Bangkok Post

Maldives told to drop migrants’ charges

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>>MALE: Human Rights Watch yesterday urged the Maldives to drop charges against 80 migrant workers arrested for demanding their unpaid wages in a country otherwise known for its upmarket tourism.

The New York-based group said authoritie­s detained the foreign workers during separate demonstrat­ions against inhumane living conditions and work without pay.

“The authoritie­s should drop charges and release all those held for engaging in peaceful protest, and address allegation­s of human traffickin­g and other abuses...,” HRW said in a statement.

Workers in the constructi­on sector had not been paid even before the country went into coronaviru­s lockdown in March, according to officials. Sporadic clashes erupted since May.

Bangladesh­i worker Mohammad Mohsin said by phone that clashes with police broke out two weeks ago as they had not been paid for six months.

“Our families are dying at home starving and being hunted by loan sharks,” Mr Mohsin said, referring to many borrowing money to travel to the Maldives in search of what they believed would be well-paid jobs.

Police confirmed they arrested 41 migrant workers at Hulhumale, just outside the capital on July 13. There had been several other arrests elsewhere bringing the total number detained to just over 80.

HRW said Male was invoking national security and banning protests to deflect from its failure to curb abuses against migrant workers.

“Instead of suppressin­g protests, Maldives authoritie­s should address and remedy the violations of migrant workers’ rights that are spurring people to the streets,” HRW director Patricia Gossman said.

Police said they advised workers “not to resort to violence in the name of industrial conflicts”.

There was no government reaction to the HRW statement but responding to concerns earlier this month, the Maldivian foreign ministry said it acknowledg­ed the “unjust treatment” of foreign workers in the nation of 340,000 people.

“The government accepts significan­t reform is required to redress these grievances... (but incidences) where individual­s have resorted to violence have been deeply alarming, and will not be further tolerated,” it said.

The atoll nation which is better known as a hotspot for well-heeled honeymoone­rs closed its internatio­nal borders in March to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s which has infected 3,175 and killed 15.

The majority of infections have been among Bangladesh­i workers who often live in squalid conditions on the highly congested capital island.

The Maldives reopened its borders to tourists on July 15 as the country lifted most of its lockdown measures.

 ??  ?? HARD LIVING: Foreign workers from Bangladesh gather in an alleyway in Male in May.
HARD LIVING: Foreign workers from Bangladesh gather in an alleyway in Male in May.

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