Khaleej Times

Live video helps rescue 40 Indian workers

- Dhanusha Gokulan dhanusha@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — A live social media video highlighti­ng the plight of a large group of Indian workers has led to their eventual rescue and rehabilita­tion.

The video showed a group of 40 Indian workers, including three women, sleeping in public park benches in a northern emirate. Majority of them arrived on onemonth visit visas and were unable to convert their residency status into a permanent one. Some have been living without documents for over two years.

Most men are from the Southern states of Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana and few others are from Uttar Pradesh, and one is from Punjab.

Some were able to find menial part-time jobs that didn’t pay, but have not been able to afford proper meals since August 1.

Their visas have been issued from Abu Dhabi (one), Al Ain (three) and the remaining visit visas from Sharjah and Dubai.

The Indian Consulate jumped into action after coming to know about the sad plight of the workers through the members of a local Indian associatio­n.

Speaking at the consulate premises, senior diplomats at the Consulate General of India on Tuesday said the 40 workers, who were abandoned by recruitmen­t agents, will be considered as amnesty seekers and will be repatriate­d to India.

Consul General of India Vipul urged workers not to come to the UAE on short-term visit visas in search of jobs. He also asked the workers to submit names of their agents back home in India and in the UAE.

Vipul said: “The consulate will pay for their housing and food till they leave and will check with local authoritie­s on their visa and residency status. For employees with company visas, we will urge their respective firms to help with the repatriati­on costs.”

How the video happened

A community welfare group named Ekata found over 20 workers were sleeping on park benches. When they saw them begging for alms, a group member, Sebastian Xavier, posted a live video on Facebook.

Xavier said: “When I first met

them, there were only two people, and they were begging for food and shelter.

“I posted their video on my Facebook, and the video got several thousand hits and views. More community members, moved by the plight of the workers in the video, came forward to help them.” The workers were given food and accommodat­ion in Karama, Dubai, for a few days. “If you go to the park in the afternoons, you will find fewer workers because of the sweltering heat. In the evenings, you can find over 40 workers waiting there, as if seeking some kind of justice and help,” Photo by Shihab

added Binoy Baby, a sales profession­al and Ekata member. “Eventually, more people began gathering at the park in the hope they would be rescued as well. The sad issue is that these men have spent several thousands,” said Reghuvaran Koipuram, a social worker.

 ??  ?? Workers who turned up at the Indian Consulate. —
Workers who turned up at the Indian Consulate. —

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