When you start to let people like these take over ports the next step may be rewritting the constitution to allow slavery.
Double standards !!! Money is good even if the hands are dirty.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_code('', 'Slavery of baby boys in the United Arab Emirates
Posted by Sarah Ibarruri
Added to homepage Thu Feb 23rd 2006, 08:57 AM ET
The United Arab Emirates. These are the people Bush wants to give our ports to. Sick people. Not only are they closely associated with Al-Qaida, but get ready for this: they're involved in toddler slavery. Here is an article from a slavery watchdog group. Evidently the UAE is a place where little boys from kidnaps little boys, 2 to 5 yrs. old: and this is what they do to them:
Sheizad, a five-year-old from Bangladesh, wakes each day at 4 a.m. in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). He does not remember much about his village, or how he came to the UAE. He may have been lured by recruiters, sold to a middleman by his parents, or kidnapped. Sheizad is now a slave, forced, because of his size, to race camels to benefit his master. By 5 a.m., he is on the track, practicing, training, and racing the camels. He goes to sleep 18 hours later at 11 p.m. Sheizad stays with other young racers in tiny rooms. There are races twice a week for which Sheizad's master wins large monetary prizes. Sheizad has never been paid for his work, yet if his camel races poorly, he is beaten. In a few years, when he is too big to race camels, he will be discarded by his owner. With no money and far from his family, Sheizad's enslavement will end in destitution.
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There are three typical methods of enslavement: 1) kidnappers steal children away from their families; 2) families sell their sons for relatively high prices, thus attaining sufficient income for the entire family for years; or 3) recruiters lure boys away from their families, promising an education and other appealing life changes.
Once enslaved, the boys must train and ride and maintain the camels, as well as care for their living space. In each of the bi-weekly races, the boys are strapped down to the camels, causing them to scream louder - thus causing the camels to bolt towards the finish line faster. Boys often fall out of the straps and injure themselves; some even die. Violence, however, is not limited to the track. A poor performance, attempted escape, or resistance to racing can all result in additional physical abuse. These conditions lead to 60% of camel jockeys dying or becoming permanently crippled.
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http://www.iabolish.org/slavery_today/country_reports/a... ')