Indians allowed to leave Bahrain
One hundred Indian workers banned from leaving Bahrain for years are to be allowed to go home, their embassy and their former employer in the kingdom, Nass Corporation, said on Thursday. “Nass has accepted the embassy’s request to lift the court clamped travel ban on all the erstwhile workers, who ran away from the company” shortly after arriving in the Gulf kingdom in 2006, a diplomat at Indian embassy said.
Earlier this week, US-based rights group Avaaz said it had launched a campaign in June urging the company to hand the stranded workers their passports back after one of them committed suicide.
According to Avaaz, the workers fled the company after Nass offered them lower wages upon their arrival in Bahrain than those agreed upon in their employment contracts.
Nass Corporation “announced that it will immediately permit more than 100 migrant Indian labourers previously trapped in Bahrain to leave the country and return home,” Avaaz said in a statement.
The company also committed to a new “policy in which workers will no longer face travel bans and Nass will refrain from continuing or instituting legal actions against workers who leave their employ prior to the completion of their contracts,” it said.
On its website, the company said “it will withdraw all court cases pending against runaway workers.” The measure “would enable the affected Indian workers to leave Bahrain at the earliest.” But their departure still awaits the completion of court procedures to remove any obstacles preventing them from flying home, said the diplomat, without saying how long these procedures might take.
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