Odud Sayed Ahammed was a hopeful man. So hopeful, he gave his one piece of land to his neighbour, so the neighbour could go find him a job in Singapore. A year passed, and there was no job. The neighbour said, “It’s getting more expensive to secure work in Singapore. Give me another 100,000 takas, and I’ll be able to do something.”
This time, the neighbour made good on his promise. Odud left for Singapore early last year. Several weeks later, he was sent home to his wife and kids – in a coffin. His death certificate says he had collapsed behind a bus-stop along Boon Lay Way. Cause of death: pneumonia. A friend who was with him has a slightly different story. He says Odud died of diarrhoea.
Was Odud’s death preventable? No one knows. Odud worked for a company called Ree Engineering. Were they negligent? Maybe. Do they owe Maloti some kind of an explanation, if not compensation? Definitely.
What did they do instead? They put Odud’s body in a box, and shipped it back to his family, along with an embalming certificate, a death certificate and a document from the National Environment Agency with the heading: PERMISSION TO EXPORT A COFFIN CONTAINING A CORPSE. Because you know, Singaporean employers are world class, that way. No condolence note. No explanations. Nothing.
Nothing to show for a man, whose biggest mistake, was to hope.