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Infanteer Two Seven
10-18-2007, 09:44 PM
A Modern-Day "Slave Trade": Sri Lankan Workers in Lebanon
Reem Haddad

In what can be termed a modern-day slave trade, Sri Lankan women arrive in Lebanon only to find themselves abused, imprisoned, raped, hungry, defenseless and alone. Siriani P., 27, came to Beirut in a desperate attempt to save her family from a life of poverty. Just ten months later, however, she grabbed the first opportunity to run away from her employers.
Clambering into a taxi, Siriani frantically sought help. "Embassy, Sri Lankan embassy," she told the driver, using the little English she knew. But after searching in vain for her embassy, Siriani ended up wandering the streets of Hamra in tears. With one eye swollen and a bump rising on her forehead, she rubbed the red marks on her neck, signs that "Madam" had, on many occasions, pulled Siriani's hair and banged her head against the wall. Clasping her well-worn dress, she sobbed as she recalled her mistress stripping her down to her underwear and beating her thin body. Siriani's tied hands prevented her from defending herself. The pain became even more unbearable when she was thrown to the floor and trod on repeatedly. "I wanted to throw myself from the ninth floor! I'd rather die than go on like this."
Siriani's weight dropped dramatically after she came to Lebanon. Awakened daily at 4:00 AM, she was forbidden to eat before 5:00 PM. Even then, she was only allowed to drink unpurified tap water with her meager meals while the family drank bottled water. Locked inside all day, she was unable to search for assistance.
Sri Lankan women are usually recruited to work overseas by local agents who promise riches in exchange for jobs abroad. Those who respond to the offer are then required to pay a fee to the local agent -- up to $500, an overwhelming sum for most. Many borrow the money, incurring a debt, which, in the future, may prevent them from returning to their country if their Lebanese employer denies them their wages.
At the other end of the labor migration chain are various Lebanese agencies constituting an unregulated -- and highly lucrative -- industry. At a cost ranging from $1,500 to $3,000, a Lebanese family can "buy" a Sri Lankan maid whose monthly salary will range from $100 to $150. The agency draws up a contract committing the maid to her employer for two or three years. Since the contract and negotiations are in Arabic, the Sri Lankan woman usually has little understanding of what she has committed herself to. The contract stipulates that the agency's responsibility for the woman expires after three months. The employer and the employee must then resolve any problems. If a dissatisfied employer brings the maid back to the agency, she will likely be beaten to render her "obedient."
After the initial three-month period, employers become fully responsible for the servant. If the woman leaves, the employer perceives it as an investment loss. Consequently, many employers lock their Sri Lankan maids in the house and control their freedom of movement by confiscating their passports. "Keeping anyone locked up is imprisonment," protests lawyer Mirella Abdel Sater. "It is illegal to force people to work against their will or to take away their passports. A maid is free to leave. If there is a breach of contract, then negotiations can be undertaken. But employers have absolutely no right to detain her against her will."
During a United Nations review of human rights abuses in April 1998, committee members "noted with concern the difficulties faced by many foreign workers in Lebanon whose passports were confiscated by their employers. The committee recommends that the state party should take effective measures to protect the rights of these foreign workers by preventing such confiscation and by providing an accessible and effective remedy for the recovery of passports."
Many abused women feel they have no choice but to escape. "‘Running away' evokes the era of slavery," said Abdel Sater. "You leave your job, but you run away only when enslaved." Since all of the runaways have left their passports behind with their employers, they must obtain new ones. But Lebanese authorities demand $900 for every new passport -- a mandatory fee for processing travel documents for non-Lebanese who lose their passports while in the country.
If they can somehow scrape this amount together, some women may still be forbidden to leave, since many employers report runaway maids to the police as thieves in order to track them down. "The employer cannot report that their maid has run away. It is not illegal for her to do so," Abdel Sater explained, "so they tell the police she stole something." Consequently, her name and picture are distributed to law enforcement authorities throughout the country. An arrest warrant is issued and the women are usually apprehended at the airport.
The police have not been helpful to Sri Lankan maids escaping abusive employers. Many police officers have demonstrated blatant racism when it comes to protecting foreign women seeking their assistance. "I had a case in which a Sri Lankan maid was raped by her employer," said Abdel Sater. "I immediately sent her to the police. When she got there, however, she learned that they already had a warrant for her arrest because her employer had accused her of theft. Supposedly, the accusation had been registered at the police station hours before she arrived. It was impossible for her employer to have registered it that early, though. I suspect he bribed the police to change the time of the report to make it appear that he had submitted his accusation first."
Abdel Sater indicated that she knew of many cases of police abuse. "Worse yet, bruised and beaten woman are usually returned to their employers. One maid I represented fled to the police bleeding. They dutifully took her back and told her employer to stop beating her. No sooner had the police left than the employer repeatedly banged the woman's head against the wall. In desperation, the maid threw herself off the balcony but survived. Neighbors found her and called me. The woman now suffers from memory loss and a fractured skull. The police had no right to return her -- it was their duty to protect her!"
Last August, a Filipina housekeeper was arrested after her French employer called the police to report a theft of a gold medallion. Linda Sacbibit, 42, charged that as soon as she entered the police interrogation room, two policemen tied her wrists and ankles together, forcing her into the fetal position. A long piece of wood was inserted behind her knees, then placed across the top of two chairs and Sacbibit hung head-down from it "like a roasted chicken," as she recounted her experience tearfully through metal bars at Baabda prison. "They began beating the soles of my feet with a cable of some sort. I don't know how much time passed but it was a long time. Then they untied me and made me stand in a pot of water. Soon after, they tied me up and suspended me again," she said. "They slapped my face and they beat my body with the wire repeatedly. I don't remember more because I fainted."
When Sacbibit woke up, she saw small black spots on her chest and arms but couldn't remember how they got there. "The men then ordered me to wash my face and arms because they were a little bloody from the rope's friction. I had to hold my arms up to show them there was no blood left. Then they made me run all around the room. They kept yelling at me to confess that I stole the medallion and gave it to my boyfriend. I told them I didn't steal anything and that I don't have a boyfriend," she said. "But they kept calling me a liar and continued beating me."
The Philippines embassy, however, refused to comment on Sacbibit's story. "The Philippines embassy helps all its citizens," was the only answer offered by the embassy's consular assistant, Berth Salvador, when pressed for information.
"I can tell you with 100 percent certainty that many people are being beaten during investigations," said Roland Tawq, Sacbibit's lawyer. "These police interrogations present the biggest problems for lawyers. They beat our clients and force them to confess. But once the accused reaches court, he or she will say something completely different."
For lawyer Mirella Abdel Sater, who volunteers her time and expertise to help foreign maids, the hundreds of cases she faces can be overwhelming. "Sometimes I feel so helpless," she admitted. "I tell people what the law requires, and they tell me: ‘Get out of here, you and your law!'." At one point, she decided to call abusive employers and ask them to stop the beatings. "In return, they threatened me," she said. "They told me: ‘We know important people and you'd better watch out'. Once the police even called me in for questioning! Since when do you question lawyers representing someone?"
Attempting to punish employers through their servants proved futile. Once rested and secure again, abused women never want to follow through with lawsuits. "I always plead with them to go through with it, but they always back down," Abdel Sater said. "When it comes time to go to court, they just don't want to face their employers."
Even if they did, Abdel Sater's work would still be sabotaged. "When we do file a lawsuit, especially if it involves high officials, it is filed so as to ensure an acquittal," she said. "Legally, I can't do anything. My job has now become to increase public awareness: Don't beat them; don't rape them. Everyone in Lebanon has someone powerful behind him or her, though. The law can't reach them. I end up being the one who's threatened."
Every Sunday, hundreds of Sri Lankans and Filipinos gather at a Catholic church in Beirut to hear the mass in their native languages. This is the first stop for most runaways seeking support and guidance. Occasionally, Lebanese members of the church's congregation will employ a runaway.
Complaints from abused women prompted the Sri Lankan government to open an embassy in Lebanon in 1998. A year later, the Sri Lankan community admits that the embassy has facilitated the replacement of lost passports. Yet other than opening a halfway house where runaway Sri Lankan women can find shelter, it has been unable to stop the mistreatment, rape, passport confiscation and illegal imprisonment Sri Lankan women suffer at the hands of their Lebanese employers.
"An embassy will do nothing in a country where the law does not protect people," Beiruti human rights advocate Tina Naccash complained. "What can an embassy do if the Lebanese government, the legal system and the police don't want to protect these women?"
Even Lebanon's leading universities have been slow to take a stand against violence occurring on their campuses. Two years ago, when a professor at the American University of Beirut allegedly kicked his Sri Lankan servant 17 times, the administration took no action to suspend him. Earlier, the vice president of the Lebanese American University had prevented the publication of a report on the abuse of foreign workers in its quarterly women's studies journal, Al-Raida, on the grounds that it was "too controversial." "If a university cannot talk about controversy, who can?" asked Naccash.
The only way to help foreign workers, Naccash believes, is through official diplomatic representatives who can intervene on behalf of such women. Naccash also calls for the Lebanese labor ministry to open a bureau of domestic workers' affairs that would ensure that all relevant laws are applied strictly to everyone on Lebanese soil.
Until then, women like Malika K., 27, who spends all her free time searching for her younger sister, Damica, are on their own. The agency that brought Damica to Lebanon from Sri Lanka has refused to say where the young woman was placed. In the 11 months since Damica arrived in Beirut, she has written only one letter to her distraught mother. In it, she described beatings, hunger and imprisonment. Malika fears, not without reason, that her sister may now be dead.


http://www.merip.org/mer/mer211/211_haddad.html

LaoSexMachine
10-18-2007, 09:47 PM
It happens alot where workers in Asia are "promise" good money to work overseas. Look at the Middle East and South Asian workers.

Moledet
10-18-2007, 09:55 PM
It's an Arab country, what did you expect? What do you think is now happening to all those captured in Nahr El Bared?

Infanteer Two Seven
10-18-2007, 09:56 PM
It happens alot where workers in Asia are "promise" good money to work overseas. Look at the Middle East and South Asian workers.

Its very sad because even if they try complaining to local Lebanese police they send them back to their owner because they are in contract. I never knew i found this article few weeks ago very disturbing. I mean low wages and longer hours abuse are okay... but assault and ****** abuse that just crosses the line:-(

Infanteer Two Seven
10-18-2007, 09:59 PM
It's an Arab country, what did you expect? What do you think is now happening to all those captured in Nahr El Bared?

I mean even though their punishments are barbaric. convicting someone innocent and slicing innocent heads off in the middle road its not right. what happened to human rights ?

**** GRAPHIC ***
http://www.migrant-rights.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/sushar-rosky.jpg
http://www.migrant-rights.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/sushar-rosky-2.jpg

One?
10-18-2007, 10:01 PM
It's an Arab country, what did you expect? What do you think is now happening to all those captured in Nahr El Bared?

out of all nationalities on this forum you should be the last one to talk about human rights especialy about those in nahr al bared. Comming from someone whose country arrests children and puts them in general population, tortures (electric shock, beating, head banging, stress positions, dehumanization....), uses civilians as human shields, kidnapping, assassinations and your list of abuses goes on. As for what is happening to those in nahr el bared probably not as much as what has happened to those in your prisons. At least they don't get raped using wooden poles.


As for sri lankans and abuse sadly its a fact. They get $200 a month, their passports are withheld and some are abused. Its ****ed up, but that doesn't mean they are all treated like that. A few days ago a philipino maid was murdered in Toronto, does that mean torontonians are barbaric?

digrar
10-18-2007, 10:02 PM
General discussion is for military threads. Moved.

Moledet
10-18-2007, 10:05 PM
Its very sad because even if they try complaining to local Lebanese police they send them back to their owner because they are in contract. I never knew i found this article few weeks ago very disturbing. I mean low wages and longer hours abuse are okay... but assault and ****** abuse that just crosses the line:-(
You think it's just Lebanon? Women trafficking and slavery happens all over the world:
http://www.catw-ap.org/
http://www.catwinternational.org/

Problem in Lebanon seems that the police is corrupt.

Moledet
10-18-2007, 10:17 PM
out of all nationalities on this forum you should be the last one to talk about human rights especialy about those in nahr al bared. Comming from someone whose country arrests children and puts them in general population, tortures (electric shock, beating, head banging, stress positions, dehumanization....), uses civilians as human shields, kidnapping, assassinations and your list of abuses goes on. As for what is happening to those in nahr el bared probably not as much as what has happened to those in your prisons. At least they don't get raped using wooden poles.

Hmmm no, I think Arabs should be the last on earth to talk about human rights especially in this time.

We do arrest children more correctly teens but for some reason they seem to prefer being arrested than actually be in the streets, at least they get education and can learn for their final exams quietly with assistance from teachers and books they need.
the rest of the tortures you listed were never proven and are allegations like Arabs usually make ("they infect us with AIDS...they send killer balloons...they give us poison candies"). The Israeli that was in jail in Lebanon (Daniel Sharon) reported otherwise, he saw teens there being beaten with baseball bats while hanged on ropes and he's no lover of Israel (converted to Islam).

BPEL
10-19-2007, 12:15 AM
Title of the thread is misleading.

If a number of Lebanese are abusing their maids, does not mean the whole population is bad.

Our neighbours have maids from Ethiopia and Sri Lanka and are treated very well.

@Moledet, what does Nahr El Bared have to do with anything? And what makes you so sure all "arab" nations share your judgment. Besides, I am sure all the thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails are waiting for their day in court yeh? Yalla...meshe el hal.

velvet-cream
10-19-2007, 12:19 AM
I would suggest you change the name of the topic.

The title "Lebanese People :: :(" is a very broad generalisation, implying the Lebanese are bad people, and does nothing to describe the subject matter.

Perhaps "Female Sri Lankan workers abused by Lebanese Masters" or something along those lines will be more appropriate.

velvet-cream
10-19-2007, 12:20 AM
BPEL, you just got in front of me!!

BPEL
10-19-2007, 12:32 AM
BPEL, you just got in front of me!!

no worries brother :hug:

Roberto
10-19-2007, 12:49 AM
Title of the thread is misleading.

If a number of Lebanese are abusing their maids, does not mean the whole population is bad.

Our neighbours have maids from Ethiopia and Sri Lanka and are treated very well.

@Moledet, what does Nahr El Bared have to do with anything? And what makes you so sure all "arab" nations share your judgment. Besides, I am sure all the thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails are waiting for their day in court yeh? Yalla...meshe el hal.

I'm no fan of the title myself, but this nonsense of "thousands of Palestinian prisoners" is getting really old...actually it was old 10 years ago. Lebanon was so gentle clearing out that refugee camp using artillery on a heavily populated area. Not that I disagree, but I can only imagine if Israel did the same thing in Gaza. Perhaps those prisoners should stop try killing Israelis (and brain washing teens)? No No...thats just silly...Right of Return! Kill the Infidels!
Unlike nearly all counties in the middle east, there is such a thing in Israel called "Rule of Law", I know its weird. What other nation beside Israel has members of parliament (or whatever its called there) that openly wish its destruction and takes in Muslim refugees from Egypt no less.

So if you don't like the title or the article (or Moledet) , fine. Stop trying to play the "Free the poor innocent(killing Jews&Christians isn't a crime) children from Israeli torture chambers" card.

BPEL
10-19-2007, 12:56 AM
I am replying to Moledet...he started it p-).

Roberto
10-19-2007, 01:10 AM
I think he was responding to "One", but its obvious he's not fan of arabs, starting a flame war won't help that...this whole thread is just one big mess.

LRPV
10-19-2007, 01:49 AM
It's not uncommon to read in local papers of brutal conditions for foriegn domestic servants in near-by countries and even occassionally Australia. I don't think the problem is race or ethnic based, just human nature at its worst when inadequate controls or oversight exists.

jamal
10-19-2007, 01:58 AM
It's an Arab country, what did you expect? What do you think is now happening to all those captured in Nahr El Bared?

well well well an israeli is talking about human rights, that makes me laugh.

Roberto
10-19-2007, 02:07 AM
well well well an israeli is talking about human rights, that makes me laugh.

Man...this is what I love, someone who reads only part of a thread, and comments...this has already be covered...and for the record, I think you can do some research on this...Israel has a better human rights record than the nations surrounding it....its not Sweden, but It aint shooting at Sudanese as they run towards the border either. Muslims flee to Israel for protection, I think thats kind of ironic. And after the Fatah-Hamas fiasco, human rights is a moot point. They killed as many civilians in 5 days as the IDF does in 5 years (most of it isn't even covered because its not really important to the outside world unless the bullets in their skulls come from Israeli M16's).

jamal
10-19-2007, 03:46 AM
Man...this is what I love, someone who reads only part of a thread, and comments...this has already be covered...and for the record, I think you can do some research on this...Israel has a better human rights record than the nations surrounding it....its not Sweden, but It aint shooting at Sudanese as they run towards the border either. Muslims flee to Israel for protection, I think thats kind of ironic. And after the Fatah-Hamas fiasco, human rights is a moot point. They killed as many civilians in 5 days as the IDF does in 5 years (most of it isn't even covered because its not really important to the outside world unless the bullets in their skulls come from Israeli M16's).

i didnt say that arab regimes are better but to hear an israeli talking about human rights? Der Yasin, sabra & Shatila, Qana 1 and 2 .....

Snoshi
10-19-2007, 04:21 AM
Like Roberto said... Arabs should stop criticizing Israel for "human" right abuses and intentional civilian killing while Arab armies are doing the same thing..
Look at what Lebanon did to Nahar-Al beld... Town completely decimated by unguided artillery... (IDF stopped using the artillery after a shell killed dozen of civilians).We don't even know how many civilians died in that camp.. I still remember how international community whined after Palestinians started to report on battles in Jenin... Palestinians said that hundreds of civilians were killed by IDF... While after the battle it was proven to be pal propaganda...

But now Lebanese decimated the hole camp.. Killed and starved everyone i there, but still they have guts to call Israel terrorists. The funny thing too is that Lebanese called Fatah-Al Islam terrorists.. While HA uses same tactics..

Every Arab country have killed so many of its own and foreign citizens but still they have guts to criticize Israel.

imohammed2
10-19-2007, 06:13 AM
It's an Arab country, what did you expect? What do you think is now happening to all those captured in Nahr El Bared?

way to go, fvckwit, you killed the discussion....think twice before you open your stinkhole next time

Danik
10-19-2007, 07:36 AM
i didnt say that arab regimes are better but to hear an israeli talking about human rights? Der Yasin, sabra & Shatila, Qana 1 and 2 .....

sabra & Shatila:cantbeli:

LRPV
10-19-2007, 10:06 AM
Ok, both jamal and moledet have played their respective slightly jaundiced cards. Now that's out of the way....is there any worthwhile debate left?

BTW. Jamal, hello, first day I have noticed your posts. If you are Lebanese it will be good to have another one on the board. Obviously you will have noticed you can light a cigarette off any middle-east thread. You might need to smoke a shisha before posting but see you about the site.

0rphie
10-19-2007, 10:47 AM
Hmmm no, I think Arabs should be the last on earth to talk about human rights especially in this time.

We do arrest children more correctly teens but for some reason they seem to prefer being arrested than actually be in the streets, at least they get education and can learn for their final exams quietly with assistance from teachers and books they need.
the rest of the tortures you listed were never proven and are allegations like Arabs usually make ("they infect us with AIDS...they send killer balloons...they give us poison candies"). The Israeli that was in jail in Lebanon (Daniel Sharon) reported otherwise, he saw teens there being beaten with baseball bats while hanged on ropes and he's no lover of Israel (converted to Islam).
at least you did not deny that Israely kidnapped a number of people

0rphie
10-19-2007, 10:50 AM
Like Roberto said... Arabs should stop criticizing Israel for "human" right abuses and intentional civilian killing while Arab armies are doing the same thing..
Look at what Lebanon did to Nahar-Al beld... Town completely decimated by unguided artillery... (IDF stopped using the artillery after a shell killed dozen of civilians).We don't even know how many civilians died in that camp.. I still remember how international community whined after Palestinians started to report on battles in Jenin... Palestinians said that hundreds of civilians were killed by IDF... While after the battle it was proven to be pal propaganda...

But now Lebanese decimated the hole camp.. Killed and starved everyone i there, but still they have guts to call Israel terrorists. The funny thing too is that Lebanese called Fatah-Al Islam terrorists.. While HA uses same tactics..

Every Arab country have killed so many of its own and foreign citizens but still they have guts to criticize Israel.
Do you stand for Israely right to critisize other countries about human rights abuses? I think both sides have terrfic track records of abusing human rights

khukuri
10-19-2007, 11:02 AM
It's an Arab country, what did you expect? What do you think is now happening to all those captured in Nahr El Bared?

Yes its only arabs, what a racist post. Lets completly ignore the 2 million easter european *** slaves in the western freedom loving democratic europe. Its always every ones else isnt it..

Kaplanr
10-19-2007, 02:53 PM
Sorry Moledet, but your first response was just dumb. This from March 2007.
And then there are the stories of Filipina, Thai and Polish workers who find themselves abandoned, held against their will and denied basic civil rights. Maybe the biggest difference is that in Israel there are people in government and private individuals who are trying to do something about it.

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3062297,00.html


Israel's *** trade booming
Human trafficking in Israel rakes in more than USD billion a year, findings in annual parliamentary survey show

By Miri Hasson Published: 03.23.05, 12:44 / Israel News

TEL AVIV - Thousands of women are being smuggled into Israel, creating a booming *** trade industry that rakes more than USD one billion a year, a parliamentary committee said on Wednesday. The Parliamentary Inquiry Committee, headed by Knesset member Zehava Galon of the left-wing Yahad
party, commissioned the report in an effort to combat the *** trade in Israel. Findings showed that some 3,000 and 5,000 women are smuggled to Israel annually and sold into the prostitution industry, where they are constantly subjected to violence and abuse.

The report, issued annually, said some 10,000 such women currently reside in about 300 to 400 brothels throughout the country. They are traded for about USD 8,000 – USD 10,000, the committee said. The U.S. State Department ranks Israel in the second tier of human trafficking around the world, saying the Jewish State does not maintain minimal conditions regarding the issue but is working to improve them.

Israel passed a law in 2003 that would allow the state to confiscate the profits of traffickers, but watchdog groups say it is rarely enforced. Most foreign prostitutes in Israel come from Ukraine, Moldova, Uzbekistan and Russia and many are smuggled in across the Egyptian border. The committee found that the women work seven days a week for up to 18 hours every day and that out of the NIS 120 paid by customers, they are left with just NIS 20, while the rest of the money is passed on to their traders.

The prostitutes face constant threats of abuse and murder, the report said, and Israeli law does little to help them. Delays in trial dates and prolonged hearings force the women to remain exposed to violence for more than a year until they are called in to provide testimony, and courts rarely collect early testimonies, as permitted by law.

To help combat the problem, the committee recommended that the state prosecutor's office refrain from making plea bargains with *** traders. It also advised to raise the threshold of punitive measures and pushed for financial compensation for *** trade victims.

Nizark
10-19-2007, 04:11 PM
This thread is about 4 seconds about from getting locked...i reckon

socom6
10-19-2007, 05:13 PM
(socom6 looks in the thread and see the two sons of Abraham at it again and leaves) "roach have no business in a fowl fight" Jamaican proverb

Danik
10-19-2007, 08:42 PM
Yes its only arabs, what a racist post. Lets completly ignore the 2 million easter european *** slaves in the western freedom loving democratic europe. Its always every ones else isnt it..

I know there is a large *** trafficking problem in Europe, but may I ask as to where you got 2 million from?

IsraDani
10-19-2007, 09:05 PM
Moledet putted it in a wrong way, but arabs countries and human rights doesnt match often like this article tells.

timetraveller
10-19-2007, 09:10 PM
On serious custer fcuk imo by what i mean the title of this topic ..


very confusing .,.,untill you read whats posted ..!!