http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/09/600-000-tricked-and-trapped-into-labor-in-Mideast-ILO.html


Last Update: Tuesday, 9 April 2013 KSA 17:09 - GMT 14:09

600,000 ‘tricked and trapped’ into labor in Mideast: ILO
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
 The 150-page report entitled “Tricked and Trapped: Human Trafficking in the 
Middle East” was based on research carried out in Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon and 
the United Arab Emirates. (Reuters) 

AFP, Amman - 
An estimated 600,000 people are “tricked and trapped” into both forced 
employment and sexual exploitation in the Middle East, the U.N.’s labor agency 
said on Tuesday.

The International Labour Organisation, issuing the findings of a two-year study 
based on 650 interviews, called for an overhaul of employment practices in the 
region, notably an end to the “kafala” system of sponsorships.

“Labor migration in this part of the world is unique in terms of its sheer 
scale and its exponential growth in recent years," said Beate Andrees, head of 
an ILO program to combat forced labor.

“The challenge is how to put in place safeguards in both origin and destination 
countries to prevent the exploitation and abuse of these workers,” she said at 
the opening of a two-day conference on the issue in Amman, Jordan.

The 150-page report entitled “Tricked and Trapped: Human Trafficking in the 
Middle East” was based on research carried out in Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon and 
the United Arab Emirates.

“Although data is scarce, the ILO estimates that there are 600,000 forced labor 
victims in the Middle East,” it said.

The study singled out the kafala system, saying it was “inherently problematic” 
because it created an unequal power dynamic between employers and workers.

The system “governs the lives of most migrant workers in the Mashreq and Gulf 
Cooperation Councils countries.”

“Reforming the kafala system would significantly improve labor migration 
governance in this regard," it said.

The study criticized as insufficient laws that “reinforce underlying 
vulnerabilities of migrant workers” and restrict their ability to terminate 
employment contracts and to change employers.

A lack of inspections kept domestic workers isolated and heightened their 
“vulnerability to exploitation,” said the study, warning against “the real 
risks of detention and deportation for workers who are coerced into sex work.”

In male-dominated economic sectors such as construction, manufacturing, 
seafaring and agriculture, “workers are routinely deceived with respect to 
living and working conditions, the type of work to be performed, or even the 
existence of a job at all,” it said.

“Human trafficking can only be effectively tackled by addressing the systemic 
gaps in labor migration governance across the region,” said Frank Hagemann, ILO 
deputy regional director for Arab states.


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