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Asian Workers Trafficked to Build U.S. Embassy in Baghdad

By David Phinney, CorpWatch. Posted October 26, 2006.


The State Department quietly awarded a corrupt Kuwaiti company a $592-million contract to build the embassy in Iraq.
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Things began looking more sketchier than ever to John Owen as he boarded a nondescript white jet on his way back to Iraq in March 2005 following some R’n’R in Kuwait city.

Employed by First Kuwaiti Trading & Contracting, the lead builder for the new $592-million US embassy in Baghdad, Owen remembers being surrounded at the airport by about 50 company laborers freshly hired from the Philippines and India. Everyone was holding boarding passes to Dubai -- not to Baghdad.

"I thought there was some sort of mix up and I was getting on the wrong plane," says the 48-year-old Floridian who was working as a general construction foreman on the embassy project.

Seven months after signing on with First Kuwaiti in November 2005, he quit.

In the resignation letter last June, Owen told First Kuwaiti and US State Department officials that his managers physically assaulted and beat the construction workers, demonstrated little regard for worker safety, and routinely breached security.

And it was all happening smack in the middle of the US-controlled Green Zone -- right under the nose of the State Department that had quietly awarded the controversial embassy contract in July 2005.

He also complained of poor sanitation, squalid living conditions and medical malpractice in the labor camps where several thousand low-paid migrant workers lived. Those workers, recruited on the global labor market from the Philippines, India, Pakistan and other poor south Asian countries, earned as little as $10 to $30 a day. As with many US-funded contractors, First Kuwaiti prefers importing labor because it views Iraqi workers as a security headache not worth the trouble.

Despite numerous emails and phone calls about such allegations, neither First Kuwaiti general manager Wadih Al Absi nor his lawyer Angela Styles, the former top White House contract policy advisor, have responded. After a year of requests, State Department officials involved with the project also have ignored or rejected opportunities for comment.

Your Passports Please

That same March Owen returned to work in Baghdad, Rory Mayberry would witness similar events after he flew to Kuwait from his home in Myrtle Creek, Oregon.

The gravely voiced, easy-going Army veteran had previously worked in Iraq for Halliburton and the private security company, Danubia. Missing the action and the big paychecks US contractors draw Iraq, he snagged a $10,000 a month job with MSDS consulting Company.

MSDS is a two-person minority-owned consulting company that assists US State Department managers in Washington with procurement programming. Never before had the firm offered medical services or worked in Iraq, but First Kuwaiti hired MSDS on the recommendation of Jim Golden, the State Department contract official overseeing the embassy project. Within days, an agreement worth hundreds of thousands of dollars for medical care was signed.

The 45-year-old Mayberry, a former emergency medical technician in the Army who worked as a funeral director in Oregon, responded to a help wanted ad placed by MSDS. The plan was that he would work as a medic attending to the construction crews on the work site in Baghdad.

Mayberry sensed things weren't right when he boarded a First Kuwaiti flight on March 15 to Baghdad -- a different flight from Owen's.

At the airport in Kuwait City, Mayberry said, he saw a person behind a counter hand First Kuwaiti managers a passenger manifest, an envelope of money and a stack of boarding passes to Dubai. The managers then handed out the boarding passes to Mayberry and 50 or so new First Kuwaiti laborers, mostly Filipinos.

"Everyone was told to tell customs and security that they were flying to Dubai," Mayberry explains. Once the group passed the guards, they went upstairs and waited by the McDonald's for First Kuwaiti staff to unlock a door -- Gate 26 -- that led to an unmarked, white 52-seat jet. It was "an antique piece of shit" Mayberry offers in a casual, blunt manner.

"All the workers had their passports taken away by First Kuwaiti," Mayberry claims, and while he knew the plane was bound for Baghdad, he's not so sure the others were aware of their destination. The Asian laborers began asking questions about why they were flying north and the jet wasn't flying east over the ocean, he says. "I think they thought they were going to work in Dubai."

One former First Kuwaiti supervisor acknowledges that the company holds passports of many workers in Iraq -- a violation of US contracting.

"All of the passports are kept in the offices," said one company insider who requested anonymity in fear of financial and personal retribution. As for distributing Dubai boarding passes for Baghdad flights, "It's because of the travel bans," he explained.

Mayberry believes that migrant workers from the Philippines, India and Nepal are especially vulnerable to employers like First Kuwaiti because their countries have little or no diplomatic presence in Iraq.

"If you don't have your passport or an embassy to go to, what you do to get out of a bad situation?" he asks. "How can they go to the US State Department for help if First Kuwaiti is building their embassy?"

Deadly 'Candy Store' Medicine

Owen had already been working at the embassy site since late November when Mayberry arrived. The two never crossed paths, but both share similar complaints about management of the project and brutal treatment of the laborers that, at times, numbered as many as 2,500. Most are from the Philippines, India, and Pakistan. Others are from Egypt and Turkey.

The number of workers with injuries and ailments stunned Mayberry. He went to work immediately after and stayed busy around the clock for days.

Four days later, First Kuwaiti pulled him off the job after he requested an investigation of two patients who had died before he arrived from what he suspected was medical malpractice. Mayberry also recommended that the health clinics be shut down because of unsanitary conditions and mismanagement.

"There hadn't been any follow up on medical care. People were walking around intoxicated on pain relievers with unwrapped wounds and there were a lot of infections," he recalls. "The idea that there was any hygiene seemed ridiculous. I'm not sure they were even bathing."

In reports made available to the US State Department, the US Army and First Kuwaiti, Mayberry listed dozens of concerns about the clinics, which he found lacking in hot water, disinfectant, hand washing stations, properly supplied ambulances, and communication equipment. Mayberry also complained that workers' medical records were in total disarray or nonexistent, the beds were dirty, and the support staff hired by First Kuwaiti was poorly trained.

The handling of prescription drugs especially bothered him. Many of the drugs that originated from Iraq and Kuwait were unsecured, disorganized and unintelligibly labeled, he said in one memo. He found that the medical staff frequently misdiagnosed patients. Prescription pain killers were being handed out "like a candy store ... and then people were sent back to work."

Mayberry warned that the practice could cause addiction and safety hazards. "Some were on the construction site climbing scaffolding 30 feet off the ground. I told First Kuwaiti that you don't give painkillers to people who are running machinery and working on heavy construction and they said 'that's how we do it.'"

The sloppy handling of drugs may have led to the two deaths, Mayberry speculates. One worker, age 25, died in his room. The second, in his mid-30s, died at the clinic because of heart failure. Both deaths may be "medical homicide," Mayberry says -- because the patients may have been negligently prescribed improper drug treatment.

If the State Department investigated, Mayberry knows nothing of the outcome. Two State Department officials with project oversight responsibilities did not return phone calls or emails inquiring about Mayberry's allegations. The reports may have been ignored, not because of his complaints, but because Mayberry is a terrible speller, a problem compounded by an Arabic translation program loaded on his computer, he says.

Accidents Happen

Owen's account of his seven months on the job paints a similar picture to Mayberry's. Health and safety measures were essentially non-existent, he says. Not once did he witness a safety meeting. Once an Egyptian worker fell and broke his back and was sent home. No one ever heard from him again. "The accident might not have happened if there was a safety program and he had known how to use a safety harness."

Owen also says that managers regularly beat workers and that laborers were issued only one work uniform, making it difficult to go to the laundry. "You could never have it washed. Clothing got really bad -- full of sweat and dirt."

And while he often smuggled water to the work crews, medical care was a different issue. When he urged laborers to get medical treatment for rashes and sores, First Kuwaiti managers accused him of spoiling the laborers and allowing them simply to avoid work, he says.

State Department officials supervising the project are aware of many such events, but apparently do nothing, he said. Once when 17 workers climbed the wall of the construction site to escape, a State Department official helped round them up and put them in "virtual lockdown," Owen said.

Just before he resigned, hundreds of Pakistani workers went on strike in June and beat up a Lebanese manager who they accused of harassing them. Owen estimates that 375 laborers were then sent home.

'Treated Like Animals'

Recent First Kuwaiti employees agree that the accounts shared by Owen and Mayberry are accurate. One longtime supervisor claims that 50 to 60 percent of the laborers regularly protest that First Kuwaiti "treats them like animals," and routinely reduces their promised pay with confusing and unexplained deductions.

Another former First Kuwaiti manager, who declines to be named because of possible adverse consequences, says that Owen's and Mayberry's complaints only begin "to scratch the surface."

But scratching the surface is the only view yet available of what may be the most lasting monument to the US liberation and occupation of Iraq. As of now only a handful of authorized State Department managers and contractors, along with First Kuwaiti workers and contractors, are officially allowed inside the project's walls. No journalist has ever been allowed access to the sprawling 104-acre site with towering construction cranes raising their necks along the skyline.

Even this tight security is a charade, says on former high-level First Kuwaiti manager. First Kuwaiti managers living at the construction site regularly smuggle prostitutes in from the streets of Baghdad outside the Green Zone, he says.

Prostitutes, he explains are viewed as possible spies. "They are a big security risk."

But the exposure that the US occupation forces and First Kuwaiti may fear most could begin with the contractor itself and the conditions workers are forced to endure at this most obvious symbol of the American democracy project in Iraq.

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See more stories tagged with: war, iraq, profiteering, halliburton, kuwait, trafficking

David Phinney is a journalist and broadcaster based in Washington, DC, whose work has appeared in The Los Angeles Times, New York Times and on ABC and PBS. He can be contacted at: phinneydavid@yahoo.com.

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View:
ROI rules, even in a war zone
Posted by: LeftWright on Oct 26, 2006 12:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is anyone surprised by this?

Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

I hope that when this nightmare finally ends the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad will be turned into a medical facility and University for Iraqis and Americans to learn about each other in a non-violent forum.

Ignorance is the enemy of all humankind.

The truth shall set us free. Love is the only way forward.

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Big Box
Posted by: edith on Oct 26, 2006 1:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The very existence of a $592 million dollar embassy when the country is in chaos and the role of the US as a neocolonial power is challenged by most Iraqi political forces is absurd.

Aside from the corruption, the massive complex is like the castle of an Imperial Conqueror. One more insult to the locals.

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» RE: Big Box Posted by: Conservasaurus
corruption
Posted by: rsaxto on Oct 26, 2006 2:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corruption in construction of the embasy is intense and pervasive. The situation described there has a old and accurate descriptor: slavery. The USA is using slave labor to build the embasy. This is one more reason the USA should totally and completely withdraw all soldiers and other workers from Iraq. The Bushies are not only guilty of mass murder in Iraq, they are guilty of massive slave labor. They are the ugliest of Americans ever except possibly the ones who held African slaves or the ones who slaughtered American Natives. Impeach the Bushie murderers and slavers before the whole world despises and hates Americans.

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» RE: corruption Posted by: andrushka
» RE: corruption....and Posted by: Captainmagic
» RE: corruption Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: corruption....er Posted by: Captainmagic
» Paradise... Posted by: eddie torres
» RE: corruption Posted by: Jayzer
» RE: corruption Posted by: rsaxto
God Forbid
Posted by: JSquercia on Oct 26, 2006 5:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
God forbid we hire unemployed Iraqi's to do the work .

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» RE: God Forbid Posted by: rsaxto
mdruss42
Posted by: mdruss42 on Oct 26, 2006 7:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More of what happens with your and my name on it when the people running things are of the calibre that might get to clean toilets in another, more sensible society.

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Biggest embassy
Posted by: AnneP on Oct 26, 2006 7:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
has anyone in our so called liberal media asked "WHY" we need the biggest embassy in Iraq. This is just another example of the occupation mentality of this administration.

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» RE: Biggest embassy Posted by: edith
Is this democracy in action? Or colonialism?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Oct 26, 2006 7:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's unbelievable is that people still write about "Bush's goal of democracy in the Mideast" in the op-eds of the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times and other 'papers of record'.

Ask any soldier coming back from Iraq or anyone from the Middle East - unless they're on the payroll, they'll tell you that the #1 US Goal is controlling the region's oil. The first two camps set up by the military in Iraq were unofficially called Camp Exxon and Camp Shell - until the Pentagon PR department heard about it. Noone ever claimed responsibility for naming the camps - it just spread by word of mouth. Sometimes the military is a whole lot smarter then the general public!

They still have slavery in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, as this article shows - and those are our 'staunch pro-demoracy allies'?

At least under the Soviet and East German communist systems, the population knew that the 'news' was just state propaganda - a lot of people in the US actually believe everything the television tells them.

The Iraqis who work in the Green Zone are no better off than the Vietnamese employees of that other US embassy:

"Iraqis employed by the US embassy live in fear that other Iraqis will find out who they are working for. "We have begun shredding documents printed out that show local staff surnames," the cable says. "In March a few staff approached us to ask what provisions would we make for them if we evacuate."
(from http://www.counterpunch.org/patrick06212006.html June 21, 2006 - leaked cable paints grim picture of Iraq)

At least you can still find the truth on the Internet. Imagine if the NYT, the WSJ and LAT had comments sections like Alternet does - fat chance! They desperately want to control the information that reaches the public....that's the Ministry of Truth for you.

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King Leopold
Posted by: owleyes on Oct 26, 2006 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When King Leopold II of Belgium annexed the Congo for himself, he instituted policies very similar to the ones this article describes. While deliberately pitting the indigenous tribes against each other in order to spare himself all the trouble of a genocide, he recruited labor from all parts of Africa on the promise of a better life and all that other tripe. The workers came, he used them to build dams and railroads, failed to deliver on the most modest of his promises, and left them to die, which they mainly did of starvation and disease. I used to feel grateful that the world had evolved beyond the stage of open brutality, but I have understood now for some time that this was just naivety on my part.

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I want to see this in the mainstream press!
Posted by: Guy on Oct 26, 2006 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, how do we get stories like this into the mainstream press? It seems that there might be more of a place for it now with at least some people in this country are finally waking up to what is going on.

Guy

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Fantastic work by David Phinney
Posted by: eddie torres on Oct 26, 2006 11:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
CorpWatch is definitely on the right track, which is where they've been for 5 years.

Unfortunately, their work is all in vain. US taxpayers won't see a single dime returned to the treasury from fraudulent contractors.

Every incoming Congressman and Senator, whether Rep or Dem, has taken boatloads from the Privilege Class. No one has the guts or the clout to shoot their financial backers in the head.

So, Americans will spend the next 10 years suffering the consequences. Get ready to eat yourselves, 'cause Soylent Green is people!

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Not that Much Different from the USA
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 26, 2006 4:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you consider the minimum wage at the national level in the USA has not been increased in a decade, the USA is not that far behind on the issue of "slave labor." Millions toil at Wal-Mart, gas stations, McDonalds, etc, you name it, and the money earned is harldy enough for food, let alone rent. These same millions also have no or very little health insurance. Meanwhile, Bush and the Repubs have done everything possible to discourage unions in the USA and encourage companies to outsource (with tax exemptions) to slave/child labor countries like China and India. So, why should we be surprised by this. Next stop will be finding a way to bring slave labor home to the USA probably by some type of "guest worker" program for immigrants that precludes even the minimum wage. Just wait and see.

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The Future; Is In This Article
Posted by: mite on Oct 27, 2006 7:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is the information in this article a shock to you? Well get use to it, the future before you. Our conditioning and slave labor camps are fully operational in the U.S. and Canada.
There is over 800 labor camps ready for the New North American Union. There is documentation that will round up the population for these slave camps, after they collect our guns, property, and empty our bank accounts.
Think about your children and grandchild and what color you want their jump suits.

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