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300 Bangladeshi workers alleged non-payment of salaries and 'extortion' of money for their residency visas by a company manager. Some of the workers claimed they had also paid a local visa trader in Bangladesh but were again asked to pay for visas on arrival in Kuwait.
Autre
Not Reported (
Nettoyage et entretien
)
- Employer
Concerné
Nombre total de personnes concernées:
300
Travailleurs migrants et immigrés: (
300
- Bangladesh
, Nettoyage et entretien
, Genre non indiqué
)
Enjeux
Frais de recrutement
,
Défaut de renouvellement de visa
,
Intimidation et menaces
,
Salaire impayé
Réponse
Réponse demandée : Oui, par Journalist
Mesures prises: In response, the workers staged a 3 day peaceful protest. Previous complaints from workers had gone unanswered but the protest prompted answers from the company and the involvement of the Bangladesh Embassy. Workers returned to work after receiving wages.
About 300 Bangladeshi workers staged a peaceful sit-in protest yesterday at their accommodation camp in Mangaf over unpaid salaries...saying that they have not been paid for three to four months...Industrial action, including strikes and peaceful protests, by expatriate workers is illegal in Kuwait, and organizers and participants can face fines, jail time or deportation.
The workers also claim that a company manager, also a Bangladeshi, is taking money for visas without the company’s knowledge. The cleaners and porters claim that the manager forces all staff to pay an illegal fee of KD 600 for the renewal of their iqamas. He also makes them pay a fee of KD 200 when they ask to go on annual leave (KD 100 on leaving and KD 100 on joining back). Some of the workers claimed to have paid KD 2,650 to get visas from a ‘local visa trader’ in Bangladesh, but were again asked to pay more for the visas once they arrived in Kuwait.