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NYU Workers Are Still Subject to ‘Abuse and Exploitation’ After Promised Reforms

Reports of human rights abuses continue to haunt NYU’s overseas projects.

Ryan McNamara and StudentNation

February 23, 2015

Students organize for the rights of academic workers at NYU’s New York campus. (Photo by Rebecca Nathanson)

This article was originally published by the NYU Local and is reposted here with permission.

If you think NYU’s administration learned its lesson from the alleged abuses of migrant laborers, Human Rights Watch would like to tell you otherwise.

On Tuesday, the prominent NGO released a new report on the alleged exploitation of the migrant workers who built NYU Abu Dhabi, as well as projects for the Guggenheim and Louvre. Human Rights Watch has released two earlier reports on the issue in 2009 and 2012.

After the 2009 report chronicled several abuses, NYU agreed to create a statement of labor values. These include prohibitions against forced labor, harassment or abuse, and discrimination. Human Rights Watch has praised the guidelines as a step forward.

Nickolas McGeehan, a lead researcher for the newest report, said that although these guidelines are commendable on paper, “the enforcement mechanisms are very clearly deficient.”

Discussing the research conducted for the most recent study, McGeehan stated, “When we went back we found the same problems.” Workers reported not having passports, paying recruitment fees that were not reimbursed, and living in squalid housing conditions.

“The most serious allegations are the deportations,” said McGeehan. In 2013, a few years after NYU had implemented its statement of labor values, hundreds of workers building NYU Abu Dhabi were arbitrarily deported. The workers had organized a strike to protest their working conditions and pay. In response, the police and BK Gulf, the contractor NYU hired to build its Abu Dhabi site, collaborated to arrest forty workers they accused of leading the strike. These workers were deported after nine days in prison. Between 200 and 350 other workers would be deported as well.

At a Tuesday panel hosted by The NYU Coalition for Fair Labor, Sean O’Driscoll, the journalist who co-authored the New York Times exposé on the abuses, discussed the strike and subsequent deportation. In October 2013, the leadership of BK Gulf agreed to negotiate with the striking workers. But according to O’Driscoll, it was a trap. A BK Gulf manager photographed any of the workers who spoke up at the meeting. “Those photos were passed on to the police who turned up at the camp the next day in riot gear, wearing balaclavas, machine guns, batons.”

O’Driscoll continued, “it was hard for me…to believe that these were NYU workers because NYU was supposed to set the real high standard not just in the [United Arab Emirates] but in the Gulf.”

In May 2014, NYU spokesperson John Beckman issued a statement to NYU Local, writing, “To any worker who was not treated in line with the standards we set and whose circumstances went undetected and unremedied, we offer our apologies.”

Joined by others in the panel, O’Driscoll expressed his wishes that NYU would be willing to compensate the deported workers, as a first step in addressing the most recent abuses. Some of the workers interviewed by HRW said they were in debt, despite having worked long hours, six days a week. NYU President John Sexton, a vocal champion of the Abu Dhabi expansion, is scheduled to be awarded a $2.5 million bonus this year.

 

Ryan McNamaraRyan McNamara is an undergraduate student reporter for the NYU Local.


StudentNationFirst-person accounts from student activists, organizers and journalists reporting on youth-oriented movements for social justice, economic equality and tolerance.


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