Kuwait Times

Inside isolation areas: Residents speak of growing hardship under lockdown

- By Reem Al-Gharabally

KUWAIT: Kuwait isolated Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh and Mahboula nearly a month ago. The two densely-populated areas predominan­tly inhabited by low income, foreign workers are now barricaded behind barbwire and checkpoint­s. No one is allowed to leave the area without a permit. Originally announced as a two-week isolation, it has now been extended “until further notice.”

Authoritie­s say the effort aims to curb the spread of COVID-19 after clusters were discovered there. Despite the isolation, Kuwait’s COVID-19 numbers have continued to spike, along with the growing desperatio­n of Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh and Mahboula residents.

A recent visit to Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh exposed the lack of safety measures: no social distancing and long queues outside the health clinic, pharmacies and supermarke­ts. The informal outdoor market was open and crowded. Unemployed men sit around in groups outside their buildings. With many people living in dormitory accommodat­ion, social distancing is impossible. The lockdown has forced people to remain in overcrowde­d conditions for longer periods.

Residents of Jleeb Al-Shuyokh and Mahboula speak of growing hardship. Unable to work, many struggle to afford basic necessitie­s, food, rent, sending money back home or paying off loans. Savings have quickly depleted as the lockdown is extended. “We can’t survive like this!” says Hussein, a 33-year long-term resident of Jleeb AlShuyoukh. “It has been two weeks. Then it will be a month. But after that, what? We are helpless.”

Forgotten corner

Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh, with a population of more than 300,000, has been the forgotten corner of Kuwait for decades. Dilapidate­d buildings, damaged roads and an overburden­ed sewage system originally built for a population a third of its current size characteri­ze the area. The authoritie­s are aware of these problems and have come under scrutiny by local media.

Under lockdown, donation food trucks are sent to the area to provide a lifeline for residents. Long queues to receive donations make social distancing impossible. Signs of social unrest are already showing. In Mahboula, a food truck was mobbed last week causing authoritie­s to re-think food distributi­on strategies.

“There needs to be consistent communicat­ion in languages that migrants understand to avoid unnecessar­y panic, as well as organized provision of food and basics. According to people we’ve spoken to in these neighborho­ods, this isn’t happening yet,” says a spokespers­on for Migrant Rights, a GCC-based advocacy organizati­on.

For the thousands of daily wage migrants in Kuwait, there has been no support. The only way out is the recently announced government amnesty to allow workers who have overstayed their visas to leave the country with a plane ticket provided and visa violation fines waived. Those with valid visas but no work are not included in the amnesty.

Still thousands rushed to accept the amnesty terms. During a recent visit to Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh, men wheeled heavy suitcases down the main street, waiting for buses to take them to the amnesty center. (The last day for the amnesty was April 30). Once they reach the facility, some reportedly got stranded because the facility was struggling to deal with the numbers of people turning up. Even though the amnesty offered a way out, thousands are returning to their countries with crushed dreams and financial debt.

Essential services

Expatriate­s who still have a job, continue to provide essential services to Kuwait during the lockdown. Kuwait’s street cleaners, couriers, supermarke­t workers, nurses, lab technician­s, doctors, pharmacist­s, delivery drivers, journalist­s, teachers, accountant­s, dentists and other profession­als and laborers continue to work.

The large illegal population­s have fuelled a debate among the citizenry regarding visa traders, the demographi­c imbalance (there are more than 3 million expats and 1.5 million Kuwaitis in the country). Some leading politician­s and public figures have used the high number of infections amongst guest workers to push anti-expatriate agendas and make xenophobic comments.

“These residents in overcrowde­d accommodat­ion are victims of the illegal practices of their employers. How can we blame them for that? It’s their employers who need to face charges and accept the costs of providing decent accommodat­ion before they get infected,” argued human rights lawyer Atyab Alshatti.

COVID-19 did not create the conditions in Jleeb AlShuyoukh and Mahboula, it is just exacerbati­ng the existing problems. Is prolonging the economic hardship caused by the mass detention of the impoverish­ed communitie­s in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh and Mahboula actually helping to curb the pandemic here, or is just causing a humanitari­an crisis on a large scale? “On television it seems everything is perfect. It is not,” explains Alshatti. “The government has to provide these people with more medical facilities, more services and more shelter to keep them safe.”

 ?? — Photos by Fouad Al-Shaikh ?? KUWAIT: Citizens exit Kuwait Internatio­nal Airport after arriving on flights as part of the government’s plan to repatriate Kuwaitis back home amidst the global novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19).
— Photos by Fouad Al-Shaikh KUWAIT: Citizens exit Kuwait Internatio­nal Airport after arriving on flights as part of the government’s plan to repatriate Kuwaitis back home amidst the global novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19).
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? An overcrowde­d makeshift market in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh.
An overcrowde­d makeshift market in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh.
 ?? — Photos by Reem Al-Gharabally ?? KUWAIT: A long queue outside the health clinic in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh.
— Photos by Reem Al-Gharabally KUWAIT: A long queue outside the health clinic in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Overflowin­g sewage in Hasawi.
Overflowin­g sewage in Hasawi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait