5. Human Traffic Builds US Embassy in Iraq
Source:
CorpWatch, October 17, 2007
Title: A US Fortress Rises in Baghdad: Asian Workers Trafficked
to Build Worlds Largest Embassy
Author: David Phinney
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14173
Student Researcher: Kristen Kebler and Angela Purcaro
Faculty Evaluator: Andrew Roth, Ph.D.
The enduring monument to US liberation and democracy in Iraq will be
the most expensive and heavily fortified embassy in the worldand
is being built by a Kuwait contractor repeatedly accused of using forced
labor trafficked from South Asia under US contracts. The $592 million,
104-acre fortress equal in size to the Vatican City is scheduled to
open in September 2007. With a highly secretive contract awarded by
the US State Department, First Kuwaiti Trading & Contracting has
joined the ranks of Halliburton/KBR in Iraq by using bait-and-switch
recruiting practices. Thousands of citizens from countries that have
banned travel or work in Iraq are being tricked, smuggled into brutal
and inhumane labor camps, and subjected to months of forced servitudeall
in the middle of the US-controlled Green Zone, right under the
nose of the US State Department.
Though Associated Press reports that, The 5,500 Americans and
Iraqis working at the embassy are far more numerous than at any other
US mission worldwide,1 there is no mention in corporate media
of the 3,000 South Asian laborers working for contractors in dangerous
and abysmal living and working conditions.
One such contractor is First Kuwaiti Trading and Contracting. FKTC
has procured several billion dollars in US construction contracts since
the war began in March 2003. Much of its work is performed by cheap
labor hired from South Asia. The company currently employs an estimated
7,500 foreign laborers in theaters of war.
American FKTC employees report having witnessed the issuance of false
boarding passes to Dubai, and passport seizure from planeloads of South
Asian workers, who were instead routed to war-torn Baghdad. Former US
Embassy construction manager for FKTC, John Owen, disclosed to author
David Phinney that the deception had all the appearance of smuggling
workers into Iraq.
On April 4, 2006, the Pentagon issued a contracting directive following
an investigation that officially confirmed that contractors in Iraq,
many working as subcontractors to Halliburton/KBR, were illegally confiscating
worker passports, using deceptive bait-and-switch hiring practices,
and charging recruiting fees that indebted low-paid migrant workers
for many months or even years to their employers.
Section 1. (U) of the Pentagon directive states, An inspection
of contracting activities supporting DoD in Iraq revealed evidence of
illegal confiscation of worker (Third Country National) passports by
contractors/subcontractors; deceptive hiring practices and excessive
recruiting fees, substandard worker living conditions at some sites,
circumvention of Iraqi immigration procedures by contractors/subcontractors
and lack of mandatory trafficking in persons awareness training. This
FRAGO [fragmentary order] establishes responsibilities within MNF-1
for combating trafficking in persons.
An April 19, 2006 memorandum from Joint Contracting Command in Baghdad
to All Contractors again states that, Evidence indicates a widespread
practice of withholding employee passports to, among other things, prevent
employees jumping to other employers. All contractors engaging
in the above mentioned practice are directed to cease and desist in
this practice immediately.
The Pentagon has yet to announce, however, any penalty for those found
to be in violation of US labor trafficking laws or contract requirements.
In a resignation letter dated June 2006, Owen told FKTC and US State
Department officials that his managers at the US Embassy site regularly
beat migrant workers, demonstrated little regard for worker safety,
and routinely breached security. He also complained of poor sanitation,
squalid living conditions and medical malpractice in labor camps where
several thousand low-paid migrant workers, recruited from the Philippines,
India, and Pakistan lived. Those workers, Owen noted, earned as little
as $10 to $30 for a twelve-hour workday.
Rory Mayberry, a medic subcontracted to FKTC to attend construction
crews at the Embassy, shares similar complaints about treatment of migrant
laborers. In reports made available to the US State Department, the
US Army, and FKTC, Mayberry called for the closure of the onsite medical
clinic, listing dozens of serious safety hazards, unsanitary conditions,
as well as routine negligence and malpractice. He furthermore called
for an investigation into deaths that he suspected resulted from medical
malpractice. Mayberry is not aware of any follow-up on his allegations.
Owen says that State Department officials supervising the US Embassy
project are aware of abuse, but apparently do nothing. He recalls, Once
when seventeen workers climbed the wall of the construction site to
escape, a State Department official helped round them up and put them
in virtual lockdown.
Phinney says that more FKTC employees are stepping forward to say that
Owens and Mayberrys testimonies only begin to scratch
the surface of the conditions workers are forced to endure in
building this monument to US liberation and democracy in Iraq.
Citation:
1. Associated Press, New US Embassy in Iraq Cloaked in Mystery,
MSNBC, April 14, 2006.
UPDATE BY DAVID PHINNEY
When I first heard that Project Censored would recognize this story
on the low-wage migrant laborers from South Asia building the US embassy
in Baghdad, I admit I felt the story was a failure. Allegations of forced
labor, lousy treatment of workers and beatings struck me as something
that should rise to the level of torture at Abu Ghraib. Despite what
appears to be a whitewash review of the embassy project by the State
Department Inspector General that exonerated the contractoreven
though more than a dozen sources on the site say conditions were abysmalI
am now encouraged by a recent effort at the US Justice Department to
investigate allegations of labor trafficking and other matters. But
the problem of labor abuse has been found to be widespread
among contractors in the theater of war in Iraq. Unfortunately, not
one contractor has been penalizedin fact, many are being rewarded
with new US-funded contracts. That is a crime to humanity that may haunt
the United States for years to come.