Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Plight of migrant laborers killed, held hostage in Middle East exposes Israel’s reliance on overseas workforce

- BY JULIE WEISE, University of Oregon, SHAHAR SHOHAM, Humboldt University of Berlin The Conversati­on

An Indian laborer in Israel was killed and several other migrant workers injured on March 4, 2024, in a missile attack launched from Lebanon by Hamas-aligned Hezbollah.

They are not the first migrant workers in Israel to get caught up in the monthslong fighting. Dozens of other farmworker­s, agricultur­al apprentice­s and caregivers from countries including Thailand, Nepal, Tanzania, Cambodia, the Philippine­s, Sri Lanka and Moldova were murdered or taken hostage during the Hamas attack of Oct. 7.

The sizable number of non-Israeli workers affected by the current war has surprised some onlookers while shining a light on Israel's reliance on temporary migrant workers.

But as researcher­s who study the proliferat­ion of migrant workers around the world, we know how labor migration programs have transforme­d nearly all societies, including Israel's. The long-running Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict has shaped Israel's migrant worker history – and has contribute­d to the globalizat­ion of the workforce in the Middle East.

A global story

The initial recruitmen­t of overseas workers to Israel, which began as early as the 1970s, followed a post-World War II trend that saw higher-income countries – such as the U.S., France and West Germany – sign labor migration recruitmen­t agreements with poorer nations. These poorer countries, which at the time included Mexico, Spain and Turkey, among others, overcame an initial reluctance to lose part of their populace and began to see emigration as a strategy for modernizat­ion. The idea was that emigrants could learn modern farming or industrial skills overseas, while sending money back to boost developmen­t in their home communitie­s.

In the 1970s and 1980s, many South and Southeast Asian countries began to promote the export of migrant workers as a key piece of their economic developmen­t strategies. At the same time, receiving countries became hooked on the idea of a flexible, temporary labor force that would not inflame anti-immigrant sentiment as much as more settled migrants seemingly did.

Israel's relationsh­ip with Thai workers came initially by way of the United States' support for the 1979 peace agreement between Israel and Egypt. The U.S. government recruited Thai workers who had once worked on Vietnam War-era U.S. military bases in northeaste­rn Thailand to help build a new air force base in Israel.

The arrival of the Thai migrant workers, along with Portuguese workers, prompted public controvers­y among Israeli lawmakers, trade unionists and the media about the creation of a split labor market, as research done by one of us has shown. Meanwhile, others worried that the workers' presence cut against Zionist imperative­s to guarantee a Jewish majority.

Attempting to resolve these contradict­ions, the Israeli government started to experiment with migration policies designed for a new category of workers – neither Jewish nor Palestinia­n – who were intended to remain separate from Israeli society.

A decade later, in a different political moment, these policy ideas would become concrete in a new category of person in Israel: the “foreign worker.”

Growing recruitmen­t

The Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict drove the “foreign worker” policy forward. Though Israel was founded on the ideology of “avoda ivrit,” or Hebrew labor, Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza since 1967 has led to the recruitmen­t of hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­n workers, who became an attractive low-wage labor force.

They soon came to compose 7% of the workers in the Israeli labor market as a whole, 24% of workers in the agricultur­al sector and 60% in the constructi­on sector.

The non-citizen Palestinia­n workers commuted daily from the West Bank and Gaza, controlled by a regime of permits and regulation­s.

When the first Palestinia­n uprising, or intifada, began in 1987, some members of the Israeli public came to see such workers as a security risk.

The 1993 Oslo Accords, which sought to foment “separation” between Israelis and Palestinia­ns, further pushed Israel to minimize the dependency on non-citizen Palestinia­n workers.

To make up for the shortfall, Israeli employers convinced the government to vastly expand the recruitmen­t of temporary workers to take their place. In addition to Thailand, countries including China, India, Nepal, the Philippine­s, Romania and Turkey spotted an opportunit­y and allowed Israeli employers to recruit within their borders. By 2003, migrant workers made up 10% of the labor force in Israel.

Creating marginal workers

Migrant workers in Israel, like their counterpar­ts the world over, have long since been vulnerable to exploitati­on.

Many of their origin countries did not demand a commitment to secure their citizens' rights in the form of a bilateral labor recruitmen­t agreement. And workers migrating via private recruitmen­t channels had to pay thousands of dollars in illegal “sign-up” fees, causing them to begin their journeys deep in debt.

Meanwhile, Israeli government policies have attempted to keep migrants outside of society by confining them to specific industries, obligating them to leave the country upon completion of their labor contract, excluding them from the public health system and prohibitin­g them from marrying or engaging in romantic relations while in Israel.

And authoritie­s have paid little attention to labor standards, leaving farmworker­s, for example, vulnerable to wage theft, terrible housing and exposure to pesticides without proper protection.

Under pressure from the U.S. government and Israeli civil society, over the past decade Israel began to sign bilateral agreements with countries sending migrants. These eliminated exorbitant recruitmen­t fees, even if they failed to meaningful­ly improve labor conditions.

Even so, the number of migrant workers has grown slowly but steadily. In 2022, a total of 73,000 migrants in Israel worked as caregivers, in addition to nearly 50,000 in the constructi­on and agricultur­e sectors combined.

Yet these migrants did not obviate the need to also have Palestinia­n labor in the mix. By Oct. 7, 2023, about 100,000 Palestinia­n workers crossed the border daily from Gaza and the West Bank.

In harm’s way

Since Oct. 7, Israeli authoritie­s have ended those Palestinia­ns' work permits and tried to recruit thousands of new workers to the fields and constructi­on sites to make up for the shortfall.

Malawi, a country that came to depend on migrants' economic remittance­s decades before Thailand did, has sent 700 farmworker­s and promises another 9,000 on the way – notwithsta­nding criticism from voices within the African nation itself.

In India, which had long sent caregivers to Israel, the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi ignored internal criticism and sent Israel more workers in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 attack, including Pat Nibin Maxwell, the man killed in the March 4 Hezbollah attack.

Workers like Maxwell are now being sent to work near the borders of Lebanon and Gaza, laboring in agricultur­al communitie­s vulnerable to Hamas and Hezbollah attacks that have been depleted by the evacuation of Israeli residents.

Though foreign government­s

are able to guarantee their citizens few protection­s in Israel, thousands have queued up in their home countries in search of a contract.

Once in Israel, they join the vast majority of migrant workers who have elected to remain in the country despite the Oct. 7 attack and its aftermath.

Like millions of migrant workers the world over in search of economic progress or survival, they have calculated, for now, that earning higher wages abroad is worth taking significan­t personal risks.

While helping keep the Israeli economy running during wartime, these migrant workers remain in the path of rockets – as the death of Pat Nibin Maxwell has illustrate­d.

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