Showing posts with label riots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label riots. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

We don't need no edukation! Riots & multiple Arson attempts in Omani high schools

Oman's students are revolting. Oh yes, protests have broken out at schools across the Batna coast. Some schools were closed by the ROP, and there were multiple arson attacks - one successful. As the newspaper Times of Oman, Anees Al Zedjali's much admired throbbing organ of the Omani 4th Estate, put it here, the crimes were committed by "miscreants" [I love the olde worlde English the expat staff at ToO use, especially when the thesaurus comes out!]

Photo: Widespread school protests in Oman are leading to acts of Arson.



Arson in Al Khoud school
Seeb: Unidentified miscreants yesterday morning set ablaze some classrooms in an Al Khoud school, located in the wilayat of Seeb.

Sources said that the culprits set the classroom afire with the help of tyres.

This incident follows a wave of protests that has lashed some schools in some regions of Oman following the high failure rates in the examinations and discontinuation of the previous promotion policy by the Ministry of Education.

Investigations are on to nab the culprits, a spokesman from the Royal Oman Police said.



And it's great to see it being reported, again in ToO. The kids are upset that they actually have to pass exams, and are blaming the teachers. How the arson helps their cause, I don't know.


Omani Student's are demanding to pass their exams, 'or else'.



High failure rate leads to protests in schools

Muscat: Students of some schools in the Sultanate launched protests against the high rate of failure in the examinations for Grades 10 and 11, citing the abolition of the earlier promotion system for this.

Some schools reportedly also witnessed acts of arson following the protests that occurred last week.

Scores of students gathered at Moosa bin Nadeer School in Al Hail area and went on a protest in the morning protesting the high failure rate in the school compared to other Muscat schools. The students blamed “unqualified” teachers for their failure in the examinations.
...



The Majlis had a meeting about Education a couple of days ago. As with all Majlis reporting, there is zero information about their discussion, problems, goals, progress, actions, et al.

Majlis panel meets to find solutions to education snags

Majlis panel meets to find solutions to education snags
Muscat: The Education and Culture Committee of the Majlis Al Shura yesterday held its meeting under the chair of Khalid bin Hilal Al-Nabhani, head of the Committee.

During the meeting, members reviewed the suggestions sent to the committee by citizens and took appropriate decisions.

They also discussed a number of educational issues and the problems facing government and private educational institutions and sought to find solutions to overcome these issues.



Excellent. Good to see the problem is in safe hands, and that plans are in place! This does not bode well for Oman's education system. There are already huge issues with teachers allowing plagiarism and rampant cheating. The schools in general churn out poorly educated & unmotivated students. English is terrible. The cirriculum is based on repetition and rote.

But at least they can line up at the 'job seekers' office later on and get $400 a month. Or 'supervise' an Indian worker.

In the same edition, Editor in Chief Essa Al Zedjali raves about the 1 Omani who just got a patent in Spain for an energy invention (which is good news, I agree), and goes on to claim this indicates how Omani education is soaring, and heralds an intellectual renaissance in the Sultanate. [Note, I'm advised all of the Opinion pieces are actually written by the (Indian) senior Editor, and then tweaked by Essa. LOL]



...
Sheikh Hilal is a product of this Blessed Renaissance — an empowered and unfettered mind and a child of liberalism ushered by the visionary ruler, His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said. Einstein said: “All of science is nothing more than refinement of everyday thinking.”

The uninterrupted run of peace and modernisation of the past 41 years of Omani Renaissance has indeed helped many brilliant Omani minds to refine their everyday thinking. Sheikh Hilal has proved the paradigm true.

A brilliant mind, hard working and competent to his core, Sheikh Hilal has proved our yet another conviction. Given the right ambience, opportunity and encouragement, Omanis too are competent enough to prove their worth in every conceivable field of human activities, especially in science and technology. Sheikh Hilal is the brightest testimony of the fact that Renaissance has been a benign movement and the country is indeed moving along the right track of modernisation.
...






Looking at the photos of the protestors, I can see they all look like the sort of bright talented hard working young minds that will be generating patents, creating world dominating businesses and being nominated for Nobel prizes.


Hey, at least we're better than Yemen.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Strikes and Unions in Oman - Neither the ROP or the International Trade Union Confederation very happy

Unions were recently made legal in Oman, reportedly in order to smooth the way for ratification of the Oman-USA Free trade agreement in the US Congress. However, the actuality of Trade Unions here doesn't really fit with what those from the West would recognise as a Union, and the International Union organisations seem to agree.

A few recent and related new items caught my eye, and my in-box.

For a start, reported a few days ago in the Arabic press, Saud Al Gabri, Head of the Federation of Workers in Oman, mentioned that the ROP were working to strengthen the 'protection' measures they have in place to protect the oil installations in the interior against the sort of labour riots or strikes recently seen in Kuwait and Dubai. (And the ROP seemed to be telling him as well to do his bit in making sure they didn't riot in the first place.)

Co-incidentally, a source in Bahwan Engineering Contractors BEC told me that, a few weeks ago there was a big incident at a BEC labour camp in the interior (near Qarn Alam), when over 500 Indian labourers effectively downed tools and blocked the entrance to the work site in protest at the circumstances surrounding the death of one of their colleagues. My source tells me that a young (29)[post-press correction: he was 39] Indian worker had suffered an apparent heart attack, and unfortunately died on the way to hospital. These things happen. But when word got back to his co-workers that the BEC ambulance transporting the poor man alledgedly had no defibulation kit and ran out of oxygen, they were a bit miffed to say the least, and promptly had a big sit-down protest. The sort of protest that one might call a strike. Such strikes are illegal in Oman, BTW, because you have to apply 3 weeks in advance for approval to strike, and even then no strikes are allowed in services considered essential to the public good (and I'm guessing that might include things like producing the nations life-blood: oil). Quite rightly, the ROP were called in to restore order by BEC management, and the ring-leaders and trouble makers behind this illegal strike rounded up and apparently shipped back to India. Hmmmm. [unfortunately I have no real evidence of this incident I can share with you, so it may be totally untrue, although I was able to confirm that a man did die of a heart attack on his way to hospital from the BEC camp there].

The original article then goes on to quote Oman Chamber of Commerce chairman Khalil Al Khanji saying that basically as far as workers rights go in Oman, everything's OK here, and that employers certainly needed to pay their workers on time and abide by their employment contracts.

In addition, Ministry of Manpower official Salem Hadrami was also quoted, reassuring us that The Omani labour law was in line with the requirements of the International Labour Organization, and that it guarantees the rights of workers, including expats. He pointed out that the Sultanate officially has authorised almost 40 trade unions so far, and that that fact guarantees the rights of workers against management abuse, and that on top of that there is general union of workers watching over everything and intervening as necessary.

So, that's alright then. [well, as long as you're not a housemaid, as you my dear are specifically excluded by that same law from the right to unionise. Sorry. And, hey! if you are a housemaid, WTF are you doing surfing the internet when you should be working!!!]

However, that statement above from the Ministry of Manpower doesn't seem consistent with the recent press release and report on Trade Unions in Oman published by the well respected INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNION CONFEDERATION (ITUC) (see exec summary below), complaining that although Oman in theory had a law allowing unions, the restrictions placed by the Government effectively made real free trade unions inoperable. Tsk tsk.


Geneva, 25 and 27 June
Press Release:
ITUC
INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNION CONFEDERATION (ITUC)
INTERNATIONALLY-RECOGNISED CORE LABOUR STANDARDS IN THE SULTANATE OF OMAN
REPORT FOR THE WTO GENERAL COUNCIL
REVIEW OF TRADE POLICIES OF THE SULTANATE OF OMAN

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Oman has ratified only four of the eight ILO core labour standards.
Despite being a member of the ILO, the country has not ratified ILO Conventions 87, 98, 100 and 111, which are those core labour standards protecting freedom of association and collective bargaining and the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation as well as equal remuneration.

Despite some recent improvements most Omani workers, especially migrant workers, continue to be denied their basic labour rights including freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining. While the proposed Constitutive Congress of a trade union centre is currently scheduled to take place later in 2008, serious concerns remain that the government may intervene again to delay the Congress or affect its proceedings and outcome.

Discrimination exists and women continue to face many forms of social discrimination throughout the country. Foreign workers are especially vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. Child labour continues to be found in sectors of the economy such as agriculture, fishing and informal family business as well as camel racing. The legislation in force in Oman does not prohibit explicitly trafficking of people. The country is a destination and transit point for many workers that may become victims of trafficking and sexual exploitation. Foreign workers are reportedly sometimes placed in situations amounting to forced labour.


The full report makes good reading, unless you're an Indian worker hoping to actually get a decent union going I guess. The much vaunted Federation of Workers in Oman has so-far never been allowed to actually convene.
Government control over union activities persists.
The law provides
for one single federation of unions, which is not in compliance with ILO Convention 87.
However, even that federation has not yet been able to meet. Following earlier
postponement, the Constitutive Congress of a trade union centre is now scheduled to take place in September or October 2008. Serious concerns remain that the government may intervene again to delay the Congress or may interfere in its proceedings and outcome.


The report also finds the absence of legislated minimum standards unacceptable too:
Omani law does not provide for acceptable conditions of work especially with respect to minimum wages, hours of work, and occupational safety and health. Workers have no legal right to remove themselves from unsafe work conditions and maintain their jobs, and laws protecting a workers´ right not to work beyond the maximum hours defined by law are not enforced. There is no minimum wage for several categories of work.

I must admit, this sounds pretty familiar. After all, we all regularly see labourers here [Indian, Pakistani, Afgani] working on building construction sites in conditions that are totally and utterly unsafe - working many stories high on rickety scaffolding, wearing flip-flops, no harnesses, no hard hats, 7 days a week, 12+ hrs a day, and living in a shack on site...

Strangely, the normally fearless and hard-hitting Times of Oman is yet to raise the issue of this ITUC report, which is pretty blunt and factual about the piss-poor state of play in Oman for free Trade Unions. Also, I haven't seen any mention of the strike my BEC contact tells me about either, or of the preparations of the ROP to (thankfully) be able to deal firmly with any more illegal labour riots in the interior either.

Perhaps the mostly Indian writers and other staff at the ol' Times should think about forming a Union...