Visit ANY massage parlour in any emirate, you will be pleasantly educated.
i haven't been to the emirates, but assuming that one massage parlour can serve 10000 customers annually (30 per day) and has 10 employees (3 per day per employee), there would be only 150 parlours in the UAE, with 1500 employees. that's nothing compared to the millions of Indians being enslaved.
On top of that, massage parlour employees work in air conditioned environments with plenty of food and water (needed to maintain appearance and to make profit), while Indians are forced to work as field slaves in construction for 14 hours per day (no need to maintain appearance, just enough food to survive).
As for facts:
Expatriates in the United Arab Emirates - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
There are approximately 180,000 Chinese people in the United Arab Emirates,[21] 150,000 of which are in Dubai.[22] Many Chinese expatriates hail from the Wenzhou region; they are mostly
businessmen and merchants who run hundreds of commodity shops.[23] Chinese culture in the Emirates has a sizeable presence; there is an overwhelming number of Chinese restaurants in Dubai.
Indians in the United Arab Emirates - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indians in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) constitute a large part of population of the country.
Over a million Indian migrants are estimated to be living in the UAE (2000),[1] who form over 40% of the total population of the UAE.
A study conducted in 2004 found the median salary range of Indian migrants to be between Dh 1,001—1,500 (between US$ 270—408) per month (or US$ 3,240—4,896 per year), considerably below the national per capita income of US$ 55,200. Only 9% of those surveyed earned a salary of Dh 5,000 (US$ 1,360) or more per month.
As for treatment of Chinese in Dubai:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubai_Chinatown
Dubai Chinatown is an 800-hectare development near Dubai International Airport; it includes a business district shaped like a dragon, its own great wall, and a forbidden city. Once completed the town will be capable to accommodate 60,000 people. Dubai Chinatown will cost $47 million, (AED 173 million). Upon completion, Dubai china town is claimed to be the world's largest china town.
The mixed-use project involves the construction of residential apartments, hotels, a shopping mall, entertainment facilities, factory outlets, warehousing. The development includes the construction of a shopping mall to be built in the shape of a dragon over 150,000 square metres and a 30,000 square feet (2,800 m2) warehousing facility. It is being tendered in four phases. The three other phases of construction are Chinamex apartments 1 and 2 and Chinamart.
Meanwhile...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indians_in_the_United_Arab_Emirates
The remaining migrants (about one-third) live in collective labour accommodations (referred to as labour camps), such as those in Mussafah (Abu Dhabi) or Sonapur (Dubai).
Approximately 88% of those living in collective labour accommodations live in rooms with an average occupancy ranging from four to eight.[8] Recently, Human Rights Watch criticised the labour accommodations, calling the living conditions less than human.[9]