Darkside of Dubai | What They Don't Show You
Автор: Interesting Flow
Загружено: 2021-12-23
Просмотров: 84089
Darkside Dubai
People in Dubai are divided into three classes: Emiratis, expats, and labourers. If you really want to discover the dark side of Dubai, you should look into the life of the third group, known as labourers. They are the largest group in the UAE. A 27-year-old man has worked as a sweeper for four years and earns 139 euros per month, of which he sends 87 euros to his family. Ordinary citizens, on the other hand, rarely leave the house for more than 5 minutes during the summer. The living quarters are 12ft by 12ft and contain six beds for six to eight people. In most kitchens, food is cooked using gas cylinders that are in poor condition. Not many people know about Dubai's dark side, where workers face a slew of issues because the city is hidden from the media. Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the supreme ruler of Dubai, smiles down on his creation. There is no doubt that Dubai contains a lot of wealth and luxury.
Sheikh Mohammed has presented Dubai to the world as the city of One Thousand and One Arabian Lights, protected from the Middle East's dust storms. However, On the skyline, the cranes have come to a halt, as though frozen in time. Countless buildings are half-finished and appear to be abandoned. Rainwater is leaking from the ceilings and the tiles are falling off the roof of the swankiest new structures, such as the vast Atlantis hotel, a giant pink castle built in a thousand days on its own artificial island, where rainwater is leaking from the ceilings and the tiles are falling off the roof. The Never-Never was used to construct this Neverland. It suddenly appears to be more like Iceland in the desert than Manhattan in the heat.
Dubai is a city that was created from the ground up in only a few crazy decades, based on credit, ecocide, oppression, and enslavement.
Expats from all over the world, especially from South Asia, make up more than 95% of Dubai's population. The majority of people have moved to Dubai with the hopes of a better future. However, their passports may be seized by airport security or companies upon arrival in an attempt to prevent them from leaving; and migrants are transferred to Sonapur, on the outskirts of Dubai, far from the city's flash and gloss.
In the most basic accommodations, more than five people live in a tight room with limited access to power.
Workers frequently become ill since the water supply in the camps is not purified. In addition, the rooms are typically plagued with rodents and insects due to a lack of ventilation!
Employees have been obliged to accept whatever wages they are paid by their employers as a result of the government's refusal to intervene in pay regulation or establish minimum working standards for migrant workers. There isn't even a bureau where they can file complaints, and refusing to work might lead to deportation or worse, jail. Migrant workers are also compelled to work in oppressive heat, with temperatures regularly exceeding fifty degrees Celsius. The government closes down tourist attractions during excessive heat, but workers are required to continue working.
As a result, it is unsurprising that the suicide rate among the Asian community in Dubai has been rising in recent years. On average, there are roughly two occurrences of suicide per week, all of which are committed by migrant workers. Local Emiratis have gotten numb to these catastrophes, according to a reporter for the Guardian.
Dubai appears to have little compassion for Asian migrant workers due to its ignorance about the terrible working circumstances of expatriates.
the darkside of dubai united arab emirates
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