By Agence France Presse (AFP)
Rana Moussaoui
Agence France Presse
BEIRUT: Abused, humiliated and deprived of the most basic rights, foreign maids in Lebanon are starting to fight back against their employers in court and, in rare cases, they are winning. Nanda, from Sri Lanka is one of the few to break the silence. The 22-year-old arrived in Beirut in 2009 to work as a housekeeper, hoping to help support her 8-year-old daughter and soldier husband back home with her meager monthly salary of $180.
Instead she found herself trapped in an abusive household with no way out.
Nanda’s employer confiscated her passport and forced her to work seven days a week, although her contract stipulated eight-hour workdays and a recent decree adopted by the Lebanese government that calls for domestic workers to be given one day off a week.
“I worked from 5:30 in the morning until midnight, non-stop and without pay,” she said. “And what’s worse is I was never allowed to call my family.”
Nanda was particularly shocked when her employer’s 6- and 12-year-old children took to beating her when she did not cater to their whims.
“I did not understand Arabic and now I know I was often being treated as a ‘sharmouta,’” the Arabic word for whore, Nanda said, fighting back tears.
“For my first two months in Lebanon, my boss gave me one slice of bread a day to eat because she said I was too fat, and sometimes leftovers. I was always hungry,” she told AFP, sitting in a shelter at Caritas Lebanon, a charity group that offers refuge to victims of domestic abuse.
But today, Nanda has joined a growing number of foreign workers who are filing lawsuits against their employers in a bid to improve their lot.
“We hope that justice will find her,” said Dima Haddad, a social worker at Caritas which is giving Nanda legal assistance.
Haddad said she especially hopes Nanda will repeat the success of 29-year-old Filipina Jonaline Malibagu, whose employer was sentenced in December to 15 days in prison by a Lebanese court for abuse and ordered to pay $7,200 in damages.
“Another worker who had not received her salary for years also managed to win compensation in court in 2009,” she said.
Many of the estimated 200,000 foreign domestic workers currently in Lebanon hail from the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Ethiopia.
The Philippines, Ethiopia and Madagascar now ban their citizens from travelling to Lebanon due to the tiny Mediterranean country’s poor labor rights record.
Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday Middle Eastern governments were failing to improve their rights records, including for the hundreds of thousands of migrant workers.
The international rights group’s World Report 2010 highlighted the poor treatment of workers in Saudi Arabia, Lebanon and Jordan, where they face “exploitation and abuse by employers, including excessive work hours, non-payment of wages and restrictions on their liberty.”
But there are signs, albeit small, that the Lebanese state and society are waking up to the problem.
In January 2005, Lebanon’s immigration authorities agreed to grant Caritas the right to house abused workers and provide them with medical and legal counsel.
And last year the government issued a decree that requires employers to abide by a set of rules including paying workers their salary in full at the end of each month and giving them one day off a week.
However, advocacy groups say that few employers respect these conditions.
“These rules stipulate one day off a week, but many employers still refuse to allow their housekeepers to leave the house,” Haddad said.
“The issue is definitely becoming more visible,” said Nadim Houry, a senior researcher in Beirut for Human Rights Watch. “But many workers still do not dare complain because of fear, or because they have no papers.”
Houry added that widespread abuse, and sometimes rape, has caused an alarming number of suicides.
Human Rights Watch estimates that one domestic worker commits suicide in Lebanon every week on average.
“When you’re cornered, suicide becomes a real option,” said Nanda.
The Lebanese Center for Human Rights (CLDH) is a local non-profit, non-partisan Lebanese human rights organization in Beirut that was established by the Franco-Lebanese Movement SOLIDA (Support for Lebanese Detained Arbitrarily) in 2006. SOLIDA has been active since 1996 in the struggle against arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and the impunity of those perpetrating gross human violations.
Search This Blog
Labels
Special Tribunal for Lebanon
Detention cases
Judiciary and Prison System
Enforced Disappearance
Women's rights
Kidnappings
ESC Rights
Environment
Non Palestinian refugees and Migrants
Public Freedoms
Palestinian Rights
Military Court
NGOs
Children rights
Torture
Minorities Rights
CLDH in the press
health
Human Rights Defenders
Death Penalty
Lebanese detained in Syria
disabled rights
Political rights
Displaced
LGBT
Racism
Right to life
January 30, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archives
-
▼
2010
(4682)
-
▼
January
(360)
- Almustaqbal - Minister Of Environment
- Alakhbar - Detainee Houmsi
- Aliwaa - Woman Kota
- L' Orient Le Jour - Conseil des ministres : deux ...
- Daily Star - Foreign Domestic Workers
- Assafir - Cldh Ngos Raises Death Of Refugee In P...
- January 30, 2010 - L'orient le Jour - Liban Najja...
- January 30, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Liban L'affa...
- January 30, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Liban Le com...
- January 30, 2010 - The Daily Star - Lebanon Majdel...
- January 30, 2010 - An Nahar - Lebanon AHRAR ask ab...
- L' Orient Le Jour - Mitri s’insurge contre les jou...
- Daily Star - Ministers Hold Heated Debate On Pro...
- January 30, 2010 - Al Akhbar - Lebanon Majdel Anja...
- Daily Star - Arab Journalists Convene In Beirut ...
- Assafir - The Elections Supervisory Authority
- Almustaqbal - Challenges Journalists
- Almustaqbal - Arab Journalists Convene In Beirut...
- Daily Star - Unesco Releases 28 Audio Books For ...
- Assafir - Unesco Releases 28 Audio Books For Vis...
- Daily Star - Rahhal Discuss Environmental Protec...
- Almustaqbal - Rahal Discuss Environmental Coopera...
- Albalad - Protect Woman From Violence
- Almustaqbal - Committee On Women Draft Of The Pro...
- Daily Star - Majdalani Palestinians Will Abide By...
- January 29, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Lebanon The ...
- Daily Star - Cabinet To Discuss Electoral Reform...
- January 29, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Lebanon BN s...
- January 29, 2010 - The Daily Star - Lebanon Majdel...
- January 29, 2010 - Assafir - Lebanon the arrest of...
- Assafir - Clarification From The Association For ...
- Almustaqbal - 28 Story Audio For The Blind In Pub...
- L'orient Le Jour - L’Option libanaise insiste sur...
- L'orient Le Jour - La justice saoudienne laisse un...
- Alakhbar - Saudi Arabia Dropped Ali Sebat' Death ...
- Aliwaa - My Nationality
- Daily Star - Study Debunks Justification For Mai...
- Aliwaa - CLDH Enforced disappearance
- Daily Star - Harb Majdalani Discuss Palestinian L...
- Almustaqbal - Shahed Needs Of Pales Refugees
- January 28, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Lebanon Kidn...
- January 28, 2010 - The Daily Star - Lebanon case o...
- January 28, 2010 - Assafir - Lebanon Kidnapping Im...
- January 28, 2010 - Aliwaa - Lebanon CLDH Enforced ...
- Daily Star - Escwa Holds Assembly On Natural Disa...
- Daily Star - Environment Ministry Pushes For Green
- L'orient Le Jour - Peine de mort requise contre la...
- Daily Star - Egypt Prosecutors Call For Death Pena...
- Alakhbar - N Y Hrw Missed Opportunities To Promot...
- Almustaqbal - Baroud In The Launch Of A Study Of ...
- Assafir - Annual Report Human Rights Watch
- L'Orient Le Jour - Nationalité : plus de 80 000 p...
- L'Orient Le Jour - 2009, année des occasions perd...
- Aliwaa - Rights For Pales Refugees
- January 27, 2010 - Al Mustaqbal - Lebanon Committe...
- January 27, 2010 - Al Anwar - France Pr Sarkozy 2 ...
- Aliwaa - Training Courses To Enable Women
- L'orient Le Jour - Lancement à la NDU de la campa...
- Daily Star - Ecological Massacres
- Assafir - Women's Political Participation
- L'Orient Le Jour - Victimes d’abus, les employées...
- Assafir - Sit-in Demanding Improving Services
- Alhayat - Pales Refugees
- Almustaqbal - The Right To Vote
- Daily Star - Saudi Girl To Face 90 Lashes For Ass...
- Alakhbar - Illegal Migrant Died In Rachayia Prison
- Alakhbar - Torture Redaa Taymour
- Almustaqbal - Mahmoud Abou Rafeh
- Almustaqbal - Case Of Brothers Jarah
- Alakhbar - Case Of Ethiopian Jailed For 15 Months
- Alakhbar - Ilo Workshop About Woman Work
- Almustaqbal - Women Council
- Assafir - Ilo Workshop About Woman Work
- Alakhbar - Woman Committe
- Almustaqbal - Woman Committe
- Almustaqbal - Mahmoud Abou Rafeh, January 23, 2010
- Almustaqbal -Case of Brothers Jarah - January 23,2010
- Assafir - Unrwa Money Aid To Al Bared Camp Families
- Almustaqbal - Rebuild Of Al Bared Camp
- Almustaqbal - Phro
- Daily Star - Lade Warns Against Insufficient Elec...
- Aliwaa - Lade Warns Against Insufficient Electora...
- Albalad - Lade Warns Against Insufficient Elector...
- Alanwar - Lade Warns Against Insufficient Elector...
- Alakhbar - Case Of Ethiopian Jailed For 15 Months
- Annahar - Woman Kota
- Assafir - For Women Rights
- January 22, 2010 - An Nahar - Lebanon Case of Deta...
- January 22, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Lebanon The ...
- January 22, 2010 - PRESS RELEASE - Morocco: About ...
- Aliwaa - Rebuild Of Al Bared
- Aliwaa - Phro
- L'Orient le jour - La Sûreté générale dément avoir...
- Assafir - Sudanese Detainees .. And The End Of Th...
- Naharnet - General Security department denies bann...
- Albalad - Walid Ben Talal Vice Pr Visit Egypt
- Almustaqbal - International Labor Trained Journal...
- Assafir - Ruwad Fronteers
- 100121 Assafir - The Issue Of Yousra Amiri
- Naharnet - General Security Department Denies Bann...
-
▼
January
(360)
A domestic helper is a worker that performs a variety of household services for an individual or a family. A domestic helper does all the household activities including cleaning, cooking, household maintenance, children care, and elderly care. If you are looking for a domestic helper Singapore then you can contact the Universal Employment Agency. They will help you to hire a domestic helper easily.
ReplyDelete