Society

Naples factory workers seek slave status

Hundreds of Bangladeshi natives, who work in textile factories in Sant'Antimo near Naples, demand that they receive slave status, believing that only in this way they will be able to leave the employer. According to them, the owners of factories force their subordinates to work for almost the entire day, while paying them no more than 250 euros per month.

Immigrants, many of whom are illegally in Italy, claim that employers took their passports from them, thereby forcing them to work 12 hours a day, seven days a week. Bangladeshi residents have already turned for help to the February 3 association, which protects the rights of immigrants in Italy. Representatives of the organization told reporters that they had already filed a petition for the recognition of Sant'Antimo factory workers as slaves.

The International Labor Organization (ILO) defines slavery as "any type of work or service whose performance is imposed against the will of workers through threats or punishments."

The ILO previously stated that this definition falls under over 20 million employees different areas of activity and services.

According to the publication Corriere della Sera, in October 2013 a circular from the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy indicated that the allocation of new quotas for foreign labor in the labor market is not expected in the near future. Over the past five years, during which Italy plunged into an economic crisis, the number of unemployed immigrants in the country increased by 220 thousand and amounted to 383 thousand foreigners, which is equivalent to 14% of the total number of unemployed.

Despite the precarious situation in Italy, the number of foreign employees employed under regular contracts increased to 2.3 million (in 2008 their number was 1.75 million workers).

As for the general indicators for the EU, the unemployment rate among immigrants last year amounted to more than 17 percent (exceeded the same indicator among Italians). After the country got stuck in a crisis, not all foreigners lost their jobs. The most fortunate were the workers in the domestic services sector, while the former employees of the industrial sector were left without a constant source of income.

Today, more than 9 percent of Italy's private enterprises come from non-EU countries. Despite the fact that the number of such companies is growing, most of them remain concentrated in certain areas of activity, and in particular, this applies to foreigners. According to Corriere della Sera, in 2012, nearly half of the foreign workers carried out assignments that did not meet their high qualifications.

The average salary of immigrants from other countries living in Italy amounted to 330 euros less than the salaries of Italians (968 euros against 1304 euros), despite the fact that before the crisis this difference was only 226 euros.

Surprisingly, Corriere delle Sera found out that in 2012 it was relatively easy for immigrants to sign a contract on an ongoing basis, unlike Italians (39 percent versus 17).

Watch the video: North Korean Labor Camps - VICE NEWS - Part 1 of 7 (May 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Society, Next Article

Italians found signs of life on Saturn’s satellite
Society

Italians found signs of life on Saturn’s satellite

One of Saturn’s moons, Enceladus, stores in its bowels an ocean of meltwater, which could turn out to be a real home for germs. This conclusion was made by scientists from Italy and the United States, joining forces to study the vast planet and its satellites. The first groundwater research at the southern polis of a small satellite that revolves around Saturn was made as part of a joint Cassini mission program that brought together talented scientists from America, Italy and Europe.
Read More
Where in Italy to live well, and where - not very ...
Society

Where in Italy to live well, and where - not very ...

A study of the quality of life in various regions of Italy in 2013 by the University of La Sapienza confirmed a well-known fact: in the leaders of Trentino and Lombardy, in the tail - Calabria. The situation is such that in Italy a kind of “border of well-being” has formed, let's call it that. The division, which Umberto Bossi and his League of the North did not manage to advance in the parliament, happened by itself.
Read More
In Florence, the train went off the rails, a worker died
Society

In Florence, the train went off the rails, a worker died

A train went off the rails at Santa Maria Novella station in Florence (Firenze) last night, resulting in the death of a 34-year-old worker, Fabrizio Fabbri. The incident occurred after midnight when Fabrizio and his colleagues, who, incidentally, claim to be a first-rate specialist, connected the wagons to the train.
Read More
UN accuses Vatican of spreading pedophilia
Society

UN accuses Vatican of spreading pedophilia

The UN Human Rights Committee has accused the Catholic Church of concealing the spread of pedophilia among its ministers, and also expressed its dissatisfaction with the Holy See's attitude to abortion and contraception. Moreover, the United Nations insists on the removal from service of priests who were somehow convicted of violence against children.
Read More