The Bangladeshi deputy consul general in New York was on Monday indicted on charges of labor trafficking and assault for forcing his servant to work without pay through threats and intimidation, a New York City prosecutor said.
Mohammed Shaheldul Islam has limited diplomatic immunity and was ordered to surrender his passport when he appeared before Queens Supreme Court Justice Daniel Lewis, Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said in a statement.
Bail was set at US$50,000 bond or US$25,000 cash. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted.
According to the indictment, Islam brought Bangladeshi Mohammed Amin to New York between 2012 and 2013 to work as a household helper for his family.
“Soon after Mr Amin’s arrival, the defendant allegedly took his passport and required the man to work 18 hours a day. Even though Mr Amin had a contract which outlines his compensation, it is alleged he was never paid for his work,” the statement said.
“If the victim disobeyed the defendant’s orders, Mr Amin was allegedly physically assaulted by the defendant, who either struck him with his hand or sometimes with a wooden shoe,” it said.
A spokesman for the Bangladesh embassy in Washington said it believed Amin had filed the case in bad faith and the allegations were “fabricated” and “baseless.”
“It may be noted that Mr Islam decided to cancel Mr Amin’s contract and was preparing to send him back to Bangladesh due to his irresponsible acts,” spokesman Shamim Ahmad said.
“We hope the court will give its verdict in the matter judiciously,” he said.
Bangladeshi consul general Shameem Ahsan told reporters over the telephone from New York that Amin disappeared on May 17, last year and the very next day the consulate informed the US Department of State office in New York.
“It is surprising for us that after 13 months he has appeared with these allegations, why did he not raise this issue earlier,” Ahmad said.
According to the charges, Amin’s only form of income came from tips from guests at parties and a “miniscule” amount of money Islam sent to Amin’s family in Bangladesh.
On several occasions when Amin sought to leave, Islam hit him and threatened to harm his mother and young son in Bangladesh, the statement said.
On occasion, Islam also stated that he would have Amin’s college-age daughter “shamed” if he did not continue to work as his servant, the statement said.
The statement did not make clear what Islam meant by shaming.
The statement also said that in 2014, shortly after an Indian diplomat in New York was charged with labor trafficking, Islam wrote a check for Amin’s cash-tip earnings that the latter then had to deposit in a bank account to create the appearance of a paycheck.
In late 2013, Devyani Khobragade, who was India’s deputy consul general in New York, was arrested and subsequently accused of visa fraud and forcing her housekeeper and nanny to work 100-hour weeks for about US$1 an hour.
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