American Nightmare: Exploited Indian Workers Demand Justice
By Sabulal Vijayan and Stephen BoykewichFrom the June 26, 2008 issue | Posted in National | Email this article

Rajan Pazhambalakode, 43, had been a guest worker in the Persian Gulf for years when he saw an ad for what looked like the chance of a lifetime: workbased permanent residency in the United States for welders and pipe-fitters, together with green cards for them and their families.
“I sold my home for the chance to be with my family in America,” said Pazhambalakode, one of the more than 550 Indian workers who paid $20,000 each in late 2006 for the chance to work at Signal International, a U.S. marine construction company in the Gulf Coast region.
Instead of achieving the American dream, the workers arrived into an American nightmare. Signal forced them to live 24 men to a trailer in labor camps at its Mississippi and Texas shipyards, charging each of them $1,050 a month and forbidding them from living off company grounds. Instead of permanent residency and green cards, the workers received temporary, ten-month H-2B guest worker visas, which allow no path to more permanent status. And since H-2B visas bind workers to a single employer, Signal answered the Indian workers’ complaints with threats of deportation.
What Signal didn’t count on was that the workers would fight back.
The devastation of Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 created a nightmare for millions of Americans, who lost their homes and jobs across the U.S. Gulf Coast. But employers like Signal saw a golden opportunity to cash in on the crisis. Even once unemployment in the Gulf Coast had skyrocketed as high as 35 percent, Signal and other local employers in industries from hospitality to shipbuilding won certifications from the U.S. Department of Labor to hire foreign guest workers on H-2B visas, a short-term work visa meant to let employers compensate for a temporary deficit of American workers by hiring foreign workers instead. The result: U.S. workers — often working-class African- Americans — were locked out of what had been permanent, well-paying jobs in the Gulf Coast, while exploitable foreign workers were locked in and paid a fraction of what their U.S. peers had earned.
When the Signal workers began to organize for their rights in March 2007, the company tried to make good on its threats. It sent armed guards to lock up the organizers at its shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss., saying they would be deported. In desperation, one organizer slit his wrist. Signal released the men but fired them.
For most H-2B workers — trapped between a mountain of debt back home and exploitation in the United States — that would have been the end of the story. But with the help of the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice, the Signal workers organized as the Indian Workers’ Congress (IWC). A year after Signal’s raid, more than 100 of the workers walked out of company camps in Pascagoula and Orange, Texas, and reported the company and its recruiters to the U.S. Department of Justice’s human trafficking division, and filed a major class-action lawsuit against the traffickers in federal court.
Since their March 2008 walkout, IWC members have taken extraordinary risks to force the United States and Indian governments to come to terms with the brutality of guest worker programs. The workers made a nine-day “journey for justice,” largely on foot, from New Orleans to Washington, D.C.; met with dozens of Congressional members or staff; and launched a hunger strike in the capital May 16, which they suspended on June 11 after an unprecedented outpouring of support from allies in the U.S. Congress, organized labor, civil rights groups and faith communities.
Their struggle is far from over. The poisonous political atmosphere around immigration in the United States has left the workers subject to surveillance and intimidation by immigration authorities since they escaped Signal’s labor camps in Mississippi and Texas in March. The Department of Justice has opened a human trafficking investigation, but presented the workers with a grotesque Catch-22: they must submit themselves for voluntary deportation proceedings before they will be allowed to participate in the investigation.
And though some members of Congress are beginning to understand that guest worker programs have been a disaster for the United States and foreign workers alike, many more are rushing to expand them. In late May, Sens. Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) and Judd Gregg (R-NH) attempted to slip an amendment expanding the H-2B program into a supplemental Iraq war spending bill.
Labor trafficker Signal International is now in crisis mode, scrambling to recast itself as a model employer. But for the Indian workers who are demanding release from the terror of deportation, Congressional hearings on abuses of guest workers and U.S.-Indian government talks to protect future workers, the real fight has just begun.
Sabulal Vijayan is a former Signal worker and one of the lead organizers of the Indian Workers’ Congress. Stephen Boykewich is the Media Director for the Indian Workers’ Campaign led by the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice. For more information, visit neworleansworkerjustice.org.
7 Responses to “American Nightmare: Exploited Indian Workers Demand Justice”
June 26th, 2008 at 5:28 am
US taxpayers don’t owe them a dime. Signal International should be the one to pay up if anyone does.
They got scammed and being a victim doesn’t lead to a reward.
June 26th, 2008 at 5:34 am
And aren’t they illegal aliens now. They have broken the condition of their visas by leaving the company so they are currently out of status.
June 27th, 2008 at 7:58 pm
I can’t believe the comments by Lynx and Rochelle. These workers did not come here for a handout. They paid $20,000 in order to come here legally and work for themselves and their families. Signal international and the labor traffickers should pay throught the teeth for what they are doing to these workers> The U.S. and Indian Governements should ensure that if you commit a crime, you should pay. From the article it seems as if this is what they want. Why would we not support these guys in their attempt to get their money back and damages for what they have gone through? Afterall, Americans like to say that immigrants should come here legally. Well, they did. And this is what happens to them.
And yes, they are out of status right now. Whose fault is that? Signal’s or these workers? What are you trying to say, that is it ok to have a work visa that is controlled by the employer? Essentially, this is what this means. If these workers are only legal while they work for the company, then the company not only controls their conditions of work, they also control whether they are legal as well. This is called indentured servitude. If workers are afraid of speaking up, then the employer can do whatever he wants. How is this ok for these workers? How is this ok for the U.S. workers who work side-by-side with these workers? Everybody loses with these workers-espicially the guest workers.
If the commentators above really give a damn about U.S. workers and all taxpayers, they would support these workers in their fight to punish these companies and ensure that guest workers programs are not expanded. It is people like these knuckleheads that blames the victims that allows these companies (and governments) to continue to screw us all.
July 8th, 2008 at 6:02 am
Good article. However, I expect an independent point of view. I expect facts, not only one-sided story (even if this particular is a true victim)
July 8th, 2008 at 11:08 pm
From:http://anti-union.blogspot.com/2008/06/modern-day-slavery-hunger-strikers.html
FACT:
American workers are another victim of Signal International
I have been following this story for a while, not only for the fact that it’s a crime against humanity and every labor law of the United states, not just for the fact that I detest slavery and Visa abuses, not only for the constantly worsening conditions that working people in my United States must endure, the HUGEST GRIPE I have is that this is the work that myself and my fellow union brothers and sisters do for a living, and while we get a decent paycheck, we only get one when we work and we are by no means independently wealthy. Construction is quickly becoming the most dangerous profession in the country, it requires high skills and training. Signal International decided that it wouldn’t even use any US workers at all, and was granted H2B, temporary, non-seasonal Visa’s to bypass all American workers and get them from elsewhere. I know quite a few pipefitters and steamfitters who would have worked to get Signal back online.
July 18th, 2008 at 3:18 am
Wow. I just don’t know how to respond to some of these comments. How can these workers, desperate enough to pay a lot of money in search of a better life, be to blamed? This corporation is basically creating sweat shops in America and it is okay to do this, because the workers were tricked fair and square? Would it still be okay if they were American?
What is really scary is that this is not the first incident of human trafficking lately [see John Pickle Company for an even worse example]. Although, yes Signal International is the one that needs to pay them their fair wages, some people in the government also need to lose their jobs for not doing theirs and looking after worker’s rights.




















June 25th, 2008 at 6:04 pm
These workers are not illiterate. In fact , States like Kerala have 100% literacy rating. People who have worked in the Gulf for several years are the richest people in India. So it is hard to believe that they would have sold their houses to be in the United States. It is obvious that they have paid a bribe to the agents for the job and anyone with a little common sense knows that when a bribe is paid there is a risk involved. If these guys are truly honest, the truth is they thought of coming here on some visa and then staying back because that is what most people do here. Unfortunately for them they got caught and now this is just an excuse to cough up some money from the government and get richer and also try their luck if possible get a permanent visa.
People from India are doing all kinds of stuff to get into the U.S. Remember recently visas for film personalities coming from Madras were cancelled because of major fraud detected by law enforcement?