The Chaguanas West MP and opposition foreign affairs critic is asking the commonwealth secretaiat to refer the matter to its Committee on Human Rights.
"I invite you to not only table this matter for deliberation at the CHOGM in November, but to refer it to your Committee on Human Rights. I ask respectfully on the behalf of the people of Trinidad and Tobago that you initiate your own investigation into these reports," Warner wrote in the letter dated October 30, 2009, which he has copied to the Human Rights Bureau in London.
Warner told Ambassador Luis Alberto Rodriguez, National Coordinator for CHOGM 2009 he felt he had "an obligation to bring to the attention of the Heads of Government, an issue which has been described in our local media as the exploitation and mistreatment of Chinese nationals by contractors in the construction industry in Trinidad and Tobago."
He stated, "In September of 2009, a group of these workers, through their hired translator, brought their concerns to my Parliamentary office. I was told of the long hours at work without pay, unsafe working conditions and very squalid and filthy living accommodation.
"I was made aware of inhumane barrack styled rooms in which they were forced to live and of a life without basic necessities, which pushed them into the consumption of carcasses strewn on the nation's roadways.
"In October 2009, hundreds of these workers who reside in my Constituency of Chaguanas West were driven into protest action in Port of Spain. Several of them were reportedly arrested by our local police force. Since then there has been a huge public outcry against the dehumanisation of these migrant workers."
Read the story: United opposition stands up for Chinese workers
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