Stranded workers in Saudi Arabia plead for help as economy falters
Resumo
Data informada: 22 Ago 2016
Localização: Arábia Saudita
Empresas
United Seemac - EmployerAfetados
Total de pessoas afetadas: 500
Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Índia , Construção Civil , Gender not reported ) , Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Indonésia , Construção Civil , Gender not reported ) , Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Paquistão , Construção Civil , Gender not reported ) , Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Filipinas , Construção Civil , Gender not reported ) , Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Iémen , Construção Civil , Gender not reported )Temas
Direito à Alimentação , Condições de vida precárias/inadequadas , Mobilidade restrita , Retenção de documentos de identificação , Saúde pessoal , Roubo de salários , Privação da liberdade de ir e virResposta
Resposta solicitada: Sim, por Journalist
Medidas tomadas: Two strikes took place outside the company office a month after the situation was reported. Workers stated they had filed cases with the labour court in 2015.
Tipo de fonte: News outlet
Workers at a construction company in Saudi Arabia have issued an urgent plea for help, saying they are trapped and facing starvation because their employer is refusing to pay salaries or grant them permission to leave the country. Foreign staff at building firm United Seemac told MEE [Middle East Eye] the company's 500-plus employees have not been paid in months and that both the Saudi government and their embassies have done little to solve their increasingly desperate crisis...
One Pakistani worker, who has not been paid in 10 months, said no one is helping them because they do not work for one of the kingdom’s larger companies...“Nobody knows the situation for employees working at small companies...All the attention is on the big companies – it’s easy to ignore us because we are not so many people."
[The company's] owner declined to answer any questions in several telephone calls with MEE. However, the company’s general manager...told MEE that it is unable to pay employees because the government has failed to pay them for completed contract work.
Saudi authorities have repeatedly said they are trying to solve the problem of unpaid workers. King Salman has ordered companies including Saudi Oger to pay staff the money they are owed, although there has been little official comment about the issue of unpaid government contracts...[also refers to Saudi Binladin Group].