https://dailyasianage.com/news/160662/evaluation-of-rule-and-policy-of-sendingworkers-abroad EDEN BUILDING TO STOCK EXCHANGE Published: 12:27 AM, 27 January 2019
Evaluation of rule and policy of sending workers abroad M S Siddiqui Thousands of men and women from South Asia, South-East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa including Bangladesh are migrating to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region for employment in construction, manufacturing and agricultural sectors, in food services and the retail trade, and in private domestic services as home workers, gardeners, drivers and nannies. The migration for employment/ migrant worker are defined in the ILO migrant workers instruments (Article 11, Migration for Employment Convention (Revised), 1949 (No. 97); and Article 11, Migrant Workers (Supplementary Provisions) Convention, 1975 (No. 143). Migration is not new in the history of mankind. The rights to gain job in other countries through migration is a right of persons to improve their economic life, actually can be said as universal human rights, since it is part of the "right to life". (Paulina Tambakaki, 2010). By the end of twentieth century's, the moral truth of human rights clearly recognized by the international community (Robert Meister; 2011). It has got momentum with globalization of trade and development of new concept of trade in service. Under the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), services can be traded internationally in four different ways. The Mode 4 refers to the presence of persons of one WTO member in the territory of another for the purpose of providing a service (WTO, 1995). The rights and privileges are often violated by the employers. Historically, non-nationals have enjoyed very little legal protection. The development of human rights, as a set of rights protecting all individuals regardless of their status, has brought new forms of protection to aliens (Tiburcio 2001). The basic rights further has been formulated in details by the United Nations (UN) in 1990 with UN Convention concerning, the protection of the rights of all migrant worker and members of their families (ICMW) entry into force on 2003, (Jennifer Yau, 2005). It took 13 years for ratification and adaption by the member countries. The convention has elaborated all the rights of the migrants and the ICMW as modern Magna Charta of migrant workers (L PennaRao; 1993) They Convention introduced the principle of non-discrimination, which permits only reasonable differences in treatment between nationals and non-nationals and grants migrants many civil and political human rights (Fitzpatrick 2003). One study (McCormack, 2015) finds that the workers' experience in exploitation often began at home country through deceptive recruitment practices, contract substitution and payment of