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Bodies of 3,000 Bangladeshi migrants brought home in 2020

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Bodies of 3,000 Bangladeshi migrants brought home in 2020


Bangladesh received nearly 3,000 dead bodies of migrant workers from different job destination countries in 2020 amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Most of the dead bodies were brought home from Saudi Arabia, the largest job destination country. Around 786 bodies were sent from the Arab country, followed by 729 from Malaysia, 306 from Kuwait, 280 from Oman, 267 from the United Arab Emirates, 174 from Qatar, according to the data available from the Wage Earners' Welfare Board (WEWB).

However, migrant rights activists said the number of the dead workers would be much higher than the official figure as many of them are buried in destination countries while many dead bodies are brought home by the families of deceased on their own initiative.


So, a significant number of dead bodies of migrant workers remains unreported by the government's department concerned.

Besides, a good number of migrants who died of coronavirus abroad were buried in foreign soil during the pandemic period.

Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit (RMMRU) in its Migration Trend Report-2020showed that at least 2,330 Bangladeshis died of coronavirus until December 27 last year. Of them, 989 migrants died in Saudi Arabia alone.

About 70,000 Bangladeshis were infected with the deadly virus in 186 countries until July 2020, the report mentioned.

Although most of the dead certificates, issued by the destination countries, showed natural deaths, rights groups said uncongenial working environment, heavy workload, poor living conditions and mental stress, caused by different diseases including heart attack and stroke, resulted in their deaths.

Besides, some were killed in accidents while some others were murdered, they said. A number of workers, especially women also committed suicide due to tortures in different ways.

Jasiya Khatoon, director of WARBE Development Foundation said, it is difficult to say exactly how many migrants die abroad every year because many dead bodies of migrant workers remain unreported in the government's databank.

She said it is necessary to keep an option of post mortem at home if the families have doubt about the causes of death of their near and dear ones.

Referring to the case studies, she said the families of deceased sometimes complained that they were killed because of tortures at workplaces.

The WARBE director also stressed the need for ensuring a congenial working environment and standard wages. Migration cost should be reduced at a reasonable level as workers many times take extra workload to cover the cost.

Even they face mental pressure when they go abroad with the job at high migration cost, she added.

The Bureau of Manpower Employment and Training (BMET) data showed that around 0.6-0.7 million workers go abroad from Bangladesh annually.

Since 1976, more than 13 million Bangladeshis have gone to different countries. But in 2020, only 0.2 million workers could go abroad with jobs due to the outbreak of Covid-19.

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lots of people suffers in gcc... Have seen many pakistanis who went to kuwait and lost their kidneys due t severe dehydration..... Its a shitshow !!
 
People are not sent by the GoB. They themselves find jobs there and go to work in the Arab countries. Heat may reach 50 degrees Celcius there, but, I do not think a man can die unless he is continuously exposed to the sun for the whole day. Desert nights are usually cooler than nights in BD. People can sleep even with a thin blanket in the early morning hours.

Note also that the Arab countries (not sure about Gulf countries) are dry. So, the perception of heat may be more severe in BD than in the Arab countries. I think BD people lose physical immunity there because of the food habits they have been accustomed to while in BD. This is how they become sick with disease and they lose their precious lives.
 
People are not sent by the GoB. They themselves find jobs there and go to work in the Arab countries. Heat may reach 50 degrees Celcius there, but, I do not think a man can die unless he is continuously exposed to the sun for the whole day. Desert nights are usually cooler than nights in BD. People can sleep even with a thin blanket in the early morning hours.

Note also that the Arab countries (not sure about Gulf countries) are dry. So, the perception of heat may be more severe in BD than in the Arab countries. I think BD people lose physical immunity there because of the food habits they have been accustomed to while in BD. This is how they become sick with disease and they lose their precious lives.
WRONG
HEAT EXHAUSTION IS THE MAIN REASON, PEOPLE ARE OVERWORKED TO DEATH
 
To the uninformed people here making noise. KSA Government here DO NOT allow any kind of Labor work during summer.
 
"...Bangladesh, which had to see about 500 bodies of its female migrant workers flown back over the last five years, at least 200 of them from Saudi Arabia alone."



Trial of brutal murder of Bangladeshi maid in KSA


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Frightening details have emerged of a female Bangladeshi domestic worker who was tortured and killed at her employer's house in Saudi Arabia. According to a report in The Daily Star published on Friday, Abiron Begum Ansar, a 40-year-old maid from Khulna who went to the kingdom in 2017, had to endure
unspeakable horrors while cooped up in a Saudi household of eight members.


According to her family, during her stay there, she was brutally tortured. Her employers would not give her food, and they would beat her, pour hot water on her body, and even put her head into a grill, they alleged. At one point, her family completely lost communication with her. After her lifeless body was flown back to Bangladesh on October 24, 2019—before being kept in a Saudi mortuary for seven months—family members who saw the corpse described it as "so horrible that we could not look at it".

This could have been yet another case of torture-leading-to-death of a hapless migrant worker, a group that remains as inconspicuous in their life as in their death. But subsequent developments in Abiron's case offer hope that justice, however delayed, may not be denied. The Daily Star report mentions progress in the trial of the case in a Saudi court, a rare instance in the country. The three accused arrested in the murder case have been denied bail, and the court will hear their case on January 20. If the victim family's demand for Qisas (or retributive justice), which forms part of the law in Saudi Arabia, is honoured, it will serve as a deterrent for other exploitative employers and set a legal precedent for similar cases in the future. This is especially significant for Bangladesh, which had to see about 500 bodies of its female migrant workers flown back over the last five years, at least 200 of them from Saudi Arabia alone. The law must be evenly applied to all responsible for those deaths, and Bangladesh must do everything within its power to ensure that justice is served and the usual suspects for the migrants' misfortune—local agents, recruiting agencies and corrupt government officials—aren't let off the hook.

Abiron's case also brings renewed attention to the deeply exploitative global multi-billion-dollar migration industry, where migrants, especially domestic workers, are subjected to frequent abuse with few rights and little freedom. Domestic workers, mostly women, have to suffer a litany of exploitation at the hands of their employers including forced labour, beatings, sexual assault and underpayment. But their sufferings and deaths often remain unacknowledged. Given how this industry works, involving multiple stakeholders, the policy options for both labour-sending and labour-receiving countries may be limited. But each has a duty to do its own part, in curbing corruption and reducing sufferings. The Bangladesh government must work harder and collaborate with its partners and counterparts to give its large migrant workforce a fighting chance to live and work with dignity.
 
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The air feels so light in 109 F in summer. If you are outside in summer, it feels like you are not getting enough air on top of the fact that it feels like you are inside an oven.

It is pretty brutal.
Yep. 5 years ago 50°c+ wasn’t a big deal to me, after a couple of Ukrainian winters I went to Kuwait in 2019, I couldn’t withstand 45°c days... that summer temperatures went upto 63°c and it would be impossible to go out without sunglasses and for long periods of time.
if someone is living in those climates for years then no problem but you can’t suddenly expose someone to that temperatures and not expect heat strokes or death. Before covid that was common to see...
 

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