Nous publions trois extraits du documentaire Someone Else's War de Lee Wang qui raconte l'histoire de plus de 30.000 travailleurs sous-payés venus du sud et du sud-est de l'Asie pour faire le «sale boulot dans les bases militaires américaines» en Irak.
Dans les cuisines d'une base américaine du Nord de l'Irak.
Un contractuel parle des conditions de vie déplorables des ressortissants de pays tiers en Irak.
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Nationality of Civilian Contractors Reported Working in Iraq and Afghanistan
| Number of Workers | Percent of Total Workers | |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign Workers* | 45,194 | 67% |
| American Workers | 22,465 | 33% |
Source: U.S. Central Command, July 2007
Nationality of Civilian Contractors Reported Injured or Killed in Iraq and Afghanistan
| Number of Injuries | Percent of Total Injuries | |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign Workers* | 3,079 | 14% |
| American Workers | 18,701 | 86% |
Source: Labor Department, January 2008. The Labor Department does not track the nationality of each civilian contractor. It does, however, maintain the mailing addresses for claimants receiving benefits. The figures above reflect country data derived from those mailing addresses as a rough proxy for nationality. The Los Angeles Times obtained the data as part of the settlement of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed against the Labor Department.
*Excludes Iraqi and Afghan workers
For more on our investigation on injured war contractors, go to Disposable Army: Civilian Contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan [1].