Asia's migrant workers debate if Gulf jobs are worth deadly risk of Iran war

Tamara Ceaikovski

All Norma Tactacon can do is pray as the sirens blare. The 49-year-old, who works in the Middle East as a domestic worker, is thousands of miles away from her home in the Philippines, where her husband and three children live. Stuck in Qatar, which is caught in the crossfire of the US and Israel's war on Iran, her only hope is that she makes it home to her family. "I get scared and nervous every time I see pictures and videos of missiles in the air," she tells the BBC. "I need to be alive to be

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