They sold their homes. They said goodbye to their families. After paying recruiters $20,000 for visas to take part in this nation's H-2B guest worker program, they traveled from India to Pascagoula, Miss. There, the Indian welders and pipe fitters were promised good jobs at the Signal International shipyard and the chance to bring their families here.
Like many of our relatives, they came to the United States in search of the American Dream.
Yet, what they found was modern-day forced labor. They were forced to live in a cramped space with two dozen other workers—and pay more than $1,000 per month for the privilege. Toilet and shower facilities were few, and they were not allowed off-site to purchase groceries to replace the company's intolerable food.
In April, I described here how the workers left the shipyard and traveled to Washington, D.C., to seek help from Congress in a struggle that resembled the battle for human dignity throughout the civil rights era. The Indian workers described their journey to Washington as a “satyagraha,” or truth action, in the tradition of Mahatma Gandhi.
They met with members of Congress and staff, including the Congressional Hispanic Caucus and the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus. They discussed the need for Congress to make fundamental changes to the H-2B system.
But they wanted to take an even bigger step, one in keeping with the momentous move they made giving up everything to seek the American Dream. So, on May 14, several of the workers went on a hunger strike. They camped out in Lafayette Park, just steps from the White House. The hunger strike led to a commitment by congressional leaders to hold a hearing on Signal's complicity to human trafficking and a visit to the United States by members of the Indian Parliament. Except for a few union blogs and other small media outlets, their sacrifice generated little press until publication of an article in The New York Times a few days ago.
On the eighth day of the water-only hunger strike, Christopher Glory was rushed to the hospital for strike-related health problems. In all, five of the hunger strikers were hospitalized, including Paul Konar, who went without food for 23 days.
The men took their action to the Indian Embassy, where they remained until yesterday, the 40th day of their hunger strike. We joined them in a rally at the U.S. Department of Justice to demand they are given full protection while the investigation into their charges is completed. Because while the corporate media may have ignored them, the eye of Big Brother has not.
In letter to Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), chairman of the U.S. House Education and Labor Committee, the hunger strikers say that since filing a federal lawsuit alleging human trafficking by Signal, they have been under surveillance by federal immigration authorities and they fear they may be deported. They asked Miller to request the Justice Department:
Release us from the terror of covert surveillance and deportation through a grant of continued presence…so that we may safely participate in the…anti-trafficking investigation. The investigation is critical both to bring these traffickers to justice and to expose how transnational trafficking rings, including U.S. corporations, recruiters and lawyers, are manipulating the structural power imbalances in the U.S. guest worker program.
Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) and 18 other members of the House signed a letter calling on Attorney General Michael Mukasey to
immediately grant continued presence to the guest workers trafficked to from India to the United States on H-2B visas for work in the shipyards of Signal International.
After yesterday's rally, a delegation delivered a copy of Kucinich’s letter to officials at Justice and asked for a meeting to discuss their continued presence in the United States to participate in the official investigation into their charges. Justice officials promised to meet with them soon. Kucinich has committed to hold hearings on the abuse of the workers.
Saket Soni, director of the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice (NOWCRJ), which is helping the workers, puts it bluntly:
Companies like Signal are using the program to hollow out key American industries like hospitality, shipbuilding and construction. They are replacing well-paid U.S. workers with exploitable, temporary guest workers.
Midway into the hunger strike, one of our staff from the AFL-CIO, who visited the men at the Indian Embassy, reflected on his encounter:
Of the original group, only one—Paul Konar, the oldest, who just had his 54th birthday this past week—has lasted the entire time.
I had been feeling a bit guilty that I hadn’t gone over in a while and I’m so glad I did. The site coordinator now is one of the students who fasted at Georgetown University a couple of years back. I think they are in capable hands.
Paul is, of course, much thinner than when I saw him last and his voice is weak. He slept most of the time I was there. When we talked, he spoke with an almost spiritual sense of conviction about doing this so others wouldn’t have to endure the same exploitation he and his fellow workers had suffered. He said “prayer is my food.” There wasn’t a trace of bitterness or anger. He seemed almost serene.
I forget sometimes that struggle isn’t just about tactics and strategy (though those things are undeniably important). It’s also about sacrifice and courage. Paul may not know that his campaign is an uphill battle that still may not have found much of a spotlight or a patron. If he does know, I’m pretty sure he doesn’t care much. The successful hunger strike at Georgetown lasted nine days. Gandhi fasted for 21 days. Tomorrow will be day 20 for Paul. Amazing.
Konar says their actions are about much more than their own plight.
This is not about green cards, it is about justice. We want to win not just for us, but for workers who come after us. The United States is a wonderful country. People come here with hope, but some end up in modern-day slavery like we experienced.
(You can help the hunger strikers by making a donation to their struggle. Send checks to the National Immigration Law Center, 3435 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 2850, Los Angeles, CA, 90010. Put NOWCRJ/IWC on the check.)
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I worked for a Fortune-50 client where East Indian labor was imported, dumped in an overcrowded apartment with no orientation, and seated three to a cubicle in the office. Any infraction meant termination and loss of visa. One young manager discovered that her team had been grocery shopping at 7-Eleven for a year because nobody had told them about Cub or Rainbow. She took on the responsibilities to orient the workers, because nobody else had.
So, Tula!
We had a similar situation up here in Montana - workers from Guatemala I believe. 8 people in a 2-bedroom apartment and being charged $800 apiece for rent and the company owned the apartments. They were not allowed to move anywhere else. No transportation - this is a small town with very limited public transit so their ability to grocery shop etc was almost nothing.
One guy got injured on the job and got fired and kicked out of the apartment - he has no way and no money to get home and is now technically in violation on his visa.
What a bunch of scumbags.
What ships is Signal building down there? Are any of them for the US Military? If so, that’s even more unacceptable; ships that are part of a fleet which protects Preznit Bunnypants “beloved Freedoms” being built by exploited slave labor.
In the 21st Century.
When Scott Adams (Dilbert creator) once characterized management as “Evil Corporate Overlords” he wasn’t being funny… he was being prescient.
Thank you, Tula.
Like some kind of freakish imitation of Democracy, our system has morphed into something that allows all manner of mistreatment - Where is the Department of Justice’s pro-active posture? Where is, of all people, Elaine Chow?
Indians protesting imperial overseers and their corporate partners? Where have I heard that before . . .
I have the feeling that the DOJ and Signal International are about to learn the same lesson the British did in the 1930s over the Salt Tax. (quote above per wiki)
the insourcing of outsourcing, with imaginary/invisible benefits!
signal was able to make this story a whisper how…?
I look at this the same way I look at the whole thing about Habeas Corpus ‘not being applicable’at Gitmo - to me, it’s the same attitude: Our laws only apply to people who look like us, think like us, act like us. If you are someone who we can exploit for our own benefit, then our laws don’t apply to you - whether you are working on US soil or in the Mariannas Islands or wherever. If you are someone who we have decided is an enemy of the US and we capture you, we have the right to totally ignore the US rule of law(and international treaties,and the Geneva Conventions, and basic moral standards) and put you in a prison someplace and torture you and it’s all ‘fine”(as John McCain would say) because you are not American and that place is not on US soil. It’s all ‘fine’.
And that attitude allows all sorts of corruption and abuse to take place.
BTW, from Glennzilla today:
McBu’ush simply must be defeated.
Bobby - I have this morbid vision of Kennedy, Stevens, Souter and Ginsburg checking in with one another first thing in the morning - “still breathing”? “Not dead yet!!” They know that their survival is our only firewall against the Roberts, Alito, Scalia and Thomas.
One more Bu’ushist SCOTUS seat and we have Oligarchy. Ugh…
It is a terrifying thought. One thing though…there is no way at this point in time that Congress will confirm another SCOTUS judge nominated by W. Now, if McBush were to win….I doubt they’d confirm one chosen by him either…JMHO
Thank you Tula. That sounds like slavery to me.
Not really sure who they’re building them for, but according to their site, at least one at the Mississippi shipyard is a submersible, so the U.S. government is a safe bet.
Here’s the problem also though….Ted Kennedy, Byrd…they go, and we have Pukes in the Senate in the majority with Darth as the tie vote….Specter a problem on their side…I can’t think of any others off hand..
Right, of course. But, McBu’ush will do the dirty work if elected.
Sounds like slavery to me too. Hmmmm….they are aliens on US territory…maybe they can do something about as of today???
If he gets elected…that is one more Repub not in the Senate…there’s that too. It could end up being a stalemate term on absolutely everything.
this is why unions are important - at least they’d keep a lot of these type corporations from bringing in soo much slave labor imo
Tula, the NILC (National Immigration Law Center) accepts online credit card donations as well.
More informative link here. There’s three projects, all pretty big. It actually looks more like oil industry related stuff. Since one is described as.
Sounds like oil drilling to me.
Alito. Roberts.
I am not sanguine.
Thanks so much for the info. I meant to check that and it slipped by me.
I guess St. Reagan is the patron saint of slave labor.
I’m too lazy for paper checks and stamps and envelopes!
I agree.
News: Cedar Rapids is now flooding…in the City. Awful. 3900+ homes evacuated…
I did a ‘digg’ on this story -
It’s really terrible. I wonder how long before they have to suffer something as bad, namely McCain and Bush visiting and pretending to care in a quest for votes?
i remember reagan from busting the air controllers union - showwed wingers how it can be done…..
CNN finally reporting that FEMA gave away $85 million worth of items designated for Katrina victims.
No kidding!
You too can endanger the public, fuck the unions (PATCO in this instance) and win courage points, just like Ronnie Raygun!
That’s lots of boxes of Neil Bush’s software!
I also did a Spotlight for ten papers. Let’s get behind this, folks - the more noise we make, the greater the chance that this will get covered and these people will get some help!!
Thought you might like to have this as a bookmark as the SCOTUS decision gets more involved:
http://www.scotuswiki.com/inde.....ah_v._Bush
Yeah, and PATCO endorsed Ronnie over Jimmy.
With friends like that…
Don’t expect much of anything good from Elaine Chao. She is married to Sen. Mitch McConnell (Republican of Kentucky). What do oligarchs care about mere human beings?
thank you once again, Tula.
Do you think Scalia’s arteries are hardening? He seems to be quite irrational nowadays.