Dubai Telegraph - 'We are ghosts': Britain's migrant night workers

EUR -
AED 4.305887
AFN 77.709185
ALL 96.478576
AMD 447.185772
ANG 2.09919
AOA 1075.152793
ARS 1700.369985
AUD 1.773631
AWG 2.110442
AZN 1.988832
BAM 1.955738
BBD 2.360665
BDT 143.336662
BGN 1.956978
BHD 0.441893
BIF 3465.248858
BMD 1.172468
BND 1.513271
BOB 8.098811
BRL 6.475887
BSD 1.172083
BTN 105.746636
BWP 15.488771
BYN 3.438849
BYR 22980.366846
BZD 2.357265
CAD 1.61593
CDF 2654.466702
CHF 0.931925
CLF 0.027231
CLP 1068.28207
CNY 8.255638
CNH 8.249606
COP 4530.075163
CRC 583.993872
CUC 1.172468
CUP 31.070394
CVE 110.262432
CZK 24.345146
DJF 208.71692
DKK 7.471023
DOP 73.649227
DZD 152.057404
EGP 55.710151
ERN 17.587015
ETB 182.28121
FJD 2.678209
FKP 0.875683
GBP 0.876291
GEL 3.15366
GGP 0.875683
GHS 13.478686
GIP 0.875683
GMD 86.177995
GNF 10246.89247
GTQ 8.976714
GYD 245.21429
HKD 9.122801
HNL 30.871544
HRK 7.535801
HTG 153.50708
HUF 387.461295
IDR 19612.805129
ILS 3.76222
IMP 0.875683
INR 105.755121
IQD 1535.364245
IRR 49390.201541
ISK 147.598809
JEP 0.875683
JMD 187.538032
JOD 0.831246
JPY 182.693329
KES 151.201549
KGS 102.532078
KHR 4693.910708
KMF 493.608762
KPW 1055.213891
KRW 1733.622576
KWD 0.35983
KYD 0.976677
KZT 604.728496
LAK 25381.625407
LBP 104957.75099
LKR 362.644648
LRD 207.4534
LSL 19.65201
LTL 3.461992
LVL 0.709214
LYD 6.352906
MAD 10.74255
MDL 19.766708
MGA 5270.944687
MKD 61.553567
MMK 2462.249047
MNT 4159.449731
MOP 9.393981
MRU 46.788509
MUR 53.980917
MVR 18.125748
MWK 2032.378672
MXN 21.1111
MYR 4.787769
MZN 74.932205
NAD 19.651926
NGN 1707.089825
NIO 43.129363
NOK 11.911598
NPR 169.197503
NZD 2.033112
OMR 0.450663
PAB 1.172073
PEN 3.946308
PGK 5.051947
PHP 68.771097
PKR 328.410553
PLN 4.202183
PYG 7824.884517
QAR 4.2742
RON 5.090889
RSD 117.377767
RUB 93.706815
RWF 1706.482092
SAR 4.397754
SBD 9.544025
SCR 15.937333
SDG 705.242561
SEK 10.884521
SGD 1.513562
SHP 0.879654
SLE 28.257353
SLL 24586.065653
SOS 668.692983
SRD 45.348695
STD 24267.714109
STN 24.499743
SVC 10.255761
SYP 12965.576153
SZL 19.65771
THB 36.827279
TJS 10.823756
TMT 4.115362
TND 3.42592
TOP 2.823021
TRY 50.188185
TTD 7.952849
TWD 36.940356
TZS 2919.444848
UAH 49.50498
UGX 4186.902498
USD 1.172468
UYU 45.928539
UZS 14134.67084
VES 327.368692
VND 30855.246128
VUV 142.305809
WST 3.264988
XAF 655.950117
XAG 0.018097
XAU 0.000272
XCD 3.168653
XCG 2.11236
XDR 0.815788
XOF 655.947319
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.574562
ZAR 19.637368
ZMK 10553.623208
ZMW 26.664606
ZWL 377.53412
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.29

    +0.13%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    90.61

    +0.83%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    77.63

    +0.57%

  • NGG

    -0.7700

    76.39

    -1.01%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    48.29

    -0.87%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    57.04

    -0.23%

  • BCE

    -0.3000

    22.85

    -1.31%

  • BP

    -1.1600

    33.31

    -3.48%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    15.4

    +3.51%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.43

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    40.65

    +0.22%

  • BCC

    1.4100

    77.7

    +1.81%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    12.8

    -0.08%

'We are ghosts': Britain's migrant night workers
'We are ghosts': Britain's migrant night workers / Photo: HENRY NICHOLLS - AFP

'We are ghosts': Britain's migrant night workers

"We are ghosts on the night shift," says Leandro Cristovao from Angola, who has worked the graveyard shift at a south London market for seven years.

Text size:

In the last decade, Britain's nine-million-strong nighttime workforce has become increasingly reliant on migrants like Cristovao, as the number of UK-born workers doing night work shrinks.

"You have a lot of night work carried out by migrant night workers in -- somewhat unfairly named -- low-skilled sectors," explained Julius-Cezar Macarie, a sociology professor at University College Cork.

"Their work is very, very essential, because they maintain this ... 24-hour society," said Macarie, whose "Nightwork Footprint" project researches the invisibility of the shift.

Amid the raging debate in the UK about the number of migrants and irregular immigrants, those not born in the UK are twice as likely to work overnight as those born in the country, according to official data from 2022.

In the health and care sector, over a third of night workers are migrants.

As the government clamps down on overseas workers, migrants spoke to AFP about working in the shadows.

- The office cleaner -

As the sun rose on a chilly morning in central London, Roxana Panozo Alba walked against the tide of suited-up bankers whose offices she spent the night cleaning.

The 46-year-old and her team -- most of whom are migrants -- clean toilets, kitchens, conference rooms and over 500 desks from 10:00 pm to 7:00 am.

She says she gets paid the London Living Wage (£13.85, $18.47) per hour.

Alba, originally from Bolivia and a Spanish citizen through marriage, moved to the UK with her husband because "there was no work left in Spain".

She has worked nights for eight years to be with her kids -- aged six and 15 -- in the day, and because she does not speak English, limiting opportunities.

"Working at night is not good, it damages your health," said Alba.

"You have to sleep (in the day), but you can't. The slightest noise and you can't get to sleep."

- The care workers -

Omatule Ameh, 39, is an overnight support worker for children with learning disabilities in rural southeast England. He moved there from Nigeria in 2023 on a care worker visa.

During the day, Ameh looks after his own eight-year-old and 18-month-old while his wife works at the care home. Sometimes, he gets only three hours of sleep.

"You find that emotionally, mentally, it's taking a gradual toll on you," said Ameh, who earns minimum wage, around £12.20 an hour.

Judith Munyonga, 44, from Zimbabwe works from 7:00 pm to 7:00 am four days a week, caring for patients with spinal cord injuries in Hertfordshire, north of London.

The former teacher monitors her patients while they sleep, often sitting besides them in darkness.

"I'll try to play music in one of my headphones to keep myself awake. When it's dark, I tell you, it's not easy," said Munyonga.

Both carers feel the government's move to end the social care visa route and rising anti-immigration rhetoric are "worrying".

Last month, the government announced it would triple the time before some "low-qualified" care workers can apply for residency from five to 15 years.

"It's like changing the rules in the middle of a game," Ameh lamented.

The Labour government has also ended the provision allowing care workers to bring their families to the UK -- the path through which Munyonga brought her husband and children.

"It's sad," said Munyonga. "You are here to care for some family, (for them) to live a normal life. And yours is out there."

Ameh is taking management courses and wants to "move up the ladder".

- The chef -

Sandeep wipes grease from the counter of a 24-hour London cafe before clocking off at 7:00 am, after a 12-hour shift.

The 21-year-old Nepali has worked as a chef there for two years, first when he was a student, and now as a graduate, after he struggled to find a tech job.

"It's really hard to get a job at the moment," said the computer science graduate, adding he had "no option" but to work nights.

He moved to the UK from Nepal in 2023 because "there's nothing back there for youngsters like us."

But if he cannot find a job that pays more than his current minimum-wage work, he will have to return to Nepal in a year when his visa expires, as the government hikes the minimum salary requirement for foreign work visas.

"They gave me the hope ... now what's the point of telling me to go back to your country?" said Sandeep, who did not want to share his full name.

"Everyone here is an immigrant," he added, gesturing towards the Nepalese team which dishes up traditional British fare through the night.

"If we couldn't do it, I think the boss has to shut down the place for night shift."

- The warehouse manager -

Cristovao, 36, packages wholesale produce which reaches UK restaurants, schools and hotels in the early morning hours.

When he first started, he would have "nightmares" and jolt awake during the day, thinking he was late for work.

"I almost became like a ghost," he said, speaking at the sprawling night market.

His boss Martin Dykes said the business, Nature's Choice, took a hit after Brexit, adding he is "worried" about new visa restrictions as local night workers are harder to find.

"My friends in the business, we wouldn't (be able to) do it. Restaurants wouldn't survive," said Dykes.

"But we are here," Cristovao said defiantly.

"While they are sleeping, we are here," he said, pointing to the residential skyscrapers behind him, where the lights are switched off.

Y.Al-Shehhi--DT