Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian Engineer Named Saddam Hussain Struggles To Find Work In India

24 Mar, 2017 02:04 PM
    Saddam Hussain, a marine engineer from Jamshedpur, India, claims that having the same name as the notorious former dictator of Iraq has made it impossible for him to secure a job in the field he has trained so hard in.
     
    When Saddam's grandfather chose his name, 25 years ago, he had no idea that it would one day become a huge burden. After all, the name is very popular among Indian Muslims, but due to his career choice it is proving an insurmountable hurdle.
     
    Two years after graduating from Tamil Nadu's Noorul Islam University as a marine engineer, Saddam Hussain is still struggling to find work, despite ranking second in his batch of 2014. All of his former colleagues have secured jobs with companies around the world, but he keeps getting rejected. He has showed up for interviews with multinational shipping companies some 40-odd times, but they all ended in rejection.
     
    After numerous failures in the first six months of job hunting, Saddam was clueless to why no one wanted to hire him, so he decided to contact the HR department of the companies he had applied to, and some admitted that it had to do with his name.
     
    "I then inquired with the HR departments of the companies and some of them told me my name was the problem," he told The Hindustan Times. "People are scared to hire me."
     
    It turns out that having an employ who shares the name of Iraq's former dictator can be an operational nightmare, especially when his job requires routinely crossing national borders. Despite the minor different in spelling - Huassain not Hussein - and the death of the controversial Iraqi leader, the name instantly arouses suspicion, so having a crew member named Saddam Hussein could create unnecessary troubles for the company.
     
    "If the issue involves crossing the borders, then nothing can be done as border patrol and airport authorities are very process-driven and if there is a red flag, they will check out," top executive of Delhi-based TeamLease Services, a leading recruitment consultant, told The Hindustan Times.
     
    "If the person's job involves frequent travel abroad, he might just keep getting stuck or the company has to pull him out of the sticky situation, making the hire cumbersome."
     
    "Even Shah Rukh Khan - the famous Bollywood actor - gets detained at US airports. What is this Saddam in comparison?" the consultant added.
     
    Convinced that he could never work as a marine engineer with such a problematic name, Saddam decided to legally change his name to Sajid, but that only made things worse. Although his current documents - including passport, voter ID and driving licence - feature his new name, on his educational certificates his name still shows up as Saddam Hussain. That makes companies even more reluctant to hire him.
     
    The Noorul Islam University has refused to change the documents until he got his Class 10 and 12 exam certificates changed first, but after appealing to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) for the change, he has yet to receive a response. Desperate to find a job, Sajid has recently addressed the Jharkhand high court with a plea to direct the CBSE to change his name. The first hearing has been set for May 5.
     
    "I am an innocent victim of somebody else's crimes," Sajid concludes.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    WATCH: Shocking Video Shows How Man Stopped His Wife From Jumping To Death

    WATCH: Shocking Video Shows How Man Stopped His Wife From Jumping To Death
    When her husband held on to her by tugging on her hair, she reportedly screamed for him to “let go”. 

    WATCH: Shocking Video Shows How Man Stopped His Wife From Jumping To Death

    WATCH: This Video Of A UP Schoolkid Talking About Demonetisation, Arvind Kejriwal Is Going Viral

    WATCH: This Video Of A UP Schoolkid Talking About Demonetisation, Arvind Kejriwal Is Going Viral
    Reportedly Uttar Pradesh-resident Archit Kumar asked some questions pertaining demonetisation and its effects that might as well drop your jaws. 

    WATCH: This Video Of A UP Schoolkid Talking About Demonetisation, Arvind Kejriwal Is Going Viral

    '84 Anti-Sikh Riots: Jagdish Tytler Asked To Appear In Court On CBI Plea For Lie-detection Test

    Congress leader Jagdish Tytler has been directed by a Delhi court to appear before it on Friday on a CBI plea seeking permission to conduct lie-detection test on him in a 1984 anti-Sikh riots case.

    '84 Anti-Sikh Riots: Jagdish Tytler Asked To Appear In Court On CBI Plea For Lie-detection Test

    Indo-Canadian Neurosurgeon Shawna Pandya To Become Third Woman Astronaut Of Indian Origin

    Indo-Canadian Neurosurgeon Shawna Pandya To Become Third Woman Astronaut Of Indian Origin
    As a child, she wanted to be a superhero, until she realized that it was not an actual profession. Still, her resume reads like she has been inching closer in real life to being one.

    Indo-Canadian Neurosurgeon Shawna Pandya To Become Third Woman Astronaut Of Indian Origin

    USA’s Muslim Olympian Fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad Says She Was Detained At Airport

    USA’s Muslim Olympian Fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad Says She Was Detained At Airport
    Fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad, the first American to compete in the Olympics wearing a hijab, has said she was recently detained at US Customs for two hours without explanation.

    USA’s Muslim Olympian Fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad Says She Was Detained At Airport

    US Might Ask Visa Applicants For Social Media Passwords

    US Might Ask Visa Applicants For Social Media Passwords
    Foreign travellers visiting the US may have to hand over their social media passwords for background check, a move which could come as part of the effort to toughen vetting of visitors, US Homeland Security Secretary has said.

    US Might Ask Visa Applicants For Social Media Passwords