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Human trafficking of Indian guest workers alleged in Miss. shipyard; Contractor defends 290-man camp

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-13-07 07:44 PM
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Human trafficking of Indian guest workers alleged in Miss. shipyard; Contractor defends 290-man camp
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Human_trafficking_of_Indian_guest_workers_0412.html

Human trafficking of Indian guest workers alleged in Mississippi shipyard; Contractor defends 290-man camp
Lindsay Beyerstein and Larisa Alexandrovna
Published: Friday April 13, 2007


Paid $18.50 an hour, but living twenty to a trailer and fighting for spoons

A month ago Monday, a group of guest workers from India placed a frantic 3:00 am phone call to Saket Soni, lead organizer for the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice. The workers said that armed security guards were holding some workers prisoner in the TV room of the Signal International Shipyard in Pascagoula, Mississippi, where the company's 290 welders and pipe fitters live.

The men told Soni that Signal International – a sub-contractor for mammoth defense contractor Northrop Grumman – had staged a pre-dawn raid and that six Indian workers had been detained in the “TV room,” flanked by security guards, one of whom carried a gun. About 200 other Indian employees at Signal were standing outside the room.

Signal says they detained the guest workers at the advice of US immigration officials, in an attempt to forcibly deport them following a labor dispute. Though the workers were later released into the custody of community groups, the incident has shed light on a longstanding immigration problem – the vulnerability of guest workers who travel to the United States on H-2B visas, and their exploitation at the hands of so-called “recruiters” and the companies they work for.

Indian workers Joseph Jacob and Sabu Lal believe the Mar. 9 raid was initiated as Signal’s reaction to worker complaints, while the company says the workers were fired for performance-related issues.

But the bigger story is in the details: These 290 Indians paid upwards of $15,000 each to travel to America, lured by the promises of a Mississippi sheriff’s deputy.

more...
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aquart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-13-07 07:49 PM
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1. Slavery is alive and well in the south.
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madrchsod Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-13-07 07:59 PM
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2. 18.50 an hour? wtf?
i guess everyone in the usa makes a lot more than that because it seems there`s no americans to do those jobs...
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hedgehog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-13-07 08:15 PM
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3. My mother has had a grudge against that ship yard since the 1960's.
She's always claimed that defense contracts went to Litton Industires to build ships there because wages were lower than in Boston and other east coast ship yards. I guess they weren't low enough!

Read the story - these guys paid money to get thses jobs and most of that $18.50 is going to the recruiter and back top the employer for food and shelter!

By the way - these are jobs paid for by the US tax payer.
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LouisianaLiberal Donating Member (848 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-13-07 08:29 PM
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4. This is the result of the attempt to equalize labor....
Some of the "labor should know no boundaries" statements are presented in terms of defending human dignity, when it is nothing more than an attempt to control the price of labor. Others claim that it is necessary to remain profitable.

Corporations will continue to promote the equalization of labor until the only thing that makes us different from Saipan and China is location.

Thanks to Larissa for another great piece.
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