Indonesian maid’s death highlights failure to protect helpers

Author: Agencies

Trafficked to Malaysia, forced to sleep outside with a dog before dying from serious injuries -– the latest abuse case involving an Indonesian maid highlights a failure to protect domestic helpers despite repeated government pledges, critics say.

Adelina Sau died earlier this month in hospital a day after being rescued from her employer’s house in Malaysia’s Penang state, with wounds covering her body. Her 60-year-old employer was charged with her murder this week, and in Indonesia, two people have been arrested on human-trafficking charges for allegedly using fake documents to send her abroad.

About 2.5 million Indonesians work in more affluent Malaysia — many illegally — in sectors ranging from agriculture to construction, including an estimated 400,000 female domestic helpers.

Allegations of abuse are common. These range from overwork, to beatings and sexual abuse, and the issue is a regular diplomatic flashpoint between the Southeast Asian neighbours.

Sau’s death sparked widespread anger in Indonesia. Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi has branded it unacceptable while Jakarta is reportedly considering reimposing a ban on sending domestic helpers to Malaysia.

Jakarta last banned sending maids to Malaysia in 2009 after a series of shocking cases, only lifting the measure two years later following lengthy negotiations that resulted in an agreement to give Indonesian helpers better conditions. However, abuse and exploitation is still regularly reported, and activists lament that pledges made to better protect maids appear to have had little effect.

Glorene Das, executive director of Tenaganita, a Malaysian rights group that deals with migrant workers’ cases, said Sau’s death was “symptomatic of a widespread and deep-seated malaise in our society”. She said there was an “utter disregard for the dignity and rights of migrant workers in general and migrant domestic workers in particular”.

String of abuse cases: There has been a string of headline-grabbing abuse cases in recent years involving maids in Malaysia and other Asian countries where helpers are employed.

In 2014, a Malaysian couple were sentenced to hang for starving their Indonesian maid, Isti Komariyah, who weighed just 26 kilogrammes (57 pounds) when she died. The plight of Indonesian helper Erwiana Sulistyaningsih in Hong Kong, who was badly beaten and starved by her employer, sparked international outrage and made her the face of a movement fighting to force change for the city’s army of maids. And the death of a Filipina maid in Kuwait, whose body was found this month stuffed in a freezer, has sparked outrage in the Philippines and prompted the government to impose a departure ban on Filipinos planning to work in the country.

In Malaysia, Tenaganita believes a major cause of the problems is that maids lack proper legal protection.

Published in Daily Times, February  26th 2018.

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