The EU border agency Frontex has been accused of exploiting staff by using a contractor who it is claimed offers interpreters an effective wage of less than €2.50 (£2.11) an hour.
The European Border and Coast Guard Agency, the EU’s best-funded agency with a budget of €754m, is being petitioned by interpreters who work with vulnerable asylum seekers in places such as Greece, Italy and the Canary Islands.
A petition on the website Change.org claims Frontex “exploits their own staff” and violates European standards on pay and working conditions, by using a third-party contractor that offers low wages.
Mohammed Moctar, an interpreter and cultural mediator who instigated the petition, said he had never been offered such low pay in eight years of working for EU agencies, including Frontex. “This last offer from SeproTec is the worst offer I ever received as an interpreter,” he said, referring to the Madrid-headquartered company that recently won a contract to provide interpreters to Frontex.
Moctar, who speaks 10 languages including English, French, Italian, classical Arabic, Soninke and his Sango mother tongue, said Frontex needed to take responsibility for the interpreters. “I am speaking up, with the risk of not getting hired any more, but this matter affects a lot of others who prefer to stay anonymous, because of fear of losing their job or decreasing chances to find work,” he said.
In July Moctar was offered €1,800-2,000 a month to work at an undetermined location in Spain for SeproTec, according to an email seen by the Guardian. While on paper the pay is well above Spain’s minimum wage, the interpreters point out they are expected to be available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
“The salary that has been offered comes
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