By Tuhin Sarwar
Special Investigative Report

Contents

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Introduction

For countless Bangladeshi women, migrating to Saudi Arabia promises economic relief and a chance to uplift their families from poverty. However, behind these aspirations lies a disturbing reality marked by severe physical, psychological, and sexual abuse.

Many women become victims of traffickers and unscrupulous recruitment agents, forced into exploitative labor and sexual servitude. Even when they seek escape, bureaucratic barriers and threats of deportation trap them in a cycle of abuse. The situation not only devastates individual lives but also casts a shadow over the reputation of migrant workers and Bangladesh’s labor export system.

The significance of this issue is profound: migration is a vital source of remittance for Bangladesh, but the unchecked exploitation undermines human rights and dignity. This report investigates the scope and mechanisms of abuse, the role of recruitment agencies, and the response of both Saudi and Bangladeshi authorities. It aims to highlight gaps and propose actionable policy reforms.


Background and Context

Between 2019 and 2024, over 300,000 Bangladeshi women migrated to Saudi Arabia for domestic work, according to data from Bangladesh’s Bureau of Manpower Employment and Training (BMET). Yet, hundreds of returnees report severe abuse ranging from unpaid wages to sexual violence.

The Kafala sponsorship system in Saudi Arabia places workers under the legal control of employers, often facilitating abuse without accountability. Meanwhile, Bangladesh’s recruiting bodies such as BAIRA have faced criticism for opaque practices that prioritize profit over protection.

Social factors such as poverty, limited education, and gender inequality compound vulnerability. A 2023 viral video showed a Bangladeshi woman at Riyadh airport exposing her abuse, visibly bearing wounds. Such incidents underscore the urgent need for reform.


Methodology

This report draws on a mixed-methods approach:


Findings

Visual data such as charts and tables illustrating these trends would be included here.


Discussion

The data reveals a systemic failure on multiple fronts: the Kafala system’s structural deficiencies, inadequate recruitment oversight by BAIRA, and government reluctance to challenge remittance flows over worker welfare.

Comparison with global literature confirms patterns of domestic worker exploitation in the Gulf, yet Bangladesh’s specific sociocultural context exacerbates vulnerabilities.

Limitations include the small survivor sample size and potential underreporting due to stigma and fear.

The practical implications are clear: without urgent reforms, women will continue to endure violations, and Bangladesh risks long-term reputational and economic damage.


Policy Recommendations

  1. Enforce a temporary ban on female domestic migration to Saudi Arabia until bilateral safeguards and monitoring are established.

  2. Establish legal aid and trauma support desks at embassies for immediate assistance.

  3. Mandatory pre-departure orientation on rights and grievance mechanisms.

  4. Create a publicly accessible digital registry of licensed recruitment agencies with performance audits.

  5. Require post-mortem autopsies for all migrant worker deaths abroad to ensure accountability.


Conclusion

The hopeful journey of Bangladeshi women seeking to uplift their families is marred by exploitation and abuse. Addressing this crisis requires political will, international cooperation, and a fundamental shift in valuing migrant women as rights-holders, not mere labor commodities.


References

 

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