Saturday, June 23, 2007

‘Trafficking’ Of Pinoy Workers To Iraq Has American Face, Film Shows


by JEREMAIAH M. OPINIANO
A finger length shard of metal on a white tissue paper nearly made Ailyn Mateo’s mother faint.
Taken from Mateo’s right shoulder, the shrapnel from a bomb that killed 22 armed combatants and 11 civilians is a terrible testament to Filipinos’ desperation for work, even in a hell hole called Iraq.
Mateo, a mother of two, is one of the migrant workers whose survival from an episode in the four-year war was snapped on celluloid in a film documentary by Chinese American Lee Wang.
Shown recently in Quezon City among members of nonprofit groups and government officials, the 24-minute video documentary revealed the uncanny ability of Mateo and over-6,000 Filipinos like her to earn a living deep within violence-riddled Iraq.
Likewise, it also showed an elaborate trail of hiring "third-country nationals" (TCNs) –as these migrant laborers from the Philippines, India, Sri Lanka, and Nepal are called– through recruiters in Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates.
The film titled "Someone Else’s War" showed these workers remain available despite a government ban for Filipinos to go to Iraq now on its third year.
Hence, Wang, his producers, and migrants’ rights advocates consider the continued recruitment of Filipino hired help for American military bases in Baghdad a form of trafficking—and the accountability trail for whatever happens to these workers leads to US companies.
"In the background of this war is an unseen army–neither American nor Iraqi. They are all in the middle of someone else’s war,’" said Wang in a voice-over on her documentary.
Blasted
THAT war Mateo came to know as a food service worker in a US military facility in Baghdad.
In a reconstruction of the night some time in May 2006, the film showed Mateo, a white bandana hiding her forehead, putting food on trays of uniform-clad men queued in front of a stainless steel counter.
Then a missile exploded, sending food, debris, and human body parts flying across the swath of a light brown desert.
According to Mateo’s mother Fe, an American soldier grabbed her arm and led her to safety amid the chaos.
When he heard the words "I am okay," Mateo said the soldier left purportedly to see if more could be saved.
When Mateo came home a month later, all she could remember of that night comes from the shrapnel that hit her shoulder.
She thought TCNs like her are invisible to the soldiers whose facilities they clean and whose trucks carrying weaponry they drive across the Iraqi border.
Apparently, how Mateo got there almost remained invisible had the trail of recruitment wasn’t uncovered by the documentary, according to Lucille Quiambao, Wang’s field producer.
What are also unnoticed are the routes where TCNs like Filipinos are hired, Quiambao said.
Another Filipino, Ramil Autencio, went on-camera to attest to this elaborate recruitment scheme.
According to Autencio, he was recruited by the MGM Worldwide Manpower & General Services, one of the Manila-based businesses that were tapped by Kuwaiti labor sub-contracting agencies that, in turn, were paid by an American company to hire TCNs.
In the film, Autencio claimed that the contract he signed with MGM stipulated that he would work as a technician in Kuwait.
"Six weeks after arriving in Kuwait, executives of MGM’s foreign principal First Kuwaiti General & Contracting Co. ordered them to board buses going to Iraq," Autencio revealed.
"A certain McKinley guy told us if we do not agree to them, we will be sent to jail and penalized with some amounts," Autencio recalled. "I was forced to go to Iraq, though my POEA contract stipulates I will be working in Kuwait."
Autencio found a way to escape from Iraq and returned to Manila.
"I hired taxicab that drove all the way from our camp to the Kuwaiti border at around midnight," Autencio said in the documentary.
"The driver was even scared because we were passing by snipers while we were driving."
He sued recruiter MGM Worldwide for contract substitution, which the Labor department’s National Labor Relations Commission upheld.
The NLRC ordered MGM Worldwide to pay damages to Autencio.
However, MGM Worldwide officials are in hiding, Quiambao said.
Trafficked
RESEARCH Director Maruja Asis of the nonprofit Scalabrini Migration Center, which hosted a premier showing of the documentary, said Filipinos there are considered "undocumented migrants", since there is a government ban to deploy workers in Iraq.
The case of Autencio is considered trafficking "since there was coercion involved" on the worker, Asis said.
Quiambao said Filipino workers found in Iraq are also taken from Dubai, United Arab Emirates and then flown from there to Baghdad.
Wang estimated that Filipinos among the TCNs in American military facilities in Baghdad earn US$300 each monthly, the peso equivalent of which is twice less than what a call center agent receives. American soldiers are protected by vehicles with very thick armors, said Quiambao.
"Trucks driven or used by TCNs are not even protected by metal, and it makes them easy prey to missile attacks, or even IEDs (inter-explosive devices)," Quiambao added.
Apart from Autencio and Mateo, the documentary also featured the case of truck driver Rodrigo Reyes, the first Filipino killed in Iraq.
It was only upon Reyes’s death that the Philippine government imposed a ban on deployment to Iraq. Since 2003, five Filipinos have died in Iraq, according to the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.
POEA’s Felixberta Romero, director of the Employment Regulation branch, assured that the agency’s Anti-Illegal Recruitment branch will look at the recruitment agencies that have First Kuwaiti General as its foreign principal. The POEA has yet to get hard facts about recruiting Filipinos going to Iraq via Kuwait through First Kuwaiti, added Romero.
Meanwhile, Quiambao identified a woman who lives in Abucay, Bataan and who recruits residents there to go to Iraq, even as she does not run a licensed recruitment agency. For this, Romero promised that the POEA will conduct a search operation for that lady recruiter.
A June 18 POEA policy forum discussed the issue of recruiting Filipinos to Iraq via Kuwait, Romero bared.
Contractor
THE documentary revealed that recruiting TCNs has a list of subcontractors from different countries.
The mother contractor, the documentary revealed, is American company Halliburton Inc.
Information by the US-based nonprofit groups Essential Information and the Center for Corporate Policy, which run the project called "Halli-burtonWatch.org," reveal that an estimated 50,000 American and TCN contractors are in Iraq under Halliburton’s watch, with 40,000 of them TCNs.
HalliburtonWatch.org reported that Halliburton’s contracts in Iraq are expected to have generated "more than US$13 billion in sales".
The watchdog’s website wrote former US Vice President Dick Cheney was CEO of Halliburton , and profits rose because of the company’s contracts with the US Federal government.
Halliburton’s revenue increased 30 percent in 2003 (to US$16 billion) "largely because of its military contacts in the Middle East, and is also the top US Army contractor that same year with a US$3.731 billion contract, HalliburtonWatch.org posted. /MP

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