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http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MTM2Mjg3NjIwOA==

UN raps Gulf on workers' rights
Published Date: April 20, 2010 

JEDDAH: UN human rights chief Navi Pillay called yesterday for Gulf states to 
improve the position of millions of foreign workers in the region and lift 
restrictions on women. She criticised the treatment of an estimated 12 million 
foreign workers in the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council: Oman, 
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. Many are 
subject to illegal practices like confiscation of their passports, withholding 
wages, and exploitation by job agents, she said. Pillay, the UN High 
Commissioner for Human Rights, on the first stop of a six-nation Gulf tour, 
singled out the systems in many of the countries which require workers to have 
local sponsors, known as kafala.

Some countries are reconsidering the sponsorship (or kafala) system that 
rigidly binds migrants to their employers, enabling the latter to commit 
abuses, while preventing workers from changing jobs or leaving the country," 
she told a small gathering at King Abdullah University for Science and 
Technology north of Jeddah. "I wholeheartedly support those efforts and call on 
other states to replace the kafala system with updated labour laws that can 
better balance rights and duties.

She called the situation of migrant domestic workers "of particular concern, 
because their isolation in private homes makes them even more vulnerable to 
physical, psychological and sexual violence". "Thus, it is of the utmost 
importance that in crafting and applying migration policies, governments 
maintain a human rights approach to migration at the front and centre of their 
action.

Under the sponsorship systems in place in much of the Gulf, nationals or 
companies can hire large numbers of migrant workers who are dependent on their 
employers for food and shelter. Many workers complain that agencies or 
employers confiscate their passports for the duration of their contracts, do 
not pay them regularly or deduct housing or health costs from their pay.

Some Gulf countries such as Bahrain are scrapping the kafala system, while 
others such as Kuwait are overhauling labour laws or introducing a minimum wage 
to improve the conditions for millions of foreign workers. But the world's top 
oil exporter Saudi Arabia, where expatriate workers comprise 7 million of the 
25 million-strong population, has yet to make such reforms as diplomats say 
there is resistance among businesses who benefit from the system.

Women in the region are still unable to fully enjoy their human rights," Pillay 
also said. "Discriminatory barriers continue to hamper women's right to shape 
their own lives and choices, and fully participate in public life and be part 
of public debates that influence the direction of a nation," she said.

On her first-ever visit to Saudi Arabia, she said other Muslim states in the 
world have improved women's rights via "dynamic interpretations of Islamic 
traditions". In those countries, governments and Islamic legal experts 
"demonstrated that far from being innovations, such legislation was compatible 
with Islamic jurisprudence and, indeed, stemmed from it." She specifically 
cited the practice of requiring women to have a male guardian to move around 
outside the home, to appear in court and often to engage in business. Such 
rules are enforced most commonly in Saudi Arabia, where society is governed 
according to ultra-conservative Wahhabi interpretation of Islam.

The rights chief pointed to some improvements in the region, including the 
creation of national human rights institutions in several of the countries. She 
also pointed to an "encouraging level" of governmental efforts to bolster 
children's' rights, stop human trafficking, and improve economic rights. And 
she praised efforts to expand women's education, which she called "not only 
fair" but also good policy to improve the community and national wellbeing and 
prosperity. But she noted that at the same time some countries were tightening 
controls on freedom of association and expression, putting greater pressure on 
activists and the media who speak out on human rights violations.

Hosted by the Saudi Human Rights Commission, Pillay made her speech at the new 
university, lauded for allowing men and women researchers from around the world 
to work side-by-side, unlike the stiff controls on gender mingling enforced by 
religious conservatives outside the campus. With entrance to the campus tightly 
controlled, however, few Saudis have ever been inside and only about 30 
students and faculty, most of them non-Saudis, were on hand for the speech. 
After the speech she visited the Organisation of the Islamic Conference in 
Jeddah, and was then to depart for a one-day stop in Qatar. - Agencies

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