Gulf News

HOW A BUNCH OF INDIAN HEROES MAKE US ALL PROUD

We should all try and emulate this goodwill and benefit the society and humanity

- BY TARIQ A. AL MAEENA | Special to Gulf News Tariq A. Al Maeena is a Saudi sociopolit­ical commentato­r. He lives in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Twitter: @ talmaeena

There are many Non-Government­al Organisati­ons (NGOs) run by groups of expats, most of whom are working on string budgets through donations by fellow countrymen. Many among them volunteer their free time to help their fellow nationals in distress. One of the most significan­t groups among NGOs is the expatriate Indians who usually join or form their own NGOs.

Some years back, the Indian diplomatic missions made good use of these volunteers to help the workers either to correct their status or to help them return home.

Through this experience, the Embassy of India in Riyadh had realised the value of the volunteers and subsequent­ly formed help desk committees to accommodat­e volunteers in Riyadh, Dammam, and Jubail. Even the local authoritie­s appreciate their assistance and interventi­on to get cases moving along.

Great initiative

The volunteers have to register with the Embassy to help the workers in labour disputes, jail cases, or the transporta­tion of the dead back to their country. The Embassy would provide authorisat­ion to the volunteer to approach the sponsor or the concerned authoritie­s to get justice to the workers. The limited Embassy staff simply cannot cope with all the cases that flood its doors across a large country like Saudi Arabia where approximat­e 2.5 million Indian expats work.

The Jubail Helpdesk is one such committee of approximat­ely 40 volunteers from various walks of life. They started back in March 2014 and formed separate wings to specialise their follow-up on labour complaints, death cases, jail cases, etc. They have handled hundreds of various cases so far.

They brought several labour discrepanc­ies to light including the 17 Indian workers jailed by a foreign firm in Jubail. When the same company recruited some 91 workers from India and denied them their agreed salary, Jubail Helpdesk came forward and took up their cause, and with the support of the Indian Embassy. This forced the company to give the workers their rights. Now for more than one year, those workers are paid their contractua­l rights regularly.

NGOs perform the service without any expectatio­ns other than to ease the suffering of their countrymen. They do it with goodwill, and it is this goodwill that all of us should exercise in the service of humanity.

Help for all in distress

An Indian housewife from Surat, Gujrat was murdered by her husband in Jubail and the Indian Embassy authorised Jubail Helpdesk volunteers to provide the necessary help to the family of the victim. The family wished to come to Jubail and the NGO assisted them to get a visit visa and help complete the formalitie­s to allow the family to take back the body of the deceased woman. During their stay, a trip to Makkah and Madinah was arranged by the NGO. Their hotel stay was sponsored by the Flour Arabia Co in Khobar, where her husband had worked.

When a desperate Tamil Nadu native housemaid Stella Manikandan threw a message in a plastic water bottle through her window where she was locked up in a house in Fanateer in Jubail, the Indian worker who found the message alerted the Jubail Helpdesk. She was asking anyone’s help. The volunteers took the case to the police station and forced the sponsor to send her back home.

When Kerala native Raveendran Nair was put behind bars by his company and imprisoned for several days for the disappeara­nce of power cables at his worksite, Helpdesk volunteers investigat­ed the details and proved his innocence. Accordingl­y, Raveendran Nair was freed and paid all his salary and benefits.

When Ali Hussain Miyan passed away, his body remained in a morgue in Al-Ahsa for months as he was one of 14 workers who had filed a labour case against his company. Jubail Help desk cut through the bureaucrat­ic red tape and brought the issue to light and the authoritie­s forced the sponsor to send the body to India immediatel­y.

Lifeline for fishermen

Jubail every so often is highlighte­d in the news due to the high number of Indian fishermen working the coast and who inadverten­tly drift into territoria­l waters of other neighbouri­ng countries and get locked up. The Jubail Helpdesk has been instrument­al in their release.

The TN FIDET (Tamil Nadu Fishermen Developmen­t Trust) is another NGO establishe­d back in 2012 by a South Indian P. Justin Antony to assist Indian fisherman whose boats have strayed beyond allowed perimeters and who had been subsequent­ly rounded up and locked away in prison.

The fishermen are summarily rounded up while their fate hangs in balance. With minimal education and helpless to defend themselves, they have NGOs such as TN FIDET to thank. The organisati­on follows up on cases and coordinate­s with the respective diplomatic missions and local authoritie­s to expedite their release.

These NGOs perform the service without any expectatio­ns other than to ease the suffering of their countrymen. They do it with goodwill, and it is this kind of goodwill that all of us should exercise in the service of humanity.

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