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Sharjah dig pauses as authorities negotiate land buy

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Martin Croucher

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SHARJAH // An archaeological dig for an ancient settlement in Dibba Al Hisn has been halted while authorities negotiate the purchase of nearby land.

Excavation work has so far been restricted to an area of 20 metres by 20 metres, where experts have already found evidence of a settlement more than 2,000 years old.

Now, officials from Sharjah Municipality are in negotiations with farmers to buy land adjacent to the site, hoping it may reveal more secrets about the history of the area.

From there, ownership would be transferred to the emirate's Department of Culture.

"We hope that the adjacent areas will be possessed by the Government so we can continue our work over there," said Dr Sabah Jasim, the head of antiquities at the department.

"We have no idea what we will find there. We have always presumed it was a large settlement but how big we have no idea."

Dr Jasim said the artefacts found so far dated from the first or second century BC, all the way to the 20th century.

It is believed that Dibba Al Hisn, an enclave that sits on the east coast of the country, was once an important port city for the region.

It was the capital of Oman and a thriving marketplace for merchants from as far away as India, China and the Europe.

"Dibba is overlooking the Gulf of Oman, so we think it was a major shipping centre for the ships sailing from the south of Iraq down the Indian Ocean," said Dr Jasim.

"We think that there's a lot potential to find a lot of archaeological remains belonging to different eras."

Work in Dibba Al Hisn started in 2004 when a resident found a piece of pottery in his garden. His home was later sold to the Government and archaeologists moved in to investigate.

They found a large ancient tomb at the site dating from the first century AD, with evidence of early trade between the Roman and Mesopotamian empires.

Recently, the team has also been conducting studies in residential areas of Dibba Al Hisn, which is a densely populated district.

"What's been left in Dibba has all been developed into houses," said Dr Jasim.

"We're working on areas which have been left undeveloped between the houses. We haven't got anything right now but hopefully soon."

mcroucher@thenational.ae

@ For more on UAE HISTORY, visit thenational.ae/topics


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Workers owed billions as authorities in China fail to tackle missing wages

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Daniel Bardsley (Foreign Correspondent)

BEIJING // Hei Pern's new job as a translator for an oil company seemed like just the career move he was looking for.

It offered Mr Hei, 22, an English literature graduate, originally from China's Ningxia region, a reasonable salary of $1,000 (Dh3,673) a month and the chance to travel overseas, something he had never done before.

Now, little more than three months since he started his job with such enthusiasm, the Beijing-based Mr Hei is unemployed and struggling for money, having quit after not receiving his promised pay.

In total, he earned just 3,700 yuan (Dh2,089) for almost three months' work, about one fifth of what his contract said he was due.

It is an all-too-common scenario among China's migrant workers, who can frequently go long periods without being paid.

"Anyone who worked honestly and hard [would] feel angry at these people," Mr Hei said.

"I didn't expect this would happen in the capital under the emperor's eye. I was really surprised and shocked."

What surprised Mr Hei more than not being paid was the apparent indifference of the government departments that he contacted to resolve his case.

He visited the labour bureau and district court in the Chaoyang district of Beijing.

After being told his own complaints were insufficient, he paid a lawyer 600 yuan to write a letter to the labour bureau outlining his case.

But because the oil company is registered in the province of Xinjiang, despite having offices in Beijing, officials said there was nothing they could do.

"The government departments weren't trying to help people," he said. "They drink tea and smoke cigarettes. They try their best to get away without troubling themselves."

Unpaid wages are thought to most affect China's migrant workforce, which numbers more than 200 million. In 2006, the official All China Federation of Trade Unions reported unpaid wages that year totalled 100 billion yuan, with construction workers owed more than two thirds of that amount.

The following year state media reported as much as 175bn yuan was owed to workers.

The issue has been raised at China's legislature, the National People's Congress, with delegates suggesting employers should contribute to a "security fund" that would ensure workers were paid in the event that the employer defaulted.

In Chongqing, the authorities this month took far more drastic action, deploying a SWAT team of police to raid a construction site where workers were reportedly owed up to 20,000 yuan each.

The city is run by Bo Xilai, an ambitious 61-year-old politician who is expected to become a member of China's supreme nine-strong Politburo Standing Committee next year.

Many other cases have seen workers lose their wages, or even their lives.

In October last year, state media reported that a migrant worker in Sichuan province was beaten to death by men from a personnel company after trying to claim his unpaid wages.

In the city of Shenzhen, workers have been banned from petitioning over unpaid wages in the run-up to the Universiade, or World Student Games in August, a move criticised by the state media.

Despite the issue being discussed for more than a decade, unpaid wages are still "a huge problem", said Geoffrey Crothall of China Labour Bulletin, a Hong Kong-based campaign group.

"Every year, particularly around Chinese new year, you see stories about hundreds of millions of yuan owed to migrant workers, particularly in construction," he said.

One reason, he said, is that the government does not have enough labour inspectors to visit construction sites.

In addition, many workers are employed on a casual basis and lack contracts. This makes it almost impossible for them to seek redress.

They have no proof how much they are supposed to have been paid, and how much they were actually given.

It is also an acute problem in manufacturing, with workers often going without their salary when their factories struggle with cash flow.

In some cases "workers will simply stage a protest and try to bring their plight to the attention of the local government. That's what happened in Chongqing", he said. Next page


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