About alex

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So far alex has created 165 blog entries.
2 01, 2012

One who will not be dancing

2019-08-30T16:36:23+08:00January 2nd, 2012|Articles, Stories|

(It doesn't start until 30 seconds in) Coming across this beautiful video, your correspondent was reminded of Jitu, whose story is here at Left for dead, Jitu finds his feet again -- except that that was written before another piece of bad news hit. Early November 2011, almost exactly a year after the accident that

20 12, 2011

Thirteen months with a broken knee, part 2

2019-08-30T16:36:24+08:00December 20th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

Continued from Part 1. "Mustafa Plaza," Manik told the taxi driver. He figured it would be safest there with lots of fellow Bangladehsis around. He might get some help too. By September 19,  just a few days alter, the $50 in his pocket was dwindling fast, and it was obvious there was no way he

17 12, 2011

Thirteen months with a broken knee, part 1

2019-08-30T16:36:24+08:00December 17th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

"Are you scared?" your correspondent asked Manik, seated across the table. His operation was scheduled for Monday, December 19, 2011, just four days away. He had never had an operation, never been under general anaesthesia before. He paused for a while, then nodded subtly. Your correspondent tried to reassure him: "You'll come out of it

14 12, 2011

‘Pay me $550 – $570 a month,’ the boss said

2019-08-30T16:36:24+08:00December 14th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

On Tuesday morning, December 13, 2011, the boss of RegiCo (pseudonym of company name) called 23 employees, all migrant workers, to his office and announced that the company was bankrupt. "You should go to the Ministry of Manpower after this," he advised. One would think the men would have been anxious about losing their jobs,

8 12, 2011

Arrived in Singapore, kept waiting for his job, only to find himself an illegal

2019-08-30T16:36:25+08:00December 8th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

Mahabubul Abul Khayer's employment history illustrates how exploitative and disgraceful Singapore's record of using foreign labour is. Repeatedly, employment agents made thousands of dollars out of him. At least in the early years, he got in return a job through which he more or less recovered what he had paid. Lately, however, the practice seems

27 11, 2011

Not like a fridge or washing machine

2019-08-30T16:36:25+08:00November 27th, 2011|Articles, Happenings|

It's been 33 years, said Isaac Tan, since foreign domestic workers started moving into Singaporean households. A generation of young people has grown up with them. How have their presence impacted our lives? Together with his friends, Abhiroop Basu, Dawn Toh and others – "creative types", according to TWC2 president Russell Heng – Isaac hit

25 11, 2011

Banned for being broke

2019-08-30T16:36:25+08:00November 25th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

"I no money, I no job," said Kesar (real name withheld on request), explaining why he worked illegally for a short spell. After he complained to his employer about deductions from his salary, he was threatened. "Boss angry and he say 'I send you back to Bangladesh'." Fearing capture and forced deportation by repatriation agents

23 11, 2011

Midnight rescue

2019-08-30T16:36:26+08:00November 23rd, 2011|Articles, Stories|

The midnight air was humid and still. Russell slid his car into the driveway fronting the block of flats marked for the rendezvous, turned off his headlights, and rolled down his window glass to listen intently to the sounds emanating from the block. Nothing unusual so far -- a bit of distant television, a mother

19 11, 2011

Workers asked to choose between pay cut or repatriation

2019-08-30T16:36:48+08:00November 19th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

Without work, Abubakar (right, above) was not getting any money and had to depend on free meals served by TWC2, but it wasn't because the scaffolder wasn't willing to work. It was simply because his boss was penalising him for refusing to take a pay cut. The boss had not assigned him to any work

12 11, 2011

The runaway

2019-08-30T16:36:50+08:00November 12th, 2011|Articles, Stories|

Hanis came to Singapore in August 2009 from East Java for a job as a domestic worker. Like so many others, she hoped to make enough to help support her husband and two children -- a four-year-old son and a daughter aged 11, whom she left in the care of her mother. Her husband

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