Authors: Kevin Bales,Ron. Soodalter
Tags: #University of California Press
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all passports be returned and that such practices “cease and desist”
immediately.7
They didn’t. In July 2007, two American civilian contractors who
had worked on the embassy testified before the House Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform, chaired by California congressman
Henry A. Waxman. One of the two, native Floridian John Owens, had
worked for twenty-seven years building U.S. embassies around the
world, sometimes in areas troubled by violence and corruption. But
after working for seven months as a foreman in Iraq, he quit. “I’ve never
seen a project more fucked up. Every U.S. labor law was broken,” he
said.8 Owens testified that the workers’ living and working conditions
were “deplorable” and described how workers were “verbally and phys-
ically abused,” forced to live in cramped trailers, denied basic needs like
shoes and gloves, and made to work twelve-hour days, seven days a
week, with time off only for prayer, and how they “had their salaries
docked for petty infractions.”9
The second contractor to testify was Rory J. Mayberry. He told the
committee that First Kuwaiti managers had asked him to escort fifty-
one Filipino workers onto a flight to Baghdad. The plane, Mayberry
recalled, was an unmarked fifty-two-seater—“an antique piece of
shit.”10 Mayberry noted with surprise that “all of our tickets said we
were going to Dubai,” whereupon a First Kuwaiti manager told him
not to let any of the laborers know they were going to Iraq. John Owens
recalled the same experience when he saw the workers’ boarding
passes: “I thought there was some sort of mix up and I was getting on
the wrong plane.”11 In Mayberry’s words, the workers were “kid-
napped by First Kuwaiti to work on the U.S. Embassy.” After their
passports were taken in Baghdad, they were “smuggled into the Green
Zone.”12
Mayberry, an emergency medical technician, was horrified at the
number of injuries and ailments among the 2,500 or so foreign laborers.
Infected, unattended sores and unbandaged wounds were common.
There was a lack of disinfectant, hot water, any form of hygiene.
Prescription pain killers, he testified, “were being handed out like a
candy store . . . and then people were sent back to work. . . . 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.’” After he requested an investigation into the deaths of
two laborers as a result of what he believes could have been “medical
homicide,” Mayberry was fired.13
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Owens confirmed the inhumane treatment. He testified that health
and safety measures were nonexistent and that serious injuries took
place as a result. When he advised workers to seek medical help for their
injuries and illnesses, he was accused by the firm’s managers of “spoil-
ing the workers and allowing them to simply skip work.” At one point,
seventeen laborers tried to escape by climbing over the wall; they were
recaptured—with the help of a State Department official—and put in
“virtual lockdown.”14
First Kuwaiti responded in writing that the charges were “ludi-
crous.”15 State Department Inspector General Howard J. Krongard dis-
puted the charges in a follow-up hearing, stating that his “limited
review” and two visits to Baghdad had failed to verify the claims:
“Nothing came to our attention that caused us to believe that trafficking-
in-persons violations”—or any other serious abuses—“occurred at the
construction workers’ camp at the new embassy compound.”16 In a
written submission the antislavery organization Free the Slaves pointed
to serious flaws in Krongard’s report. They noted that the State
Department’s own Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report for 2007 revealed
“a structure conducive to trafficking in persons” throughout much of
the Middle East. This includes sponsorship laws that give employers
control over workers’ ability to leave the work site, their job, or the
country. The TIP report observed “Employers commonly do not provide
workers with documents legitimizing their employment in the coun-
try . . . and refuse to sign exit permits allowing victims to leave the coun-
try, effectively holding the worker hostage.” Most damning, the Free the
Slaves submission showed that while Krongard had gone to investigate a
charge of human trafficking, he failed
to recognize the significance of, and appropriately characterize as warn-
ing signs: . . . the contractor’s practice of holding employee passports;
terms of employment that raise concerns about exploitation, including
the amount of payment relative to national standards, payment by the
month rather than the day or hour, and a 14 day workweek, with no days
off; the requirement to prepay recruitment, travel or other fees before
obtaining control of earnings; and the fact that most workers interviewed
either originated in countries whose laws prohibit work in Iraq, because
of the strong possibility of abuse, and/or whose countries are identified by
State’s TIP report as having a significant number of victims of severe traf-
ficking to the Middle East.17
For his part, Chairman Waxman was also dissatisfied with
Krongard’s methodology and conclusions. The inspector general, said
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Waxman, “had followed highly irregular procedures in exonerating the
prime contractor, First Kuwaiti Trading Company, of charges of labor
trafficking.”18 On September 18, 2007, Waxman began an inquiry into
accusations that Krongard had repeatedly hindered fraud and abuse
investigations in both Iraq and Afghanistan. The allegations were sup-
ported by information from several of Krongard’s current and former
employees, some of whom sought whistle-blower status to protect them
from punishment for malfeasance. Congressman Waxman stated to
Krongard, “One consistent element in these allegations is that you
believe your foremost mission is to support the Bush administration,
especially with respect to Iraq and Afghanistan, rather than act as an
independent and objective check on waste, fraud and abuse on behalf of
U.S. taxpayers.”19 Playing politics may be business as usual, but when
politics and business combine to abet slavery and then hide it, some-
thing is terribly wrong in our government.
I N T H E WA K E O F K AT R I N A
Any American who is not aware of the dismal federal response to
Hurricane Katrina has not been paying attention. A significant part of
our country lay in ruins, and much of it still does. In the aftermath of
the hurricane a door opened to abuse and human trafficking. The need
for immediate, cheap labor to help repair the storm’s damage—and to
rebuild order in the devastated region—was met with an influx of
thousands of laborers. Some were U.S. citizens, others foreigners—
documented and not. Some came on their own, seeking work, while
others were brought in by smugglers, with the usual promises of steady
work at a decent wage. Meanwhile, the combination of physical devas-
tation and government negligence fostered a breakdown of order, and as
human rights attorney Cathy Albisa puts it, Mississippi and Louisiana
were “like the Wild West all over again.”20 The opportunities for forced
labor were rife, and opportunist criminals wasted no time. When the rule
of law breaks down, exploitation and slavery flourish, imposing the con-
trol of the weak by the strong, the hopeful by the greedy.
It is sometimes difficult to distinguish between a case of trafficking
and one involving harsh labor conditions. This is especially the case
with undocumented, “illegal” workers. “The very act of criminalizing a
person’s existence,” says Albisa, “creates these blurry lines.”21 In a
number of instances, the government determined that, while uncon-
scionable, the conditions under which workers suffered were really
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nothing more than instances of unfortunate working arrangements—
some of which included labor law violations—and did not impede the
workers from leaving to find other employment. Some cases, such as the
Imperial Nurseries case in Connecticut, leave room for doubt.22 Still,
while the seeds of trafficking might exist within worker exploitation,
they don’t always blossom into full-blown slavery—at least to the extent
that they can be proven in court.
In November 2005—shortly after Katrina hit—the online magazine
Salon.com
published a report by journalist Roberto Lovato entitled
“Gulf Coast Slaves.” It documented the Halliburton company’s decep-
tive hiring, mistreatment, and discarding of hundreds of undocumented
Latino workers brought in for post-Katrina cleanup on U.S. naval bases
in Louisiana and Mississippi. KBR was the main subcontractor.23
According to Lovato, President Bush paved the way for labor abuses
by relaxing labor standards immediately after the hurricane through his
suspension of the Davis-Bacon Act, a law that requires contractors to
pay workers the “prevailing wages” for government contract work. Bush
also removed the requirement that laborers had to fill out employment
eligibility forms. Without them, Halliburton and its subcontractors
were free to hire undocumented laborers and to pay them as little as
they chose—or, as happened in some cases, nothing at all. Finally, under
pressure, Bush reinstated both policies, but not before a tremendous
amount of money had been made on the backs of abused workers.
Remarkably, given that these are paid for by tax dollars, the
Halliburton contracts are secret. Despite the number and size of the
jobs awarded the megacontractor, “there is an utter lack of trans-
parency.”24 Laborers’ International Union of North America vice presi-
dent James Hale said, “To my knowledge, not one member of Congress
has been able to get their hands on a copy of a contract that was handed
out to Halliburton or others. There is no central registry of Katrina con-
tracts available. No data on the jobs or scope of the work.” Although
his legislative staff have attempted to obtain copies of contracts, they
were refused for reasons of “national security.” He adds, “If the con-
tracts handed out to these primary contractors are opaque, then the
contracts being let to the subcontractors are just plain invisible. . . . This
is an open invitation for exploitation, fraud and abuse.”25
What we do know is that Halliburton hired KBR—which hired sub-
contractors, who hired subcontractors, until the list of companies with
initials for names formed a “shadowy labyrinth . . . a no man’s land
where nobody seems to be accountable for the hiring—and abuse—of
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these workers.”26 This line of deniability ran all the way to the job bro-
kers who hired the workers. These job brokers customarily find work-
ers by frequenting job fairs and advertising in Spanish-language
newspapers in various cities with large Hispanic populations.
According to Lovato, the ads “typically promise room, board and pay
in the range of $1200 a week.”27 One worker later said, “They gave us
two meals a day and sometimes only one.”28 Said another, “Mr.
Donaldson [CEO of KBR subcontractor DRS Cosmotech] promised us
we’d live in a hotel or a house. We lived in tents and only had hot water
that smelled of petroleum.”29 A third man, who had been working on
the naval base at Belle Chasse, Louisiana, reported, “The food was
going to be free, and rent, but they gave us nothing. They weren’t feed-
ing us. We ate cookies for five days. Cookies, nothing else.”30
Ultimately, when the workers received no pay whatsoever for their
weeks of work, the job brokers claimed they themselves had not been
paid by the subcontractors who had hired
them,
and so on up the
ladder, with avowals of nonpayment at every rung, all the way to
Halliburton—which denied the “existence of undocumented workers
providing labor for their operations on the Gulf Coast bases.”31 This
was a lie. Logging phone calls from workers, the Mississippi Immigrant
Rights Alliance estimated a presence of over five hundred undocu-
mented laborers on Belle Chasse alone. And an October 2005 raid on
Belle Chasse by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) estab-
lished the presence of undocumented workers, as did “visits to the
naval bases and dozens of interviews by
Salon.
”32
The physical conditions under which the laborers worked are numb-
ingly familiar. For those who didn’t sleep in tents, there were run-down
trailer parks, reminiscent of those in which migrant farmworkers are
forced to live, where “up to 19 unpaid, unfed and undocumented KBR