Tied
to camels: Kids in UAE continue to suffer
Lankan
children also forced into 'camel slavery'
By SRC-A.L.Adv.
Shortly after sunrise and again before sunset every day
Sheizad and the other little riders are strapped to the backs of
camels for endless hours of training at the racetracks amid the
sand dunes and glittering skyscrapers of this rich Arab emirate.
Behind a camel's hump, the frail figures of some of the children
- most of them only five or six years old - are virtually invisible.
Despite a government
ban seven years ago against the use of young children as camel jockeys,
the practice is still widespread in Dubai and the rest of the United
Arab Emirates.
Hundreds of
children are forced or lured into a life of virtual slavery as jockeys
in several Gulf countries, where camel racing has been a traditional
sport.
Most of the
children come from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Sudan
- countries bound together by poverty.
Sheizad, from
Bangladesh, is too young even to know his age, which cannot be more
than five. On a warm afternoon, he arrived at the Camel Race Track
in Dubai, together with other young waifs in the back of a van.
Nearly all
of them are dirty, barefoot and looking like orphans robbed of their
childhoods. By contrast, at the nearby Nad Al-Sheba track which
hosts the six million-dollar Dubai World Cup every year, horses
usually arrive in clean, air-conditioned comfort.
Most of these
children have either been abducted by unscrupulous traffickers who
sell them to agents in the United Arab Emirates for 20,000 dirhams
(approx Rs0.3 million), or have been sold by poor parents or relatives,
or lured here under false pretences.
These include
promises to their parents that the children will get good work and
education, said Ansar Burney, a human rights activist from Pakistan
who has helped return some of the children to their families. The
agents, most of them from the Indian subcontinent, are the middlemen
between the kidnappers and local sheikhs or powerful families who
keep the children and train them between eight or nine hours a day.
The people
in charge of the children mistreat them, and they beat them. While
they give very good food to the camels, the children are not even
allowed a proper meal for fear that they will gain too much weight
and be heavy for the camels. Often, the children are forced onto
crash diets in order to lose weight before an important race.
The small jockeys
are bound to a camel's back, often using adhesive straps. But sometimes
the kids slip off and either get trapped underneath the camel or
are trampled. It is not uncommon for children to fall off or get
dragged along, sometimes to their deaths, according to a 1999 report
from the London-based human rights group Antislavery International.
The children
work hard and long hours. They usually go to sleep between 10pm
and 11pm, and get up at 4am for the start of their daily training
an hour later. The children's training extents until 11am or 12am
and then in the afternoon between 3pm and 6pm.
The use of
children in the camel races has been illegal in the UAE since 1993.
The regulations prohibit children from racing camels, and call for
jockeys to weigh at least 45 kilograms in keeping with international
standards for horse jockeys.
Once Sheizan
is atop a camel, his tactic is to utter a series of bloodcurdling
screams from the outset, whipping the animal as much as he can in
order to make it run faster.
But if Sheizan's camel comes first in the race, no wealth or fame
awaits the child. All the honours will go to the camel's owner.
-dpa
From Daily Dawn
Laugh Zone
Tough cookie
In the Bundeswehr (West German Army), a company of soldiers
decided to have some fun with their company cook, a short, fat,
very un-martial young man. So every morning before he woke up, one
of them would defecate into his boot. The amazing thing was that
the cook accepted this treatment silently. Every morning he would
clean out his boot and go to work as if nothing was wrong. After
several weeks of this, the soldiers began to tire of the game; it
wasn't very much fun because the cook never reacted, and they were
beginning to feel guilty as well. So they sent a delegation to apologize
to him and promise to mend their ways.
The cook heard
them out, then said, "You are going to stop shitting in my
boots? Fine, then I will stop pissing in your coffee."
School cooks
and technology
Boy to Mother:
Our school cook really knows her new technology as well as her history.
For school lunch today we had micro chips with ancient grease.
Thanks god
A five-year-old said grace at family dinner one night. "Dear
God, thank you for these pancakes." When he concluded, his
parents asked him why he thanked God for pancakes when they were
having chicken. He smiled and said, "I thought I'd see if He
was paying attention tonight."
Pampered
cow
Mary Ann forwarded on to us a couple of "Bad" Puns,
she received.
What do you get from a pampered cow? Spoiled milk. I used to work
in an orange juice factory, until I got canned. Yeah, they put the
squeeze on me... said I couldn't concentrate. You know, same old
boring rind over and over again! I wanted to be a chef, figured
it would add a little spice to my life, but I just didn't
have the thyme!
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