Migrants continue facing service deprivation at Embassies
Staff Reporter
| Published: Thursday, December 18, 2025
Illustration: Niemur Rahman Emon.
Bangladeshi workers, students abroad complain of inadequate
support, harassment at missions despite vital remittance contributions
Bangladeshi migrant workers, students and professionals
continue facing severe service deprivation at embassies abroad despite their
substantial contributions to the national economy, according to complaints
gathered until this International Migrants Day.
Migrants allege consistent failures by Bangladeshi missions
to provide adequate services, alongside reports of harassment and bribery.
Ministry of Expatriates' Welfare and Overseas Employment is observing
International Migrants Day 2025 and National Expatriates Day 2025 today to mark
the occasion.
Thousands of Bangladeshi students travel worldwide annually
for higher education. Many work alongside studies and send remittances home,
contributing significantly to economic development. However, students report
embassies fail to provide expected support and rarely work generously for
citizens' needs.
Abul Hossain, a PhD student in Russia, told Kaler Kantho
that despite growing numbers of Bangladeshi students and workers in Russia,
embassies provide no proper guidance or initiatives to engage with students.
"Although there is a hotline service, calls are rarely answered,"
Hossain said.
Naim, a student in Malaysia, reported that any embassy task
requires excessive time. "Even when following proper procedures,
unnecessary complications are often created," he said.
Professional migrants face similar difficulties. Masud Rana,
a worker in Malaysia, complained about persistent passport-related harassment.
After receiving passports from High Commission, activation at e-scale requires
two additional days. "High Commission could complete the process at once
if it wished," Rana said, adding that limited call centre expansion makes
communication difficult.
Sajedul Haque, a professional in Italy living with family,
said securing embassy appointments for land, family and relatives' matters has
become extremely difficult.
SM Mahbubul Alam, Director General of Public Diplomacy
Division at Ministry of Foreign Affairs, blamed middlemen for creating such
problems. He claimed brokers mislead service seekers and create complications,
though issues are gradually decreasing.
Interim government has failed to reopen key labour markets
including Malaysia, Oman and United Arab Emirates after one year in power.
Previously closed nine labour markets remain shut, causing declining overseas
employment numbers and raising fears of manpower export sector collapse.
Saudi Arabia remains Bangladesh's largest labour market,
absorbing 50 to 60 percent of overseas workers annually. This year up to 16th
December, 10 lakh 71 thousand 570 workers went abroad, with 7 lakh 12 thousand
44 travelling to Saudi Arabia, representing 50.49 percent. However, workers
face new complications including mandatory Taqamul certificate requirements and
problems with iqama, employment and wages.
Chief Adviser Dr Muhammad Yunus acknowledged that expatriate
Bangladeshis play invaluable roles in the country's economy and progress. He
noted remittances sent by migrant workers are vital for keeping national
economy moving.
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