Nepalese sue US company over Iraq
A Nepalese man and relatives of 12
others who were killed in Iraq four years ago are suing American firm
KBR on charges of human trafficking.
The men were recruited in Nepal
to work in a hotel in Jordan, but were later told they would have to
work at a US air base in Iraq, their lawyers said.
Twelve of the men were kidnapped and killed by Islamic militants while being transported inside Iraq.
The 13th man was made to work against his will at the air base, lawyers said.
The execution-style killing of the hostages was recorded by the extremists and posted on a website.
The incident sparked riots in
Nepal with angry demonstrators targeting a mosque, some government
buildings and offices of employment agencies.
At least two people were killed in the protests.
'Passports seized'
The lawsuit filed in the US
District Court in Los Angeles on Wednesday alleged "that the illicit
trafficking scheme... was engineering by KBR and its subcontractor",
identified as Daoud & Partners.
The men, between the ages of 18
and 27, were recruited "to work as kitchen staff in hotels and
restaurants in Amman, Jordan", said a statement from Cohen, Milstein,
Hausfeld & Toll, one of the law firms handling the case.
Some recruitment agencies are blamed for sending workers to Iraq |
But once they arrived in Jordan "they were not provided the expected employment," the statement said.
Their passports were seized, and
they were told they were being sent to Iraq "to provide menial labour"
at the Al-Asad air base, it added.
"For 15 months, the 13th man
Buddi Prasad Gurung, was held in Iraq against his will, before KBR and
Daoud allowed him to return home to Nepal," the statement said.
"It doesn't appear that any of
them knew they were going to Iraq," news agency Reuters quoted attorney
Matthew Handley as saying.
KBR would not comment on the
lawsuit, but in a statement, the company said it "in no way condones or
tolerates unethical or illegal behaviour".
Nepal banned its citizens from going to Iraq to work there in 2003 because of safety concerns.
But a lack of employment
opportunities back home meant that private recruitment agencies
continued to send Nepalese workers to Iraq through countries like
Jordan and Kuwait.