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Britain: report documents widespread forced migrant labour
By Rick Kelly
12 February 2005
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A study released February 3 documents the widespread use of
forced migrant labour in Britain. Its findings reveal that the
use of such labour is by no means confined to the criminal or
semi-criminal fringes of economic life. Rather, many immigrant
workers, legal and illegal, are trapped in abusive arrangements
that exist in a number of Britains major economic sectorsincluding
the publicly run National Health Service (NHS).
Published by the Trades Union Congress (TUC), the report offers
a damning indictment of the conditions faced by the most oppressed
strata of the working class under the Labour government.
Dr. Bridget Anderson of Oxford University and Dr. Ben Rogaly
of Sussex Universitys Centre for Migration Research authored
the study, titled Forced Labour and Migration to the UK.
The papers release came on the one-year anniversary of the
Morecambe Bay tragedy, in which 23 young Chinese workers drowned
whilst picking cockles.
The report is based on interviews with migrants, employers
and employment agencies, trade unionists and immigration lawyers.
It adopted the International Labour Organisations (ILOs)
definition of forced labour, which describes it as all work
or service which is exacted under the menace of a penalty, and
which is not voluntary. A range of abuses and exploitative
practices were catalogued within this category. These included:
* Gross exploitation. Migrant workers are largely concentrated
in low-wage sectors. Their pay is further reduced by deductions
typically made by employers, agencies, and other third parties,
which often leave workers earning far less than the minimum wage.
One Ukrainian woman was found working in a pub for £1 an
hour; an Indian construction worker was paid £20 for a nine-hour
day.
Migrant workers are routinely forced to work very long hours.
A previous study cited in the TUC report found that domestic workers
in private households worked an average of 17 hours a day. Excessive
work hours are also suffered by those forced to work multiple
jobs simultaneously. One Nigerian woman worked for several years
on the London underground from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m., and at the Royal
Mail from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m.
* Debt bondage. This was the most common form of coercion
found by the researchers. Debt bondage occurs when a worker is
forced to take out a loan, often with exorbitant interest rates,
in order to enter Britain. The debt is then used to control and
exploit the immigrant. One woman had borrowed US$1,000 for
her trip and had not yet managed to pay this off, despite being
in the UK for nearly 4 years, the investigation found. She
is currently paid £2 an hour to work in a chip shop for
12 hours a day. From Monday to Saturday she lives on the chips,
but on Sunday must pay for her food. Sometimes she works as a
barmaid with no pay but for a free meal.
* Intimidation and violence. Criminal gangs involved
in employment agency rackets typically use violence against migrant
workers. Two Polish construction workers brought to Britain by
agents were forced to work long hours for no pay. When they attempted
to escape, they were badly assaulted.
Some British employers also use the threat of deportation to
intimidate their staff. In another case, the researchers revealed,
Three nationals of South Asian countries who entered on
legal permits to work for an employer in the manufacturing industry
were threatened with violence when they refused to accept their
working conditions. They were required to work 12-hour shifts
from Monday to Friday and a 9-hour shift at the weekend followed
every day by cleaning the employers private residence. Their
employer refused to negotiate and threatened to deport them. When
they eventually managed to escape from him he contacted the Immigration
Service to inform them that they were in the UK without work permits.
* Restriction of movement. Employers or agencies frequently
extract forced labour by retaining workers passports and
identity documents. In 2004, it was made a criminal offence to
enter Britain without a valid travel document, which the study
noted may make migrants even more reluctant to leave such
employers. Many migrant workers are also forced to accept
overpriced and often overcrowded accommodation, which is intended
to leave them completely dependent on their employers.
Forced labour is usually associated with the most marginalised
and unregulated economic sectors, such as menial agricultural
labour and prostitution. The TUC investigation found, however,
that abusive work conditions and forced labour are becoming increasingly
pervasive throughout the British economyand sections of
the public service.
Within the NHS, many migrant nurses face extremely low pay
and terrible working conditions. Poor salary levels and a lack
of education and training opportunities have resulted in a shortage
of British nurses. Migrant health workers who fill the shortfall
are usually recruited through poorly regulated agencies, leaving
them vulnerable to terrible abuse. The NHS, pointing to the agencies
involved, declaims any responsibility.
The TUC reported on the case of Conrado, a highly
qualified nurse from Asia, who was brought to England after he
paid an agency £700 and took out a loan of £1,500.
Once working, the nurse was left with just £46 a week, after
money was deducted for his rent and loan repayment. Conrado
described how he lived on £5 worth of food in a week, having
an apple for breakfast, a snack in the staff canteen for lunch,
and rice for dinner. He felt that he was relatively fortunate
because he lived close enough to the hospital to walk.
Forced labour and the British economy
A number of academics and journalists have conducted studies
over the past few years into the conditions faced by migrant workers.
The latest TUC report, however, differed in that it attempted
to assess the role of forced labour in the context of the demands
of the contemporary British economy.
The Blair government as well as the media have routinely reacted
to exposures of forced labour and agencies exploitation
of migrants by focusing on human trafficking. This
response consists of the denunciation of individual criminals
and gangs together with a push for more restrictive immigration
laws. While the government has presented anti-trafficking laws
as being in the interests of the affected migrant labourers, the
legislation has the effect of driving illegal workers further
underground, heightening the vulnerability of migrants to abuse
and forced labour.
The governments treatment of forced labour as strictly
an immigration issue also results in the deliberate neglect of
any examination of the structural and economic determinants of
migrant labour abuse.
Forced Labour and Migration to the UK found a direct
correlation between the use of forced labour and the competitive
relations of those industries in which the use of this labour
is most prevalent. To understand abusive employer relations,
the report noted, it is important to consider the often
grossly unequal market strengths of small suppliers and their
customers.
The study suggested that in a number of cases, contractors
who pay their workers the minimum wage actually price themselves
out of the market in many sectors, particularly agricultural and
construction work. Economic deregulation and liberalisation, promoted
by successive Conservative and Labour governments, have facilitated
the reliance upon sub-minimum wage levels in these industries.
Economic pressures combine with the desperation of often-impoverished
immigrants to produce a situation in which abuses flourish. The
report correctly noted that it is very difficult to distinguish
between a free and consensual and an unfree
and coerced employment relationship. Many migrants succumb
to the exploitation because they feel that they have no alternative.
The reality is that, under the pressures of the global capitalist
economy, the British working class as a whole is being pressed
by low wages and substandard working conditions. The forced labour
experienced by numbers of immigrants can only be properly understood
as the most concentrated expression of a universal trendthat
is, the offensive against the social position of the working class
that has been sustained for more than two decades.
The reports authors fail to draw such conclusions. Rather,
they recommend that the government pass a number of limited measures,
such as state rating of employment agencies, and more effective
prosecution of employers who use forced labour. Such palliatives
will do nothing to address the root cause of the problemthe
demands of the profit system.
Despite the reports serious shortcomings, the Blair government
reportedly tried to suppress it until after the general election
due to be held later this year. According to the Guardian,
the report was due to be released last September, but pressure
from government departments held back the release.
The ILO, which co-commissioned the paper, was threatened with
funding cuts by the Department of Work and Pensions if the report
was published, according to an unnamed TUC official quoted by
the newspaper. An ILO official in Geneva said that the delay had
followed some very sensitive discussions and extensive
comments from the British government. This reaction indicates
the nervousness of the Blair government and its sensitivity to
any examination of its right-wing social and economic program.
See Also:
Britain: Iraqi asylum
seeker ends 46-day hunger strike
[27 August 2004]
UK: Racial Equality
chairman calls for compulsory teaching of a core of Britishness
[1 May 2004]
Britain: 19 Chinese
workers drown working on slave labour gang
[11 February 2004]
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