Arab News

Orange passport for India’s migrant workers ‘institutio­nalizes discrimina­tion’

- SANJAY KUMAR

NEW DELHI: The Indian government’s recent decision to issue orange passports to people who require emigration checks has been widely criticized by concerned citizens who have described the new rules as discrimina­tory.

The Indian Foreign Ministry said on Friday that those who need emigration clearance for travel to a group of 18 countries, mostly in the Gulf region, would be issued with orange passports and those who do not would receive blue ones.

People who have graduated high school, or are among the 2 percent of Indians who pay income tax, do not require emigration checks. But the vast majority of unskilled workers do.

“You are making a mockery of the people who are illiterate and come from the marginaliz­ed section of society,” said Professor Irudaya Rajan S. of Kerala’s Center for Developmen­t Studies (CDS). “It is an institutio­nalization of discrimina­tion on the basis of education.”

According to the Pew Research Center, one in 20 migrant workers worldwide are Indian-born. As of 2015, 15.6 million people born in India were living in other countries. India has been among the world’s top countries of origin for migrants since the UN started tracking those figures in 1990. A World Bank estimate says that India received about $69 billion in remittance­s in 2015 amounting to roughly three percent of the country’s gross domestic product.

Data provided by the Indian Embassy in Doha reveals that between 2004 and 2017, around 3,154 Indian workers died in Qatar, with more than 200 workers dying each year from 2007 onwards.

“How will changing the color of the passport stop exploitati­on?” asked Rajan. “It’s not the right move. In the name of protection, you are exposing people to risk both inside and outside India. (This) is not going to help stop human traffickin­g and exploitati­on.”

Government sources say the scheme is supposed to prevent the exploitati­on of Indian workers abroad, although there has been no clear explanatio­n as to how.

The government has claimed that the new passport scheme will make it easier for immigratio­n officers to identify workers who require vetting before being allowed to travel to various countries. As the Washington Post reported, “The theory is this would also make human traffickin­g more difficult as border officials would immediatel­y know which people need the extra permission to travel.”

But Rajan said, “It is sheer discrimina­tion on the basis of the socio-economic status of the workers. The government argues that it wants to protect Indians who are vulnerable through this decision. The orange passport will make them much more vulnerable, as they are more easily identifiab­le.”

Pranay Kotasthane, a geopolitic­al analyst at the Bangaloreb­ased think tank The Takshashil­a Institutio­n, questioned the need for emigration clearance in the first place, and added that the “priority of the government should be to prevent exploitati­on of women and Indian workers abroad. There is no way the change in the color of the passport is going to do that.”

He told Arab News that “by changing the color of the passport, you are just systematiz­ing more discrimina­tion – one Indian gets one color of passport and another gets the other one. It’s not solving the problem. In fact this should be used as an opportunit­y by India to completely get rid of the emigration system that we have used since 1983.”

Rakesh Sinha, a member of Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), the paternal organizati­on of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), defends the government’s decision, saying that “the move will act as a deterrent against human traffickin­g.”

However, leader of the opposition, Congress Party President Rahul Gandhi, said the move was “completely unacceptab­le” and that the government is “treating India’s migrant workers like second-class citizens.”

“This action demonstrat­es BJP’s discrimina­tory mind-set,” Gandhi added.

 ??  ?? India plans to issue orange-covered passports to some migrant workers, not the regular blue passport, pictured above. (AFP)
India plans to issue orange-covered passports to some migrant workers, not the regular blue passport, pictured above. (AFP)

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