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Kuala
Lumpur. Hok Pov had never been beaten and never known hunger until she came to
work in Malaysia in April.
In the six
weeks that she worked as a maid for a Malaysian family, she says she lost 10
kilograms while toiling 20 hours a day with little to eat. Often she was
slapped and punched by her employer, she says.
“I was so
hungry that I even ate chicken bones,” a sobbing Hok Pov, 31, said at the
office of Malaysian rights’ group Tenaganita that rescued her in June with the
help of police.
“There was
always lot of work to do and I had to suffer beatings. Once I was slapped so
hard that my tooth fell off. Who can bear this?” Hok Pov said in her first
media interview.
She is
among 41 Cambodian maids rescued this year by the group, highlighting the
frequent abuse and exploitation of foreign domestic workers due to inadequate
laws in this wealthy Southeast Asian nation.
Concerns of
abuse of Cambodian maids came under the public spotlight after a Cambodian maid
was found dead last month outside the home where she worked, while another was
rescued by Malaysian police after she was allegedly abused and had her head
shaved bald by her employer.
According
to the embassies of Indonesia and Cambodia — which have supplied the bulk of
more than 230,000 foreign maids in Malaysia — about 2,000 women come forward
every year with complaints of abuse. Although that’s a tiny fraction of the
total number, rights groups say every instance of abuse shows Malaysia in poor
light and emphasizes the government’s uncaring attitude to the problem.
Malaysia’s
rising prosperity has meant that fewer locals want to do menial, low-paying
jobs. The gap has been filled by foreigners, mostly Indonesians who can be seen
on construction sites, palm plantations and in homes as maids.
But a
string of high-profile abuse cases, including deaths, led Indonesia to ban its
women in 2009 from working in Malaysia. The number of foreign maids fell from
280,000 three years ago to about 230,000 today. Some 50,000 of them are
Cambodians, of which 30,000 came this year alone.
The
government says it condemns abuse of maid but has not done anything to review
the laws to protect them. Malaysian immigration officials in charge of foreign
domestic workers couldn’t be reached for comment on the issue, despite repeated
attempts to contact them.
Tenaganita
director Irene Fernandez said on Wednesday that maids who come from poor
countries are all vulnerable to abuse, except for Filipinos who are better
protected by their government. She said abuse is institutionalized here as
maids aren’t allowed to retain their passports and get no days off in a week.
“Instead of
addressing the root problem of putting an end to abuse, the government is
turning to other poor countries vulnerable to abuse to source for maids,” she
said.
Tenaganita
is urging Cambodia also to stop sending maids to Malaysia until the government
puts in place tougher laws, or at least an agreement that protects the maids
from abusive employers. Indonesia has negotiated such an agreement and is
expected to lift the ban on its maids soon.
Hok Pov,
who said her hair was cut short like a boy’s, was promised a monthly salary of
650 ringgit ($218) — double her wage as a factory worker in Cambodia. She has
not received any money from her employer.
“I just
want my salary and get out of here. I don’t ever want to come to Malaysia
again,” said Hok Pov, who is married and has an 8-year-old son.
“They are
rich, educated and religious people but why don’t they have any compassion for
the poor like me? I have no one to turn to. Every night I cried myself to
sleep. It was one and a half months in hell,” she said.
Tenaganita
official Liva Sreedhana said it was difficult to file criminal charges against
Hok Pov’s employer as she has no physical injury or scars to show, and only has
her words. The group is now negotiating with the employer, who is refusing to
give Hok Pov any money and is dodging meetings.
Men
Chaveasna, who also lives in Tenaganita’s shelter with Hok Pov, completed her
two-year work contract last August but never got her wages. Her Malaysian
employer bought her a flight home and ditched her at the airport.
Chaveasna,
30, who came to Malaysia to work to support her farmer parents, won a case in
the labor court this year to demand wages totaling 7,700 ringgit ($2,580) owed
to her. But her employer appealed to the high court and the case is pending.
“It is
better not to work in Malaysia because we may not get paid,” she said. “There
are many new factories in Cambodia and I can find jobs back home.”
Cambodian
Ambassador Norodom Arunrasmy said on Wednesday that Malaysia is the only
country that recruits Cambodian maids, giving the poor a lifeline.
She said
the Cambodian government was in the process of drafting a new law to protect
its maids, including screening the employer to ensure the girls would be
properly housed and not overworked.
“To ban or
not to ban would be up to the high decision of my government ... but they [the
government] also know that our people need work and jobs in order to survive,”
Arunrasmy said in an e-mail.
Associated Press
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