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Donate Migrant-Rights.org is entirely supported by non-governmental backers and the general public. Your donations pay for Migrant-Rights projects, staffing, research, resources, servers and protective infrastructure. The Impact Help expand our availability in English, Arabic and provide new content in Bengali, Tagalog, Hindi and other languages Help improve data and research on migrant workers to produce evidence-based policy alternatives and reports Help ensure that migrants to the Middle East are represented at the UN and other institutions Donate to Migrant Rights Payment Method Visa/Mastercard Paypal Donate to migrant rights $10 USD $25 USD $50 USD $100 USD $500 USD Donate a custom amount to migrant rights Or donate a custom amount Custom Amount 10 Donate Advancing the rights of migrant workers throughout the Middle East About Donate Home Translate For Us Our Networks Contact Search Search العربيةEnglish العربيةবাংলা Migrant Rights News & Reports Reportage Interviews RSS Feed Interviews, current affairs and resources for media. Campaigns Infographics Statistics Resources Rights Abuses Home News & Reports [STORIES OF ORIGIN] Better lives. Betting on migration [STORIES OF ORIGIN] Better lives. Betting on migration Share Find us on Twitter Find us on Facebook Find us on ... Share this via email STORIES OF ORIGIN is a new MR series that explores the lived experiences of both returning and potential migrants, and their families. First stop is Nepal, which sees on average 1500 citizens emigrating to the GCC daily. Apr 17 2015 Vani Saraswathi

[STORIES OF ORIGIN] Better lives. Betting on migration | Migrant-Rights.org

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A series exploring the lives of migrant workers in their countries of origin.A narrative emerges that's in contrast with the one prevalent in countries of employment, where they are often seen as individuals without choices or plan.Part 1.

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Page 1: [STORIES OF ORIGIN] Better lives. Betting on migration | Migrant-Rights.org

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Home News & Reports [STORIES OF ORIGIN] Better lives. Betting on migration

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STORIES OF ORIGIN is a new MR series that explores the lived experiences of both returning and potential migrants, and theirfamilies. First stop is Nepal, which sees on average 1500 citizens emigrating to the GCC daily.

Apr 17 2015

Vani Saraswathi

Page 2: [STORIES OF ORIGIN] Better lives. Betting on migration | Migrant-Rights.org

The writer is a Qatar-based journalist and Strategic Adviser to Migrant-Rights.org.

As of 2011 there were over 700,000 Nepali workers in the Middle East, and this number has since risen, with 400,000 living and working inQatar alone. Nepal and the Philippines are amongst the countries most dependent on remittances. However, that coupled with a lack of propergovernance renders Nepalese migrants extremely vulnerable, while in the Philippines it has given them a collective voice.

“They are lucky to have jobs here, because their life is better here than where they come from.”

The dehumanisation of low income migrant workers is often justified or brushed aside based on this argument.

One part of that argument is partly true, the other is completely false. In fact, one cannot be farther off the mark.

When they migrate for better income, they also face isolation, discrimination, and harsh living and working environments.

Low-income Nepalese workers migrate to the Gulf because they earn more and their savings potential is higher. However, their life is notbetter. There is a broad line that separates economic needs (paying school fees, building a house, accumulating capital for a business) fromquality of life (abundant supply of fresh produce, close knit families, supportive community, little houses nested in the Himalayan hills andvalleys).

The life here is in stark contrast to the one lower-income migrants lead in the Gulf states. Home is community and well-being; a strongsupport system that doesn't isolate based on gender; a quality of life that is natural to the geo-location. When they migrate for better income,they also face isolation, discrimination, and harsh living and working environments. Which begs the question: does money equate wealth?

A lack of respect for that human capital both in cash-strapped countries of origin and flush countries of destination leads to desperation andexploitation.

“I had said I will never go abroad. But the situation is such now, I have no choice.”

The Village Remittances Built

We drive three hours out of Kathmandu to the Tanahun district and pull up by the road side. The car can’t go any further. A 20 minute walkuphill leads to the village of Yampaphant. Single-roomed houses, many with corrugated roofs, nestle on the hill-face. Each has its ownkitchen garden, cattle shed and a tiny toilet. A tap by the garden serves as a wash area.

Some houses are brighter, bigger; some cattle sheds have more cows than others; few homes also have a poultry farm. Affluence isdetermined by the livestock one owns. That affluence more often than not comes from remittances.

The milk is the tastiest I’ve had. The yoghurt creamy and prepared daily. The cattle provide manure for the organic kitchen gardens, and freshcauliflower and greens are sold to the middle man too.

At dawn, the dirt roads are busiest. Children in smart uniforms rush to catch the bus to the ‘Montessori’, a term used loosely to define privateEnglish medium schools. Fresh produce from the kitchen garden, eggs, poultry and milk from cattle is taken to the middleman by the busstop on the highway. The farmers are aware that what they receive is not even half of what the final market price will be. They have no othermeans of reaching the consumer.

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Fresh food, a close-knit community and an unpolluted environment are the staples in rural Nepal from where a majority of the migrantworkers in the Gulf hail.

The human capital deficit in the GCC is poverty of sorts too. Yet, migrant workers continue to be dehumanised because there is littlecognisance of what and whom workers leave behind to build the economies of countries that don't have enough manpower to be self-sufficient. 

The food is so wholesome, one wonders how they could ever survive the onslaught ofprocessed food they receive abroad. 

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The Nepali government has invested little in the entrepreneurial dreams of its citizens. Agriculture accounts for over 70% of its economicactivities, yet farmlands are being abandoned for what are seen as lucrative offers in the GCC and Malaysia. The Government does little tocorrect this.

Somprasad Lamichane and his family of returning migrants play host. His father spent several years in Doha in the 1990s, his brother spent acouple of years in Qatar too. Somprasad lived in Saudi Arabia for five years.

Though young, he is also the ‘big brother’; the one the villagers turn to for advise on migration and contracts, on starting businesses andfinding sustainable income once they return from their foreign employment. His is the story that most hopeful migrants aspire for.

But Yampaphant has some dire stories as well. Every household in this tiny village has someone working in the Gulf, or a returnee orsomeone preparing to go.

Somprasad has managed to organise a co-operative of sorts for the cattle farmers, including his brother. About 10-12 of them sell milkcollectively, ensuring better rates. Still, it’s just one small step.

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There are plans to expand the co-operative, setting up subsidiary cottage industries to produce dairy products. Even the best-laid plans needgovernmental and financial support, both of which are in short supply.

So labour migration is seen as the best course of action.

“First I wanted to do something in my country...I didn't succeed. So I will go to Bahrain, to improve my economic status.”

Waiting for the ‘Call’

Shriram Amgain (26) has a Bachelor’s degree in Business Science. He is now going to Bahrain.

Shriram walks me through his village. Animated and full of plans, he says going abroad was not his Plan A.

“First I wanted to do something in my country, I started a poultry farm. But I didn't succeed. So I will go to Bahrain, to improve my economicstatus.”

His words, entirely. He brushes off my attempts at speaking in Hindi, preferring to speak in English.

“Two months ago I went to Kathmandu to All Moon Overseas manpower company. The Bahrain factory required 42 people, there were 23candidates in first round of interview, and only six were selected, I was one of them. Then a Skype interview with the company. Second roundinterview only I was selected. I will work as a service person in a restaurant.”

“Do you know how the work environment will be?”

“They told me it won’t be difficult work,” a split-second flicker of doubt in his eyes, before he says: “Once I gain some knowledge about thehotel line, I can return and establish in my country.”

He has paid NPR50500 (US$500) for medical evaluations and will pay another NPR100,000 (US$1000) once he receives the visa. All of thishas been borrowed from family and friends in the village, in addition to debts he has already incurred.

“There’s no facility here for business. When I did poultry farm, I lost a lot of money. The market price didn't match our costs. Within twomonths I lost NPR200,000 (US$2000). I borrowed from family and friends in the community.”

“Why not a bank loan?”

“I would have had to mortgage my property, I didn't want to do that. I am still paying interest on that loan.”

“Have you heard of the problems Nepalese face in the Gulf?”

“Yes, my brother also warned me that life will not be easy there.”

Brother is Som, more a term of respect than consanguinity.

“There is no opportunity for me here to earn that money.”

That money being the cash he needs to pay off debts and build a business.

“I had said I will never go abroad. But the situation is such now, I have no choice. In my family there are 5 members. Parents, grandmotherand sister. There is no other income source. My father was working in a paper mill. For many years. But the company shut down, and theydidn't give 2 years salary. It’s still pending, because they are in losses. So my father is back here and doing farming. But it’s not goodincome.”

He is upbeat. Foreign employment is the panacea to all his economic woes.

“I will be paid BD130 (NPR35000, US$350). They will give me food and accommodation. Visa is for 2 years. I want to stay 5 years. Then Iwill have enough money to do something in my own country. I plan to save 30000 every month, after expenses.”

“Have you done your research on Bahrain?”

“At the time of interview, I did. I liked what I read about the country. Only after that I told them try Bahrain. First I tried Dubai because Ihave friends and family there. I was waiting for visa interview, but the agent said there was no job there now, and suggested Bahrain.”

(Several weeks after the meeting, on the eve of publishing this piece, we speak to Shriram. He still awaits a job contract.)

We continue walking through small villages, through hilly roads and picturesque ponds, all looking out to the snow-topped mountain ranges.Som and Shriram take turns pointing out several brightly painted houses. “Remittance house.” It’s a refrain one hears a lot. Any sign ofaffluence has a remittance prefix. It’s that prefix that is the carrot at the end of the stick.

Next: Returnees' dreams. Some Interrupted.

Posted In GCC, Migrants in Media, Nepal, Sponsorship, Spotlight, Trafficking, Workers

It seems cruel to point out that his savings estimate is way too ambitious. It seems crueller to let him believe in it. I keep silent. So doesSomprasad. 

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