INT31
International/Diaspora/
Law/RightsIndia's
Bahrain mission plans new move to protect workers' rightsDubai, Sep 27 IANS The
Indian embassy in
Bahrain has decided to ask the Ministry of Overseas
Indian Affairs MOIA to ensure that employers in the
Gulf nation get a consent letter signed by their
Indian employees before they hand over their
passports.The
Bahrain mission's proposal comes in the wake of a series of
complaints from
Indian workers who allege that their employers demand
money for the return of
passports.There are around 290,000 expatriate
Indians in
Bahrain and a large number of them
work as contract labourers in that
Gulf nation's booming
construction industry."In
court, many companies often deny taking away the
passport of their employee and say that they don't have it," an
embassy official told the
Bahrain Tribune
newspaper. "It is then difficult to prove who is lying. The
court requires proof that the
passport was indeed taken by the sponsor," the official said.The
complaints from
workers continued even as a new labour regime came into effect in
Bahrain from July this year.Under the provisions of the new Labour
Market Regulatory Authority LMRA, local employers cannot keep the
passports of their expatriate
workers.Nowadays, the LMRA itself endorses a two-year residence permit for an expatriate worker thereby ensuring that such
workers need not hand over their
passports to their employers who otherwise ask for the document for "required
government procedures", the
report said. Despite this,
social workers in that
country claimed employers continued to demand that their expatriate
workers hand over their
passports.That is why India's Ambassador to
Bahrain Balkrishna Shetty is
planning to send the recommendation to MOIA, calling for employers to have their
workers sign a consent letter before taking the
passports.According to the proposal, employees should also lodge a
complaint with the
embassy if their
passports are taken without the employer
giving a receipt.In such a scenario, the
embassy will take up the issue with the Bahraini labour authorities and the
company may even
face blacklisting from the
embassy.--Indo-Asian
News Serviceab/sh/jg363
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