Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Rights group slams S Arabia slave
Saudi Arabian families are abusing female migrant workers to the point of slavery and Riyadh needs to respond with sweeping labour and justice reforms, a major rights group said Tuesday. US-based Human Rights Watch said in a new report released in Indonesia that many Saudis believed they ‘owned’ their foreign domestic workers and treated them like slaves. ‘Saudis treat them like chattel, slaves, like cattle. A domestic worker is like a slave and slaves have no rights,’ the report quoted a ‘senior consular official’ with a foreign embassy in the kingdom as saying. The 133-page report entitled ‘As If I Am Not Human’: Abuses against Asian Domestic Workers in Saudi Arabia,’ was compiled after two years of research, the group said. The work included 42 interviews with domestic workers, officials, and labour recruiters in Saudi Arabia and the workers’ countries of origin, it said. Out of 86 domestic workers interviewed, HRW concluded that 36 faced abuse that amounted to forced labour, trafficking or slavery-like conditions. Some of the cases were horrific. ‘For one year and five months... no salary at all. I asked for money and they would beat me, or cut me with a knife, or burn me,’ Sri Lankan domestic worker Ponnamma S was quoted as telling the rights group. Haima G, a Filipina domestic worker, said her employer called her into his bedroom one day soon after she had arrived and told her she had been ‘bought’ for 10,000 riyals (2,670 dollars). ‘The employer raped me many times. I told everything to madam. The whole family, madam, the employer, they didn’t want me to go. They locked the doors and gates,’ she was quoted as saying. Nour Miyati, an Indonesian domestic worker, had her fingers and toes amputated due to daily beatings and starvation. Charges against her employers were dropped after a three-year legal process, despite a confession. ‘Employers often take away passports and lock workers in the home, increasing their isolation and risk of psychological, physical, and sexual abuse,’ HRW said in a statement. It said Saudi labour laws excluded domestic workers, so many were forced to work 18 hours a day, seven days a week – often without pay – for years. Sleeping quarters included closets and bathrooms. Nisha Varia, HRW’s senior women’s rights researcher, said that in the worst cases the women were ‘treated like virtual slaves.’
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