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 At Rising Rate, Nepalis Working Abroad Go Home in Coffins
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Posted on 12-22-16 12:42 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Excerpts from:

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2016/12/21/world/asia/ap-as-nepal-migrant-deaths.html?_r=0

Hundreds of young Nepali men excitedly wave final goodbyes to friends and family. On this day 1,500 will fly out of the Kathmandu airport bound for jobs mostly in Malaysia, Qatar or Saudi Arabia — jobs that are urgently needed by the people of this desperately poor country.

But on this day, too, six young men will come back in wooden caskets, rolled like suitcases out of baggage claim on luggage carts.

The number of Nepali workers going abroad has more than doubled since the country began promoting foreign labor in recent years: from about 220,000 in 2008 to about 500,000 in 2015. Yet the number of deaths among those workers has risen much faster in the same period. One out of every 2,500 workers died in 2008; last year one out of every 500 died, according to an Associated Press analysis of data released by Nepal's Ministry of Labour and Employment.

In total, over 5,000 workers from this small country have died working abroad since 2008— more than the number of U.S. troops killed in the Iraq War.

The causes, in many cases, have been mysterious. Natural death, heart attack or cardiac arrest are listed for nearly half the deaths. Most families are notified that their loved ones simply went to bed and never woke up. That's exactly what Saro was told.

Nepal exports iron and steel, carpets, some vegetables — but mainly, Nepal exports men. It even advertises them.

"Nepalese workers are well known for their hard work, dedication and loyalty," boasts the Nepalese Embassy website in Doha, Qatar, where a pre-World Cup construction boom employs about 1.5 million migrants. The Nepali workers "are comparatively cost effective," says the embassy, and they're experienced at "working in the extreme climatic conditions."

About 10 percent of Nepal's 28 million residents are working abroad. They send back more than $6 billion a year, amounting to about 30 percent of the country's annual revenues. Only Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan are more dependent on foreign earnings.

Sitting behind her tidy desk at the Department of Foreign Employment, spokeswoman Rama Bhattarai shrugs off the death toll.

"I'm not trying to be insensitive but we have sent millions of workers to more than 100 countries, and so yes, sometimes people will die. They die as foreign employees, they die here when a bus goes off a cliff," she says.

Authorities in Nepal say their citizens seem to die abroad more frequently than their equally vulnerable Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi and Indonesian co-workers, but the explanation for the increased mortality has been unclear.

"It's usually sleeping disease," said Kumud Khanal, vice president of the Nepal Association of Foreign Employment Agencies, which represents more than 400 registered agents. "We get the report that he was talking with friends in the evening, had dinner and went to bed, and in the morning he was found dead." The deaths are reported as a hypertension problem, he said, like heart attack or cardiac arrest.

Abroad, Nepali workers also eat twice a day, but the mainstay is whole meal flour flatbread with some pickle or a vegetable, and once a day they have chicken. Some in the Middle East say they drink less water at their desert worksites than they do in mountainous Nepal because, as Hindus, they're not allowed to use Muslim bathrooms and are forced to wait for hours.

No one has identified a single cause of SUNDS fatalities — medical journal discussions include genetics, infection and nutritional deficiencies. And in Nepal, the syndrome is not being considered at this point. Instead, Nepali authorities say it could be stress, even homesickness, brought on by physically demanding jobs in extremely hot climates.

This week Saro made the daylong journey back to Kathmandu, calmer and determined.

She spent two days at a government office. Clerks ignored her, then a date on the death certificate was deemed unacceptable. Eventually, with help, she received $2,777 from the Foreign Employment Promotion Board.


 
Posted on 12-22-16 7:22 PM     [Snapshot: 157]     Reply [Subscribe]
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What a f_cking miserable life we Nepalese have. Reading these kind of articles just makes me sad. What the f_ck needs to be done to change this? The government of Nepal has absolutely no intention of developing the country neither do its neighboring countries want to see Nepal developed. What a f_cking whirlpool we are in.
 
Posted on 12-22-16 9:20 PM     [Snapshot: 254]     Reply [Subscribe]
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Corruption and nepotism are the main cause of Nepal being where it is, and add the social backwardness also.
 
Posted on 12-22-16 9:54 PM     [Snapshot: 283]     Reply [Subscribe]
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What social backwardness? Can you explain what you mean by that? The cause of people emigrating overseas is the lack of financial stability in Nepal. Then, the second reason would be pollution. 😨 Thirdly, for me, I can't stand the cold + no heater combination. 😧
 
Posted on 12-22-16 11:37 PM     [Snapshot: 316]     Reply [Subscribe]
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I think we have grossly overrated the term 'Development'. It has probably been more than fifty years that, say average Nepali in Urban areas, have had access to education. We can conservatively assume, say, at least 30% of Nepali population are aware of what constitutes a developed society. The common variables; roads, dams, canals, irrigation, optimal agricultural production, jobs, thriving industries, access of technology and automation in industrial output, human rights, secured border, free flow of human and financial capital, policing, democracy where all citizens participate in the policy formulations, robust checks and balances of Government through strong judiciary, protection of minorities and the rights protecting vulnerable etc. All these standards and variables of 'Development' are measured against other countries that are perceived to have managed these variables in a better way. Quantifiable measure like Human Development Index comes to mind. Many of us are aware and may have read academic journals, papers and books about why poor countries remain poor. What are the maladies and what are the solution. For example, in their widely accepted book 'Why Nations Fail' the writers duo Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson concluded that it is the robustness of democratic governance and consistency of the system that supports it (The Bureaucracy) when it is rigid and structural, the nation progress. Now you and I can both say 'gimme a break' after we read that book. As if all the learned people of Nepal do not already know about it. We are at a stage where we should give up on our high expectations from ourselves (from our politicians and our society as a whole). Even with all the resources in our hand and all the good intentions, we may not make a choice that yields higher financial returns for our country. We may not agree between the varying goals of financial return, economic incentive and social rewards. To elaborate further, I was working in Legal Department of a Bank in Nepal that was owned 75% by another Financial Institution listed in LSE, a member of FTSE 100 (and 25% by Nepali public). That Financial Institution had a policy of owning 100% Equity in their subsidiaries in Asia, Africa and Middle East, wherever they could. Something tied to their capitalization policy and controls they employed from such legal structures. That was just their policy. I am not sure why (probably most of us can make an educated guess). Being a big bank, there was a mild effort to lobby through Nepal’s WTO Accession Package at Fifth Ministerial Conference in Cancun (The Cancun Accession). Nepal had already faced major problem in the area of tariff binding, in particular for agricultural commodities. On the areas of services (Banking included) Nepal was asked to undertake commitment to open up 70 services sub-sectors where Nepal was also requested to make commitments for 100 percent equity participation by foreigners within a period of five years. However, Nepal stood firm on its position and only allowed up to 80 percent foreign equity participation. With WTO Accession on those terms, it was easy for NRB to deny the request for buyback of 25% publicly traded stocks (of that Bank). Now assume you are democratically elected and all powerful Prime Minister of Nepal with all good intentions for your country. That decision may not sound too awful. But probably you may still get plenty of backlash from this same Sajha Community on why did you even allow 80% Equity Ownership by Foreigner in sensitive Service Sub Sectors? But for Carlos Slim and Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud of the worlds it does not matter if you are Lichtenstein or Isle of Mann or Panama. They want a 100% Owned Opaque but Safe Wholesale Bank. Not in our watch. Who is for that kind of permission? This is just one juxtaposition that contradicts a good macro economic and social policy agenda with plain vanilla financial mathematics. Just one. At this stage of complexity in Nepal we have now created legacy of cross conflicts and multitude of interests that infringes upon one another. For Example try hypothetically creating a Sajha User Community Memorandum that lays out the Rules for Participants and Readers of this Website. The Ambrosias of this community will immediately impinge upon the trolling rights of Divorce Guys of this community. A policy granting 100% land owning rights to foreigners will immediately give up Sovereign Rights of Nepalis because Indians who have more money will start buying Land. 100% Ownership in Media is a No No because you will only read how good PM Modi is in the News Papers. But these examples are Black and White types. There are many gray areas in policy making, the variables of which are unknown, therefore the outcomes of decision either helps one group or harms another. Therefore a unanimously agreed and popular policy decisions are almost impossible to achieve. Then what is the purpose of my Litany? This is not a useful or a unique example. You might say, people like me who have pessimistic outlook are the reason why our country is lagging behind. The Youth of Nepal ought to be working together for one holistic and ideal purpose: The ‘Development’ of our country. But this multitude of interest and conflicts in Policy Level Decisions are not unique to Least Developed Countries. Even in US, with world’s highest GDP, the Ghetto Citizens of Chicago and Philly do not have access to the same kind of education or access to wealth that you and I have. Then there is no singularity to this problem. The Fiscal Conservatives tell us that they should not be given handouts (food stamps, WIC) because they will be parasites. The Liberal Progressives tell us that they should be allowed to Abort (fund Planned Parenthood), they should not be allowed to carry Guns (Gun Rights Restrictions), they should be able to go to the same schools that high property tax payers send their children to (with better Charter Schools, re-districting of School Districts etc). When I stroll around Ghettos of South Side Chicago, I constantly ask (to myself) why Brother, why are you so doped in Weed? Can’t you go to the the Public Library and read? But that is a typical Brown (Nepali) Supremacist in me thinking like that, without the context of Black Oppression and history of gentrification of suburbs. My point being – it may be virtually too late to expect that we will change for good. And then we will have a good constitution. A progressive economy to look forward to. Those are all ideals that we should leave behind. Seriously, we are wrong in expecting a conventional ‘Development’ outcome for our country. That is NOT going to happen. We are seeing that old ‘Capitalism’ is gradually failing (Kudos to Tom Piketty for Capital in twenty first century). We already saw the fate of ‘Marxism’.

My point is only that our conventional wisdom about approach to development will not work for our country. It is not working for India or Philippines. You may say it is working by showing and comparing HDIs and other Development Indexes for China, Botswana, India and Phillipines. But go to Siwan in Bihar, Isabela in Basilan, Philippines, some rural place in Botswana and the HDIs will become all too clear. I don’t have two hundred years to wait for Nepal to have electric trams connecting Siraha to Dang. That is going to happen but not through conventional Government and Politicians of today. Which is why I say, we ditch this expectation about economic development by the Government for the people. The real accesses to the riches of the world will come through Global Citizens that push the boundaries of legacy political borders and status quo. The Mark Zuckerbergs, the Steve Jobs, the Mahabir Puns, The Malala Yousafzai and the Ujjwal Thapas of the world. Where current set of rules, e.g Petrol = OPEC, Navy/Air Force = NATO, Foreign Aid = G20 will gradually be challenged by disruptive technologies. Some of us may be at the forefront of those disruptions and many of us may not. But it is NOT the consensus “Government” and friendly Himal, Pahad, Terai that will accomplish such feat.

Source used:
http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/policy/cdp/cdp_background_papers/bp2014_23.pdf
 
Posted on 12-23-16 9:02 AM     [Snapshot: 416]     Reply [Subscribe]
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GirlBoss, please read the article, not only comments. Please tell me if you still think people in the article (and majority of people) left the country because of the causes you wrote.
 
Posted on 12-24-16 12:55 PM     [Snapshot: 479]     Reply [Subscribe]
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at the same time lakhs of indians come to work in nepal and nepal is one of the biggest foreign remittance source for india. also all nepali big business houses are foreign angikrits and we are just chowkidars and dumb customers for them. all this because of our lahure tradition.
 


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