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Ordie
01-19-2009, 02:38 AM
Filipino maids in Mideast jobs say they face abuse

By JAMAL HALABY, Associated Press Writer
Sunday, January 18, 2009
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(01-18) 10:12 PST AMMAN, Jordan (AP) --
Forty narrow mattresses line the carpeted floor of the basement at the Philippines Embassy, a damp and dimly lighted room where 20 women have sought refuge from abusive employers.
The room is one of two shelters run by the embassy for Philippines citizens in Jordan — a country that human rights groups accuse of not doing enough to protect about 500,000 foreigners, including 30,000 Filipinos, who are here working as maids and servants or in construction.
Jordan, like other Middle East countries, offers little legal protection for foreign workers, forcing governments like that of the Philippines to operate shelters. Many of the victims are women who accuse their employers of beating them, refusing to pay wages and forcing them to convert to Islam.
"I was ironing when madam snatched a hot iron from my hand and branded my arm," said Francis, 30, a shelter occupant who fled her Jordanian employer's home six months ago. She refused to give her last name, saying she did not want to worry her family in the Philippines.
Recently, the government in Manila decided to stand up for its citizens working in Jordan and elsewhere in the Mideast, saying the money sent home isn't worth the cost of shelters and court cases against workers who flee their employers.
Almost a year ago, the Philippines imposed a ban on sending more workers to Jordan unless the government enacted regulations protecting them. The demands included blacklisting abusive employers, setting maximum hours, guaranteeing one day off a week and quadrupling the minimum monthly wage to $400.
While abuse of maids from poor countries by employers in richer ones is not limited to the Middle East, Philippine officials say it's particularly widespread in the region, including in wealthy states like the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.
"We are very strict in enforcing new rules," said Virginia Calvez, labor attache at the Philippines Consulate in the emirate of Dubai. "If the employer does not want to comply with our regulations, we advise (the worker) not to go."
Jordan has made some concessions, but has not mandated the $400 monthly salary. Neither has Lebanon. Other Mideast countries — including those in the oil-rich Arab Gulf — have agreed to the minimum wage.
But as a result, many employers are hiring maids from countries like Sri Lanka and Indonesia without minimum wage laws. Since new rules were put in place in the Emirates in April 2007, the demand for Filipino maids has dropped by 50 percent, Calvez said. The number of Philippines citizens working in other Gulf countries, including Kuwait, also has declined.
In Amman, Samia Elyan, a 47-year-old housewife, said she replaced her Filipino maid with a less expensive worker from Indonesia, who gets just $100 a month.
"Who cares if the Philippines stopped sending workers to Jordan," she said.
The bans in Jordan and elsewhere also have not prevented Filipinos from slipping into the countries for work. More than 5,000 Filipinos have defied the ban in Jordan since January, said Julius Torres, the Philippines ambassador to Amman.
"The ban made our voice heard, but I know it doesn't solve the problem of employers' maltreatment or abuse," he said.
He added that the Philippines and Jordan have negotiated a protocol on work conditions, but that it would not be signed until the Philippines decides on a mechanism for exporting laborers to Middle East countries, which would probably take three or four months.
The ban on exporting domestic workers could be dropped once the protocol is in place, Torres said.
Meanwhile, Jordan has changed its labor law to give foreign workers some rights, including compensation for being fired without a valid reason.
Labor Ministry Undersecretary Ghazi Shbeikat said the government has ordered prosecutors to actively prosecute abusive employers and is considering expanding police-run shelters for battered women to take in foreigners.
"We're dismayed by the alleged abuses," Shbeikat said. "We're doing our best to improve the conditions."
Jordanian human rights activist Assem Rababah lauded the improvements to the rules as a step in the right direction, but urged enforcing them rigorously.
The new regulations have not dampened the criticism. Amnesty International issued a scathing report in November, saying about 10 foreign workers are believed to commit suicide in Jordan each year.
It accused employers of abusing workers and recruitment agencies of routinely beating newly arriving workers to "frighten and discourage them from running away or from making complaints about their employers."
But Adnan Fawzi, who owns a private Jordanian recruiting firm, denied employment agencies administer beatings. "We go by the book. It's not us, but some employers who practice modern-day slavery," he said.
Sarah Balabagan, a one-time Filipino maid in the United Arab Emirates, became the subject of international outcry after being sentenced to death in 1994 for killing an employer who she said tried to rape her. Reprieved and back in the Philippines, she says many domestics become utterly despondent after regular beatings in Middle Eastern households.
"Some want to end their suffering with death," she said, citing a maid who jumped from a house window in the Middle East last year to escape frequent beatings. The maid broke her leg and is now home, Balabagan said.
The issue of mistreating maids has prompted a Saudi-based advertising agency to launch a public service TV campaign aimed at decreasing the abuse. The ads, shown on several pan-Arab satellite TV stations, feature re-enactments of employers verbally abusing their maids.
But the ill-treatment persists. In one recent case in Jordan, Fayzah Ismail, 20, said she worked for her employer for 2 1/2 years for an agreed meager monthly wage of $150, "but she never paid me." Ismail is staying in a Philippine Embassy shelter.
A 17-year-old from the Philippines claims her employer and his son raped her. She went into hiding last month and agreed to speak to The Associated Press on condition her name not be used nor her hiding place revealed because she feared arrest after her employer reported her to police as a runaway.
The teenager said she came to Jordan five months ago to help her poor parents. To comply with a Jordanian law requiring workers to be at least 18, she said she used a fake passport saying she was 28.
"I have no tears. My tears have all dried up," she said. "I'm frightened and helpless."

Source:http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2009/01/18/international/i101246S08.DTL&type=printable

Mr Gently Benevolent
01-19-2009, 02:48 AM
Poor Filipinos they get a hard time, there a good few in the Scottish and Northern Irish fishing fleets at the moment and a few stories of mis-treatment have emerged. The Spanish / UK flagged fleet has the worst rep at the moment regarding non EU workers.

sujithkochi
01-19-2009, 02:51 AM
This is very rampant in the Middle east.

These poor women has no options as their passports will be withheld by the employers. And even if they manage to run away, their employers will file police case against them which in turn make them criminals.

LineDoggie
01-19-2009, 03:06 AM
Rampant in the AO for some time. Some people think that Filipinos employed by them are Chattel. Here in NY on Long Island a Couple from Muttentown kept a Pair of Indonesians as virtual slaves.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2007/10/30/2007-10-30_long_island_maids_cut__scalded_prosecuto.html

Shadowstorm
01-19-2009, 04:44 AM
Not surprised about this issue. In the Middle East, they treat there foreign workers like s**t.

vryhpyammoadded
01-19-2009, 11:29 AM
I once harbored a number of Asian illegal’s facing similar but less severe crap here in the US. Some of the local business/political elite felt that virtual slavery while dangling the promise of a never obtained green card was acceptable. They even went so far as to install an immigrant lawyer to assist and maintain the image of legitimacy.

I and a few other citizens, who took offense at all this, took it to the courts, the media and public but nothing happened other than the Feds threatening us for harboring illegal’s. We worked out a deal though.

We eventually cornered the immigration lawyer with a mountain of damning evidence of having effectively embezzled millions by letting the IRS know. My wife, one of the customers of that law office about the time I met her, lost a few thousand to the dangled carrot. The lawyer took an extended vacation to Brazil and the IRS found evidence a large amount of ill gotten cash left the country.

In retribution, and to cover its tracks the maid service fired all its immigrants. This resulted in a number of us harboring these folk while working with the courts. It took four long expensive years for justice to barely occur netting only a handful of the immigrants getting incensed at the US people and its government, returning home. About sixty others remained and now own successful, productive businesses in the area and are slaves to no one.

It was such a mess here in the US; I can’t even fathom how ugly it could get in other countries with worse dehumanizing corruption. I’ve known a lot of damn fine people from the Philippines, China and elsewhere who simply don’t deserve to be treated this way. And, it’s not just in Saudi.
I’ve heard rumor of a similar scandal being kept hush, hush in the DC area because of so many VIP’s being involved.

These and a few other examples of individual and state corruption are why I feel every individual MUST have the right to bear arms and mentally empowered to judge and take action. Justice always gets corrupted by power leading to travesties of such scale and magnitude that individuals handling their issues one on one, even violently at times, pale by comparison, in my opinion.

karimlan
01-19-2009, 05:15 PM
Nothing new. Having grown up in the Philippines, stories like these were common knowledge. TV programs and sometimes even movies were made about them.

BTW, I wouldn't believe all this stuff about the Philippine govt. trying to make better working conditions and all that.

California Joe
01-19-2009, 05:32 PM
I'm not trying to be insensitive here but, DUH! I realize that these women need the jobs and the money seems good but isn't it kind of a foregone conclusion that they will end up with a job that's nearly as hazardous as running Route Irish?

I seriously feel bad for them but you could see this coming from a mile away.

I have a sister in law that's a Fillipina and she's brilliant and a manager for Holiday Inn. Her husband is currently at Bragg. I'm sure she'd agree with me.

LineDoggie
01-19-2009, 05:41 PM
Hey! I didnt think Rte. Irish was that Bad. I walked on it numerous times, but point taken.

I hear that in Saudi it's much worse for Domestic Staff, Lots of abuse

frenchy
01-19-2009, 05:46 PM
Sad story. really.:-(

I think there is a lack of info in Philippines and a lot of countries to warn future foreign workers of countries who are likely to abuse them.

California Joe
01-19-2009, 05:52 PM
Bottom line is, it's sh*tty to abuse anyone. Taking hard working people from one place and dropping them into an alien environment and then treating them like sh*t because you can, is especially cowardly and dishonorable.

LineDoggie
01-19-2009, 05:54 PM
I dont think it's a lack of info, more like a lack of Well Paying Employment in the Phillipines itself.

karimlan
01-19-2009, 05:56 PM
Sad story. really.:-(

I think there is a lack of info in Philippines and a lot of countries to warn future foreign workers of countries who are likely to abuse them.


No lack of info at all. It's a well known fact that even I knew about it as a kid (mid 1980s).

karimlan
01-19-2009, 05:57 PM
I dont think it's a lack of info, more like a lack of Well Paying Employment in the Phillipines itself.

Yup, that's the long and short of it.

Dercius
01-19-2009, 06:12 PM
Thats the reason why I hate Dubai so much. Golden cage build with slave force, they should put a huge board saying Wellcome to 21st century Piramids. Kind of the same applies to the whole Middle east

deagle
01-19-2009, 06:23 PM
don't worry, karma will address those animalistic employers.

Warlord
01-19-2009, 06:49 PM
Having worked in the ME for ten years and being a Filipino myself, I cannot count with my fingers the horror stories I have witnessed about the abuse of domestic helpers even family chauffeurs and to think that a lot of those maids are often college educated.

I was also involved in the shelters by donating money and food every time I get a chance. I can say that our government isn't doing enough but it is doing what it can. Not much I can say for the communist group (MIGRANTE) that lauds itself as the defenders of the Filipino expat workers. I've never seen them around.

One thing I can say about those Arab abusers, they sure know how to do it. Like they got some practice with it. I've had one girl relate to me how the 2 sons and father, her employer would take turns with her and then they would occasionally invite friends.

BearInBunnySuit
01-19-2009, 07:16 PM
Having worked in the ME for ten years and being a Filipino myself, I cannot count with my fingers the horror stories I have witnessed about the abuse of domestic helpers even family chauffeurs and to think that a lot of those maids are often college educated.

I was also involved in the shelters by donating money and food every time I get a chance. I can say that our government isn't doing enough but it is doing what it can. Not much I can say for the communist group (MIGRANTE) that lauds itself as the defenders of the Filipino expat workers. I've never seen them around.

One thing I can say about those Arab abusers, they sure know how to do it. Like they got some practice with it. I've had one girl relate to me how the 2 sons and father, her employer would take turns with her and then they would occasionally invite friends.

That is really sick. What are the host governments doing about the abuse?