http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=3D35752
Daily Star, Dhaka, bangladesh
Saturday, May 10, 2008 12:56 AM GMT+06:00
EDITORIAL
Banglade**** workers in distress
Govt must send high-powered team to Riyadh
Banglade****s employed in Saudi Arabia are in dire straits. That is the
truth which comes out in the media. Over the past few months, Saudi
policemen have been hunting down Banglade****s and sending them off to
de****tation centres despite many of them possessing perfectly valid
papers. As a number of anguished Banglade****s now in the kingdom have
made it clear, the Saudi police pay no heed to the fact that those
they go after are legally permitted to work in the country. In many
cases, when our workers show their absolutely genuine papers to the
police, the latter commit the sheer outrage of tearing them up and
hauling these hapless people off to the de****tation centres as a step
towards sending them back to Bangladesh. Amidst such grossly
unacceptable behaviour, the workers are unable to collect their
belongings or call their employers.
There are at present an estimated 20,00,000 Banglade****s employed in
Saudi Arabia. It is therefore easily understandable how significant a
contribution they make to Bangladesh's as well as the host country's
economy. Now if these people (and Banglade****s are re****tedly the only
people targeted by the Saudis, with others remaining untouched) turn,
for no good reason, into objects of inexplicable wrath in the kingdom,
it becomes necessary for the Bangladesh authorities to take up the
matter with Riyadh on an urgent basis. A couple of months ago, the
Saudi authorities raised the bogey of Banglade****s indulging in
criminal activities in the kingdom. Now they offer no reason at all to
explain why they are specifically picking them out and dealing with
them in such outlandish manner. We understand that Bangladesh's
foreign affairs adviser has been seeking a visit to Riyadh for
sometime without the Saudis coming up with any response. Clearly, it
is an abnormal situation we have before us; and it must be tackled in
an appropriate manner.
The Foreign Office must get down to the job, through our embassy in
Riyadh, of ascertaining from the Saudis the reason for the harshness
they have adopted toward our workers. Additionally, a high-powered
team must be sent to Riyadh to discuss the entire gamut of issues
involved in the situation. At the same time, the Saudi embassy here
must be asked in no uncertain terms to explain why Bangladesh's
workers in the kingdom are being subjected to such degrading,
appalling behaviour. It is the job of our government to come to the
aid of our citizens in Saudi Arabia. It is also its responsibility to
find out the causes that may have led to such sudden Saudi activity
vis-=E0-vis Banglade**** workers.


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