Migrant Workers Hit Hard by Lebanon Crises, UN Warns
Migrant workers in Lebanon have been hit hard by its multiple crises and half of them left jobless, the UN warned Wednesday, calling for voluntary returns to be scaled up.
The combined effects of Lebanon’s
economic collapse, the COVID-19 pandemic and last year’s deadly Beirut port
explosion have worsened already dire living conditions for migrant workers.
The International Organization for
Migration found that “50 percent of the respondent migrants reported being
unemployed, with the majority losing their jobs in the last quarter of 2020.”
The UN’s migration agency also
said more than half of those surveyed said they were unable to meet their food
needs, AFP reported.
The plight of migrants workers in
Lebanon – including many from the Philippines, Ethiopia, Bangladesh and Sierra
Leone – has come under increased scrutiny in recent years over cases of
mistreatment.
The IOM said many respondents said
they were still being subjected to abuse, including beatings, sexual harassment
and denial of wages.
“As the economic situation continues to
deteriorate and employment opportunities remain limited, migrants’
vulnerability to exploitation and abuse is likely to increase,” said Mathieu
Luciano, the agency’s Lebanon chief.
The Lebanese currency has lost
more than 85 percent of its value against the dollar, in an economic crisis that
has sent poverty levels above 50 percent of the population.
The UN survey found that around
half of respondents wanted to go home but were stuck in Lebanon.
Many are unable to pay for return
flight and in some cases are not free to do so as a result of an infamous
sponsorship system known as “Kafala” whereby they relinquish their passports to
the agencies that find them work.
“Clearly, and based on this worrying assessment,
there is an urgent need to rapidly scale up voluntary return assistance
services in Lebanon,” said Luciano.
The IOM said it was seeking funding to offer more voluntary returns to the thousands of migrant workers stranded in crisis-hit Lebanon.