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Human Rights Watch accused the Abu Dhabi authorities and global institutions of failing to tackle abuse of foreign workers and called for contractual guarantees from construction firms. AFP Photo World
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ABU DHABI: Human Rights Watch accused the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday of exploiting thousands of Asian workers hired to build museums and art galleries on a showcase island.

Rights groups have criticised conditions in which labourers work in the UAE, a Gulf Arab country whose population has shot up to 4.5 million in recent years due to rapid urban development.

Many workers are housed in shanty camps; work long hours during intense summer heat and humidity, and employers often retain their passports. Criticised internationally, the UAE has taken some measures in response to the complaints.

‘While the UAE government has moved to improve housing conditions and ensure the timely payment of wages in recent years, many labour abuses remain commonplace,’ the report by the New York-based HRW said.

The HRW report refers to Saadiyat Island which is planned to be the centre of a showcase ‘cultural district’ in the UAE capital Abu Dhabi. French museum The Louvre and New York's Guggenheim Museum are to open branches there.

The report documents ‘a cycle of abuse that leaves migrant workers deeply indebted, badly paid, and unable to stand up for their rights or even quit their jobs’.

‘Workers face the choice of quitting their jobs while still owing thousands of dollars for the unlawful recruiting fees, or continuing to work in exploitative conditions. Virtually all complained of low pay and poor-quality healthcare.’

The Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC), which is in charge of the development, said construction had not yet begun and special care was being taken over workers' welfare.

A statement said contractors were obliged not to seize passports and encouraged to pay workers promptly. It said it would implement an HRW suggestion to provide contract copies in the language of the workers, not only Arabic and English.

‘TDIC has been building the Saadiyat Construction Village, one of the most advanced accommodation and living facilities for construction workers in the Middle East, with the first 5,000 residents to be welcomed in July 2009,’ it said.

The UAE plans to set up special labour courts, encourage ‘model’ housing, and allow workers to switch jobs if employers delay wages by two months, the state news agency cited senior labour ministry official Humaid bin Demas saying on Tuesday.

The UAE is fending off other accusations of rights abuse.

Concerns over the conduct of a member of the ruling family have the potential to stall a multi-billion-dollar nuclear energy deal with the United States.

The UAE says it has detained a member of the ruling family Sheikh Issa bin Zayed al-Nahayan over a video aired on U.S.television networks where he appears to torture an Afghan grain trader.

Washington has criticised the UAE for human trafficking, including maids and other workers trapped into paying fees while their passports are confiscated - Reuters.

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