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          New Delhi, July 4 (IANS) Seventy-eight Indians, working for a   private firm in Saudi Arabia, have been left stranded without food and water   after their employer reneged on paying their salaries for about six months,   apart from failing to issue them identity and medical aid cards.
 The   Indians -- mostly from the states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar -- have been left   without food and water at their shelter in Tabuk, a town about 1,000-km from   Jeddah and located close to the Jordan border, according to one of the victims   who spoke to IANS over the phone.
 
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        The workers had been hired about two years ago by the Tabuk-based Mutafail   Maintenance and Trading Company through an Indian recruiter and had gone to work   at the facilities of the Saudi firm in 2010.
 "However, sometime in the   beginning of 2012, the firm stopped paying our salaries and for the last six   months we have been without food and water. The shelter we stay in also does not   have enough facilities for a decent living," Pankaj Mishra, one of the 78 Indian   workers, told IANS from Tabuk over phone.
 
 "We have not been issued the   mandatory medical card and the Akana (identity) card, which allows us free   movement around the town and the country. Soon after we arrived, our passports   were taken away from us and is now in the custody of our employer, which is the   norm for any overseas employee," Mishra said.
 
 He also lamented that they   wanted to return home, but were unable to do so without their   passports.
 
 The workers had got in touch with the Indian consulate in   Jeddah regarding their problems six months ago.
 
 The Indian consulate in   Jeddah said it was seized of the matter relating to the Indian workers in Tabuk   and had taken up the problems of these expatriates immediately after being   informed of their plight.
 
 An official, who did not wish to be named,   noted that the consulate was in touch with the Ministry of Overseas Indian   Affairs in New Delhi over the 78 Indian workers' problems and was informing the   ministry back here on a regular basis.
 
 "At the moment, we have a senior   official from the Jeddah consulate present in Tabuk talking to the local labour   authorities and the employer to settle the issues," the official told IANS over   phone from Jeddah.
 
 "Due to our negotiations, we have been able to   convince the Saudi firm to pay up salaries of four months to all the Indian   workers," he said.
 
 Noting that the plight of the 78 Indian workers is not   "an isolated case", the official said that it was the sort of issue that all   expatriates, be it from Pakistan, Bangladesh, or any other country, faced in   Saudi Arabia, all due to the labour laws and rules, which were quite   stringent.
 
 The issue of the 78 Indian workers is now being heard in a   labour court in Tabuk and the Indian consulate from Jeddah is providing them   legal assistance.
 
    
	
	
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