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cartoon by Khalil Bendib
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A controversial Kuwait-based construction firm accused of exploiting
employees and coercing low-paid laborers to work in war-town Iraq is now building
the new $592-million U.S. embassy in Baghdad. Once completed, the compound will
likely be the biggest, most fortified diplomatic compound in the world.
Some 900 workers live and work for First Kuwaiti General Trading & Contracting
(FKTC) on the construction site of the massive project. Undoubtedly, they have
been largely pulled from ranks of low-paid laborers flooding into Iraq from
Asia's poorest countries to work under U.S. military and reconstruction projects.
Meanwhile, their boss, Wadih al-Absi jets back and forth to the United States,
dreaming of magazine covers celebrating his rise to a global player in large-scale
engineering and construction.
Raised in Beirut, he says he began his career much like the people he now employs--
as a laborer installing drywall. The Lebanese Christian escaped war in his home
country in the late 1970s and moved to Kuwait. The Persian Gulf country welcomes,
even recruits, expatriate blue-collar workers like al-Absi once was to do the
grunt work and domestic chores in its booming, oil-rich economy. Today glitzy
shopping malls, flashy cars and sprawling villas have become the norm and migrants
make up the nearly two-thirds of this tiny desert state's 2.3 million population.
Building his own personal fortune, al-Absi, too, relies on migrant labor. His
Kuwait City firm, co-owned by a member of one of Kuwait's richest and most powerful
families, is one of the larger Middle East companies that collectively ship
tens of thousands of cheap day laborers to Iraq's war zones where they are paid
just dollars a day.
Fortune Favors a Few
American contractors witnessing the plight of some of these migrants at military
camps around Iraq have openly complained that the Asians endure abysmal working
conditions, live in cramped housing, eat poor food, and lack satisfactory medical
care and safety gear.
Typically, these migrants work 12 hours a day, often seven days a week, and
earn just dollars a day performing tasks considered unsuitable for US war fighters.
They work construction, drive trucks, run laundries, clean latrines, pick up
rubbish and operate stores, dining facilities and warehouses. Without them,
and the "body shop" contractors that provide such laborers, the US
and coalition military camps -- virtually small cities -- would shut down.
It can be a lucrative business, one that has helped trigger explosive growth
of al-Absi's company where he acts as both general manager and co-owner.
Less than three years ago FKTC boasted $35 million in assets. Today, the firm
has racked up hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. contracts in Iraq, pushing
the company well past the $1 billion mark. With 7,000 employees in Iraq, the
company claims to be holding $800 million in construction and supply contracts
directly with the Army for military camps, plus more than $300 million under
Halliburton
's multibillion dollar contract to perform military logistics for the occupation
forces in Iraq.
It's the kind of success that allows al-Absi to enjoy finely tailored suits
with French cuff shirts, send his children to American universities and enjoy
the fruits of being a newly-minted millionaire. "I love America,"
he says freely.
Meeting over a morning coffee last September at the posh Four Seasons Hotel
in Washington, a legendary Georgetown retreat favored by pampered heads-of-state,
Hollywood elite, the Rolling Stones and business executives, al-Absi's eyes
widened as he talked about his company's greatest prize – the embassy.
The New Embassy
Indeed, the massive $592-million project may be the most lasting monument to
the U.S. occupation in the war-torn nation. Located on a on a 104-acre site
on the Tigris river where U.S. and coalition authorities are headquartered,
the high-tech palatial compound is envisioned as a totally self-sustaining cluster
of 21 buildings reinforced to 2.5 times usual standards. Some walls as said
to be 15 feet thick or more. Scheduled for completion by June 2007, the installation
is touted as not only the largest, but the most secure diplomatic embassy in
the world.
The 1,000 or more U.S. government officials calling the new compound home will
have access to a gym, swimming pool, barber and beauty shops, a food court and
a commissary. In addition to the main embassy buildings, there will be a large-scale
Maine barracks, a school, locker rooms, a warehouse, a vehicle maintenance garage,
and six apartment buildings with a total of 619 one-bedroom units. Water, electricity
and sewage treatment plants will all be independent from Baghdad's city utilities.
The total site will be two-thirds the area of the National Mall in Washington,
DC.
Unlike most of Iraq's reconstruction, the embassy is "on time and on budget,"
according to a December report to U.S. Senate Foreign Affairs Committee which
calls the progress an "impressive" feat given that construction is
taking place in a country besieged by war.
"Most major construction projects undertaken in Iraq since 2003 have not
met these standards," writes Patrick Garvey, a member of the Senate Foreign
Relations staff who traveled to Baghdad in November 2005.
With the embassy making a prestigious notch on the company's belt, First Kuwaiti
will step onto the world stage, al-Absi beamed. "I dream about what it
means," he said. "We have become a global company."
Despite this pride, al-Absi asked to keep the embassy contract a secret until
the first floors were built. The dangers of an attack are just too serious,
he said. Even his personal residence had been bombed in the past. "I am
all for transparency, but this is Iraq," he said.
Despite the new embassy's importance, and its rare on-schedule progress, the
State Department has also resisted publicizing the contract. It was only after
weeks of inquiries, that it confirmed that FKTC had been selected to construct
all but the most classified portion of the project. One day after the web site
FedBizOpps posted a standard public notice for the first $370-million in FTKC
contracts, it yanked the announcement. Department spokesman Justin Higgins cited
security concerns.
Philippino & Nepali Workers
While safety is part of the reason for keeping a profile low, labor conditions
for Iraq's migrant workers are nothing to boast about.
When first asked about mistreatment of FKTC's labor force last August, al Absi
threatened to sue if the allegations were published. At the time, CorpWatch
was investigating the claims of Ramil Autencio and other Philippinos working
for FKTC in Tikrit in late 2003 and early 2004. They claimed they were overworked,
served poor food, and received less salary than what was agreed to in their
contracts.
Originally recruited for employment by MGM Worldwide Manpower in the Philippines,
Autencio said he had planned to work at Crown Plaza Hotel in Kuwait for $450
a month. Then his recruitment contract was sold to FKTC when he reached Kuwait
where he says he was "forcibly" pressured to work in Iraq.
More recently, an October 10 story in the Chicago Tribune reported on four-dozen
other Nepalese workers waiting in Kuwait for jobs on American military bases
in Iraq. In September 2004, after watching television reports that 12 Nepalese
hostages in Iraq executed at the hands of insurgents, they changed their minds.
A FKTC manager in Kuwait handed the panicked workers an ultimatum, reports
the Tribune: either travel to Iraq to fulfill their contracts and they would
be released on the streets of Kuwait City to fend for themselves. Undoubtedly,
none had the resources to find their way back to Nepal.
"The company was forcing them to go to Iraq," Lok Bahadur Thapa,
the former acting Nepalese ambassador to Saudi Arabia, told the Tribune.
Al-Absi, who speaks excellent English occasionally peppered with bluntness
of a construction worker, denies the allegations of ill-treatment and trafficking.
"It's bullshit," he said, after emailing electronic documents apparently
signed by Autencio and others agreeing to work in Iraq. "Total bullshit."
But stories of mistreatment recently prompted the U.S. State Department to
join forces with the Defense Department into possible labor trafficking by Middle
East firms doing business in Iraq.
"Our people are investigating the issues," said State Department
spokesman Justin Higgins after U.S. Ambassador John Miller, head of the Office
to Monitor and Combat Trafficking of Persons, left for the Middle East in late
January.
When CorpWatch inquired last July about widespread complaints about the poor
working conditions and possible coercion of low-paid Asian laborers in Iraq
working under Halliburton
's logistics contract, the Army said an investigation was underway. That inquiry
began and ended with the Army raising the issues with Halliburton
"for them to address with appropriate action within the terms of the contract,"
said Army spokeswoman Melissa Bohan in an e-mail this month.
Secretive Contract
The contracts for building the largest, most-strongly fortified embassy in
the world is a tale of fits and starts. From the Bush Administration's initial
request for more than a billion dollars in emergency funding for the project
to the selection of an inexperienced Kuwaiti firm to build it -- to even the
small oversight effort is also a tale of secrecy.
Although White House had signaled Congress in early 2004 that it was planning
a permanent embassy in Baghdad, it wasn't until spring 2005 that the Bush Administration
formally pushed the funding request veiled as an emergency measure. The original
proposal for $1.3 billion was almost three times the price of the new embassy
in China.
Reeling from overcharges and costs around other Iraq contracts, Congress immediately
cut the price tag for the new Baghdad project in half to $592 million and called
for strict oversight. Wired with the most up-to-date technology and surveillance
equipment, it will still be a super-bunker and the biggest US embassy every
built.
Once funding was secured last spring, the U.S. State Department quietly put
the project up for competition among seven competitors – including some
of the most accomplished US engineering companies. Among the bidders, Framaco,
Parsons, Fluor, and the Sandi Group have established track records for building
secure embassies or large-scale construction projects.
But the award went to First Kuwaiti, a company with little experience in projects
on the scale envisioned for the embassy.
"First Kuwaiti got the embassy job. [It] kinda surprised everyone that
a foreign company would win," said an executive of one prominent firm in
an email to another, both of whom bid against First Kuwaiti.
But publicly, the losing companies simply shrugged their shoulders and buttoned
their lips.
"First Kuwaiti was the lowest bidder," said Gilles Kacha, senior
vice president of Framaco. The New York-based firm won a "contractor of
the year award" from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice for its work on
the interim Baghdad embassy, but lost in the competition for the new compound.
There may also be little reason for some of the losing competitors to complain.
Some. including Framaco and The Sandi Group of Washington, DC. soon received
other State Department contracts. The open-ended contracts call on the companies
to work anywhere in Iraq when needed, including on the new embassy project.
The Sandi Group was given notice to prepare for some site clearing and for
building temporary housing for the embassy workers, said Sandi's vice president
for development, Muge Karsli. Then the order was abruptly suspended in January.
"I was supposed to hear more from them in a week, but I didn't," she
said matter-of-factly. "Now, it is on hold."
Bill Waldron is one contractor who will talk about the embassy project. He
claims his Rocky Mountain Group lost more than $250,000 while preparing a bid
to perform engineering oversight for First Kuwaiti and project inspection. Waldron
said that his 25-year-old, veteran-owned Colorado company had already been given
the word that his company would be the leading contender for the deal, which
is why the firm spent so much effort on the proposal, including compiling a
2 inch thick file on the company's personnel experience in Iraq – experience
that State Department contract officers said they were looking for.
Then the State Department put the job up for open bid three different times,
each time with a new revision. The last solicitation was cancelled after the
contracting officer went of vacation, according to Waldron.
Waldron's patience finally burst. Only after doggedly hounding the State Department
for reasons why the competition had been cancelled did he find out what happened.
The contract was awarded without competition on an emergency basis to a Maryland
company, Mil Vets, Waldron said. "We contacted Mil Vets and asked if they
had any experience working in Iraq prior to being awarded the embassy project,"
Waldron said. "The answer was no."
A-Absi, for his part, views his embassy agreement as based on merit and it
is the success of his company that draws fire from his critics.
First Kuwaiti never, ever got any job without offering the best value at the
lowest price," he said. "People will never criticize someone who fails."
That, says al-Absi, is a price he is willing to pay.
David Phinney is a journalist and broadcaster based in
Washington, DC, whose
work has appeared in The Los Angeles Times, New York Times and on ABC and
PBS. He can be contacted at: phinneydavid@yahoo.com.