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26th October 2005
The
new irish slave trade
The work permit system
in Ireland is an utter disgrace. It is a disgrace to the Fianna Fail and
Progressive Democrat parties which brought the system in. It is a disgrace
to Dail Eireann that it was passed, and to every TD who voted for it.
And its a disgrace that Irish people have allowed it to continue
with such dispassion.
The work permit system
reinstates the fuedal concept of serfdom. It ties the worker to the employer.
The employer gets the work permit instead of the worker.
Think about that for a minute. Think of the power that gives an employer
over a worker. If the employer exploits a worker, there is very little
the worker can do about it.
That would be outrageous if the worker was Irish, who could speak the
language, had a network of friends and family and was generally clued
in to the way things are done here.
But its not applied to Irish workers. Its applied to people
who come here from far poorer and less developed countries. People who
cannot speak English. People who have spent their life savings getting
here and cannot afford to be sent back. People who are supporting their
families back home.
Thats a nice hand to have if you are an unscrupulous bastard, which
is unfortunately the case with all-too-many Irish employers. Any fool
could see what would happen under such a system.
And so it has transpired. People working with migrant workers on work
permits are now hearing a litany of abuse and exploitation of these people.
Tales of people being paid e2 an hour. People being subjected to arbitary
deductions of wages. People being deprived of their legal rights and being
threatened when they enquire about those rights.
Some of the workers are also housed by their employers so they face a
double sanction if they lose their jobs.
Now the Work Permits Bill 2005 is being brought forward to modernise the
system. The Bill does make some headway in that prevents employers taking
passports and bank account documents; and makes directors responsible
for breaches of work permit law.
It also, superficially, gives workers the work permits. Yet although the
worker is supposed to be granted the permit, the work permit is still
tied to the employer.
This is completely unacceptable. People will continue to be abused and
exploited under this system.
There are just 30 Labour Inspectors to police tens of thousands of migrant
workers (and every other worker). They cant act until they get a
complaint. Whos going to complain? The guy who is dependent on the
employer for his job, his home and right to stay in Ireland? Its
a joke. A sick joke.
If there has to be work permits then there should be at least a state
agency between the worker and the employer; or freedom of movement between
all employers using the work permit system.
We have too much history as a people, far too much history, to allow this
disgrace to continue.
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