The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Saudi building bust traps thousands in desert nightmare

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FIRST they had no pay, and then no work. For a time, there wasn’t even food in the squalid, concrete camps where they had been abandoned to live in the searing heat of the Saudi Arabian desert. Medical supplies dried up two months ago.

Owed weeks and weeks of back pay from constructi­on companies squeezed by the kingdom’s economic slowdown, thousands of foreign labourers from South Asia face the grim uncertaint­y of how long their plight will continue.

“They don’t give us any answers about our salaries,” said Mohammed Salahaldee­n, a duct fabricator from Bangladesh, as he stood in a labour camp in Riyadh set up by the Saudi Oger constructi­on company in better days. “After they pay me my salary and benefits, I will go.”

As Saudi authoritie­s slash spending and delay payments to contractor­s to cope with the plunge in oil prices, the austerity is exacerbati­ng the woes of private businesses that have, for decades, relied on government spending for growth. Casualties include the thousands of foreign labourers who helped to keep the economy humming with low-paying jobs in constructi­on.

Abandoned labourers, including nearly 16,000 from India and Pakistan alone, according to their government­s, haven’t seen a pay cheque in about eight months. Under a system of sponsorshi­p known as kafala that leaves many workers at their employers’ mercy, they’re also not being given the exit visas they need to leave the world’s largest oil exporter. In Saudi Arabia, it’s up to employers to arrange such visas, but before doing so they’d have to pay back wages and endof-service benefits.

Calls made to the Saudi Oger and Saudi BinLadin Group constructi­on companies weren’t returned. At King Salman’s order, stranded workers will be given food and medical services, and can receive exit visas directly from the state, the Labour Ministry said, pledging to safeguard their rights and resolve their problems. Legal representa­tion will be furnished pro bono, the ministry said. Workers have said they don’t want to leave without their money.

The conditions in which the workers from Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and the Philippine­s wait are fetid and cramped. They sleep eight to a tiny concrete room and share dirty toilets with feral cats. Temperatur­es soar to 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Farenheit) in the summer, and the electricit­y powering air conditione­rs often goes off. Some of the labourers are so destitute that they only own one set of clothes.

Mohammed Khan, an Indian nurse from Mumbai at the Saudi Oger camp, is left to treat patients suffering from diabetes, hypertensi­on and high cholestero­l without medication.

“They can’t go to a hospital because they no longer have insurance,” said Khan, 45. “They have no money.” Workers said Saudi Oger stopped paying their medical insurance policies.

The kingdom has for decades provided millions of foreign labourers with jobs that have allowed them to improve the lives of families left behind. In 2014, it ranked second behind the US. as the biggest source of workers’ remittance­s, according to World Bank data.

Yet as oil prices plummeted, government efforts to repair public finances hit a constructi­on industry already struggling amid a building slowdown. Companies such as Saudi Oger and the Saudi BinLadin Group have delayed wages and cut thousands of constructi­on jobs, according to media reports.

In March, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told Bloomberg that Oger’s problems were unrelated to the Saudi economy. The government had also temporaril­y barred BinLadin Group from taking on new contracts last year after a crane operated by the company collapsed in Mecca, killing more than 100 people.

The Indian Foreign Ministry says more than 4,050 workers alone are stranded without pay at Saudi Oger camps.

For three days recently, at a camp near Diriyah, the original home of the Al Saud royal family, the company abruptly stopped providing free food at the canteen, according to workers interviewe­d there.

Nasser Abdul Manaf said he has been forced to take his children in Hyderabad, India, out of school because he can no longer afford their education. He is six months late on his family’s US$90-a-month rental apartment and says the building owner wants to kick his family out.

“They have nowhere to go,” the 46-year-old said. “They will have to move onto the streets.’’

Prince Mohammed said in March that the government had started paying companies for work done. People briefed on government plans said later that authoritie­s were considerin­g using “I-owe-you” notes to pay outstandin­g bills to conserve cash.

 ??  ?? A south Asian worker stands outside a room which sleeps eight men at the Saudi Oger labour camp, set up by Saudi Oger Ltd., in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Aug 7.
A south Asian worker stands outside a room which sleeps eight men at the Saudi Oger labour camp, set up by Saudi Oger Ltd., in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Aug 7.

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