Ref: Ayo rame-rrame ke Qatar, gaji busar, hidup bakal mewah nan sejahtera. 
Untuk mengenal bualan BNKP2TKI atau badan resmi “legal trafficking” dari rezim 
Neo Mojopahit, silahkan lihat video footage “Inside Story” dari TV Aljazeera 
(milik Qatar) tentang masalah peruburuhan di Qatar, dengan click pada 
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidestory/2012/06/201261472812737158.html 
 atau baca artikel terlampir : Modern Slavery: The Plight of Foreign Workers in 
Qatar. 

http://forum.kompas.com/internasional/250755-tki-di-qatar-bisa-bergaji-us$-10-ribu-sebulan.html


TKI di Qatar Bisa Bergaji US$ 10 Ribu Sebulan 





  Melihat animo dan kebutuhan besar pengguna tenaga kerja Indonesia di Qatar, 
Badan Nasional Penempatan dan Perlindungan Tenaga Kerja Indonesia (BNP2TKI) 
membuka stand di ajang Kongres Kamar Dagang dan Industri (Kadin) sedunia di 
Doha, Qatar.

  BNP2TKI mengklaim menjadi satu-satunya lembaga pemerintah yang hadir dalam 
kongres Kadin sedunia tersebut.
  "Undangan itu saya terima langsung pada saat bertemu dengan panitia Kongres 
pada forum International Employment Business Meeting (EMB) BNP2TKI di Qatar, 
Rabu 27 Maret lalu," ujar Kepala BNP2TKI, Moh Jumhur Hidayat dalam keterangan 
tertulisnya, baru-baru ini.

  Jumhur menjelaskan, undangan agar lembaganya membuka stand di ajang berskala 
internasional tersebu dikarenakan banyak permintaan tenaga kerja profesional 
baik semi skill maupun skill. Hal ini diketahui dari sejumlah gelaran forum 
employment business meeting (EMB) yang dilaksanakan BNP2TKI.

  Selain mendapat undangan khusus, panitian Kongres Kadin Sedunia juga 
memberikan stand gratis bagi BNP2TKI.
  Pada kesempatan kongres tersebut, BNP2TKI selain membawa brosur juga akan 
melibatkan Pelaksana Penempatan TKI Swasta (PPTKIS), asosiasi profesi dan 
pemangku kebijakan penempatan terkait lainnya.

  "Kami akan diberikan kesempatan untuk memaparkan kepada 150 negara potensi 
ketersediaan TKI profesional yang siap ditempatkan " ujarnya.

  Jumhur mencontohkan, di Qatar saja banyak TKI profesional yang bekerja di 
sektor minyak dan gas bumi (Migas) dengan gaji US$10.000-15.000 per bulan.

  Pada saat kunjungan ke Qatar Kepala BNP2TKI sempat berdialog dengan para 
pekerja di sektor perminyakan. "Ada ribuan TKI profesional di Qatar," ungkap 
Jumhur.


  +++++
  http://digitaljournal.com/article/303006

  Modern Slavery: The Plight of Foreign Workers in Qatar
  Like this article44
  By J Ocean Dennie 
  Jan 27, 2011 in World 
  2 comments 

  It goes without saying that Qatar's economy and entire way of life depends 
heavily on the efforts of foreign workers. Less known, however, are the abuses 
and rights violations these workers are increasingly subject to. Sadly, no 
resolution is in sight. 
  According to 2009 figures from the Qatar Statistics Authority, an astonishing 
94 percent of the workforce is non-Qatari. Most of these non-Qatari workers 
originate from developing countries such as Nepal, India and the Philippines. 
In recent years, numerous accounts have surfaced of migrant workers subjected 
to abuse and ill-treatment by their employers. The list of grievances, 
according to Human Rights Watch, includes complaints of “unpaid wages, 
excessive working hours, heavy debt burdens from exorbitant recruitment fees, 
isolation and forced confinement resulting in physical and psychological 
abuse.” The situation can turn desperate when workers take matters into their 
own hands, with reports of suicide and murder, and as reported by Amnesty 
International some 20,000 migrant workers in 2007 simply running away from 
their employers. 
  Of the almost 1.2 million documented migrant workers currently employed in 
Qatar, it is difficult to approximate the full extent of employee mistreatment 
within this sizable labor force since there is a culture of silence and fear in 
reporting abuses. Of the cases that do leak out into the media, however, 
ranging from physical assaults of domestic workers or mental abuse afflicted 
upon newcomers who are unaware of their rights to generalized conditions akin 
to slavery, there is definitely some cause for concern, that, given the 
tremendous wealth at stake, has gone virtually unheeded within Qatar itself. 
  The underlying causes that have contributed to this situation are similarly 
difficult to delineate with any degree of accuracy, however, certain trends can 
be extrapolated and offered forth as factors. Implicit in these factors are 
quite obvious differences between employer and employee involving national 
identity, class and language. Laborers hired through recruitment agencies in 
other countries such as Bangladesh or Nepal, arrive in Qatar with very little 
understanding of the culture or labor rights in the country. These workers 
usually originate from uneducated and impoverished classes, lured by 
desperation into working abroad in order to improve their lives and support 
family members back home. There is a tremendous sense of honor in accepting 
such employment abroad. This can be compounded by severe pride where workers 
frequently lie to their families about their living conditions. With that comes 
an awful degree of pressure to continue with unfavorable circumstances rather 
than facing the defeat of returning home empty-handed. Again, this culture of 
fear is driven by a lack of knowledge on available legal rights, remedies and 
redress. Workers are often afraid to even raise issues of employer wrongdoing, 
for in the words of one such laborer, the “company will take action…if they 
hear I’m talking”, while another worker echoed his concern: “If we make a 
mistake, we get sent back.” 
  In addition to inherent difficulties in adapting to a new language, class and 
cultural conditions, the plights of migrant workers are often exacerbated by 
the exploitative business practices of recruitment agencies. Grandiose 
guarantees made in their home countries are often broken when recruiting agents 
compel workers upon arrival to sign new contracts in a foreign language for 
much lower wages than pledged back home. Poorly monitored labor recruitment 
agencies also often overcharge migrant workers, leaving them heavily indebted. 
Compounding such devious tactics is the frequent practice of Qatari employers 
who confiscate the passports of non-Qatari workers upon arrival. Since most of 
the migrant workers arriving in Qatar have never engaged in such an arrangement 
abroad, they are often unaware of their rights in another country or choose not 
to exercise them when abuses or wrongdoing takes place. 
  Recourse to state institutions are limited. Although the National Human 
Rights Committee has been established to promote human rights within the 
country and deal with violations, their resources are limited and their 
services not well publicized. According to Qatari labor law, complaints can be 
filed with the Labor Department but few such cases ever make it very far. Human 
rights advocacy groups such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International do 
not have a strong presence within the country. The Solidarity Centre, 
affiliated with the AFL-CIO, partners with the National Human Rights Committee 
to “advance basic rights at work for migrant and Qatari workers through 
capacity-building programs and cross-border exchanges”. The key is to raise 
awareness among migrant worker population of the availability of such support, 
limited as it may be. The question, beyond the scope of the paper 
unfortunately, is how to effectuate a wider dissemination of knowledge in a 
legal system that does not afford many rights to the foreign laborer. 
  The status of migrant workers under Qatari legislation, including both labor 
and human rights law is not dissimilar to the status afforded illegal aliens. 
Labor laws offer little protection because of lax enforcement, while foreign 
embassies of developing countries do little besides offer refuge to their 
nationals, for fear of jeopardizing the flow of remittances workers send to 
their families back home. Labor laws in these states are usually in favor of 
protecting the employer who is a citizen of the state rather than the foreigner 
who is not, which leaves the treatment and well being of these workers to the 
will of the employer. What contributes to this employer-biased mindset is that 
many labor-receiving countries such as Qatar end up tying migrant visas to 
their employers, making it all but impossible to switch employers when they 
experience abuse. These countries also exclude domestic workers from the labor 
laws, leaving them open to abuse with few avenues for redress. 
  This oppressive system is referred to as 'kafala'. Several Gulf states, 
including Qatar, have developed and instituted a worker sponsorship system 
which defines the legal basis for residency and employment of migrant workers. 
This system was designed to enable the government to regulate labor flow and 
requires that, in order for migrant workers to receive an entry visa and a 
residence permit, they have to be employed by either a Qatari citizen or 
institution . The sponsor then assumes full economic and legal responsibility 
for the employee during the contract period. The migrant worker can only work 
for the original sponsor and once the contract is terminated, the employee must 
leave the country immediately, otherwise, workers are required to obtain the 
permission of their sponsors in order to leave the country. 
  In addressing this injustice, Human Rights Watch has called for the 
reformation of the kafala visa system arguing that “employment visas that tie 
workers to their employers make it difficult for workers to change employers, 
even in cases of abuse...workers’ visas should not be linked to employers." 
Also included in their recommendations was a call to “ensure that migrants have 
access to justice and support services. Migrants who suffer abuse should have 
access to shelter, legal aid, medical care, and temporary residence status. 
Governments should ensure speedy and transparent mechanisms to resolve wage 
disputes, and they must prosecute cases of abuse against migrants through the 
criminal justice system.” 
  The legal rights and remedies available to migrant workers are extremely 
limited and outlined in Qatar's Labour Law of 2004. At present, there is no 
comprehensive Human Rights Code protection as exists in most Western nations. 
Domestic labor law clearly favors the employer but does generally provide that 
an “employer shall undertake to enable the worker to perform the work and to 
provide him with all things necessary therefore” under Article 44 of the Labour 
Law while Article 45 states that an “employer may not ask the worker to perform 
other than the work agreed upon unless necessity so requires”. Under Article 
51, the worker is entitled to terminate the contract before its expiry but only 
under very limited circumstances. Appeal provisions are similarly limited, 
requiring the employee, before recourse to a Department of Labor tribunal, to 
first lodge an appeal with the employer. (Article 64) If a dismissal is deemed 
in violation of the law, the Department can either annul the dismissal, order 
the worker to return to work and payment of his wages for the period he was not 
allowed to work or payment of a suitable compensation. There is no mention in 
the legislation of the possibility of awarding further damages to the worker. 
Employers are also responsible under Article 103 for taking “measures capable 
of securing the hygiene and good ventilation in the places of work”, however, 
this provision does not extend to the living quarters of migrant workers which 
have been described as “shocking”. And while Article 118 provides for the 
establishment of unions referred to as 'Workers Organizations' authorized to 
take “care of the interests of their members and protection of their rights and 
their representation in all matters related to the affairs of the work”, The 
Georgetown Voice noted, however, there are no unions or strikes in the country. 
Organizers of strikes are summarily deported. 
  Clearly, as human rights groups have called for, Qatar has an international 
obligation under I.L.O Convention No.111 which it ratified in 1976 that deals 
with employment discrimination, affirming that all human beings, regardless of 
race, creed or sex are entitled to an environment of freedom, dignity, economic 
security and equal opportunity . In stark contrast, however, Qatar has yet to 
ratify convention No.143 that deals with the rights of migrant workers. 
  On the more pressing question, however, of Qatar revamping or even abolishing 
the kafala system, progress looks grim. According to Migrant Rights, it appears 
the Qatari Chamber of Commerce has successfully lobbied government to retain 
this unjust facet of Qatari labor law, despite condemnation that it is 
outdated, unfair and contributes to the abuse of the rights of migrant workers. 
At the very least, as suggested in Qatar's newspaper The Peninsula, the 
situation calls for “waging an awareness campaign by local media with the 
government's backing to convince companies to provide better wages and safe and 
hygienic living and working conditions”. 
  Ordinarily, one might expect that Qatar would be a vanguard when it comes to 
these issues in the Middle East. In recent years, the country has attempted to 
champion itself as a progressive state, promoting liberal values. If there is 
to be any alleviation of the plight of migrant workers in the country, the 
government must recognize the inconsistency of these unjust policies with the 
image they are attempting to espouse abroad. Unfortunately, it seems that until 
there is a surge of domestic or international pressure there is very little the 
government will do to address this crisis. 

  Read more: http://digitaljournal.com/article/303006#ixzz2PI4YK9RN



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