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Washington. When governments from around the globe passed a treaty in June to protect domestic workers, labor experts called it a surprising breakthrough for millions of exploited women.
Even
countries that fail to ratify the pact will eventually be judged by its
standards, they said, and the campaign to pass it had enlisted fresh allies,
newly mindful of abuses from unpaid wages to rape.
Two days
later, Saudi Arabia, a major destination for domestic workers, beheaded an
Indonesian maid — at once highlighting the need for protections and the
challenges of putting them in place.
The
execution followed reports from maids who said their Saudi bosses had burned or
beaten them, and the condemned woman, who killed her employer, said she had
been abused. But when the Indonesian president protested, the Saudis stopped
hiring Indonesians and pointedly turned to cheaper workers from countries less
likely to complain.
The twin
developments — accord in Geneva and maid wars in Riyadh — show opposing forces
in a global campaign to protect domestic workers, an overlooked group of as
many as 100 million people.
More broadly,
that campaign tests the effort to raise work standards in a world of cheap and
mobile labor. Many domestic workers are migrants, and the precedents could
shape the treatment of other migrant groups. On Sept. 30, for example, Hong
Kong's High Court struck down a law that had excluded domestic workers from the
residency rights offered to other foreign citizens, potentially allowing
100,000 maids to gain the right to stay.
The events
show that "officials have not forgotten about migrant workers," said
Philip Martin, an economist at the University of California, Davis. "But
they are also a reminder of the difficulties of extending effective protections
to them."
''The
receiving countries can always say, 'We will get workers somewhere else,'"
he said.
While
acknowledging such challenges, the treaty's supporters say that it establishes
vital new principles and that it will accelerate changes already under way.
Before the pact was approved, Singapore, Jordan and New York State had passed
new laws, and proposals are being considered in places as different as
California and Kuwait. Even Saudi Arabia, a source of frequent abuse
complaints, is considering changes that officials may feel more inclined to
accept after voting for the pact.
''The
treaty was a watershed event," said Nisha Varia, a researcher at Human
Rights Watch. "There is now a global consensus that these women deserve
the same rights as other workers. All the governments involved in this
conversation will be under pressure to examine their labor laws."
As a labor
force composed mostly of women who work behind closed doors, domestic workers
are hard to organize and vulnerable to attack. Many countries exclude them from
labor laws, leaving no legal boundaries on their hours or pay.
In the
United States, domestic workers are covered by minimum-wage laws, but they are
excluded from federal statutes on occupational health, overtime and the right
to organize.
As long ago
as 1965, the International Labor Organization, a branch of the United Nations,
saw an "urgent need" to protect domestic workers, whom it called
"singularly subject to exploitation." But interest in formal action
waned, and women flooded the workplace, making nannies and maids a cornerstone
of modern economies.
The export
of domestic workers became big business in migration hubs like Indonesia and
the Philippines, where more than half the migrants are women. Both countries
celebrate the sums the women send home and simmer at the stories of
mistreatment that percolate in the news media.
Saudi
Arabia is a prime destination for both countries. In 2008, a study by Varia
cited dozens of cases that amounted "to forced labor, trafficking, or
slavery-like conditions." While abuses occur everywhere, the report said,
Saudi Arabia prosecuted few cases and sometimes allowed bosses to pursue retaliatory
charges, like theft, against victims who complained.
A spokesman
for the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Washington declined to comment. In the past,
Saudi officials have accused critics of exaggerating isolated cases of abuse,
and noted that legions of women still seek the jobs.
When the
international labor group turned to domestic workers in 2010, Persian Gulf
states, speaking as a bloc, called for nonbinding recommendations. In a
reversal this year, they supported a binding treaty. What is more, they strengthened it, with
calls for stronger language on contract rights, overtime pay and access to
courts during employer conflicts.
''It really
made an impression," said Ellene Sana of the Center for Migrant Advocacy
in Manila. "When you think of abuses, you think of the gulf — yet here
they are, standing up for domestic workers." Pressure from the Arab Spring,
Sana said, may help explain the change. Others note that the rotating
leadership of the bloc passed to the United Arab Emirates, which is conscious
of the region's global reputation.
Of the 128
governments that voted, only Swaziland opposed the pact, which says domestic
workers should enjoy rights equivalent to those given to other workers in the
same country, including limited workweeks, overtime pay and paid
vacations.
While the
United States pushed hard for the pact, the Senate rarely approves labor
treaties that would require changes in federal law, as this one would if
ratified. Legally the pact applies only in countries that ratify it, but its
uses as a yardstick may be broader.
Even as
support for the treaty grew, so did reports of abuse in Saudi Arabia. Keni
binti Carda, an Indonesian maid, went home in 2008 with scars spread across her
back and face. She said her employer burned her with an iron and forced her to
eat excrement. A Sri Lankan maid, L.D. Ariyawathie, arrived home last year with
two dozen nails in her body — hammered there, she said, by her employer.
After an
Indonesian woman, Sumiati binti Salan Mustapa, was hospitalized in Medina last
year with broken bones and a mutilated face, Indonesian President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono condemned her "extraordinary torture." But the
conviction of her employer was overturned.
On June 18,
two days after the Geneva vote, Saudi Arabia beheaded an Indonesian named
Ruyati binti Sapubi. Yudhoyono denounced Saudi "norms and manners,"
and the Saudis stopped admitting new Indonesian maids. They had already placed
a similar ban on the Philippines, after several Philippine lawmakers visited in
January and wrote they were "shocked into speechlessness by the tales of
rape and abuse." Saudi recruiters then described plans to hire thousands
of Bangladeshis at wages of $170 a month, less than half what the Philippine
government demanded.
More
battles may be pending. Under a new law, the Philippine government must
identify which countries are acceptable destinations for domestic workers,
which could prompt more conflicts like the one with the Saudis.
Still,
Philippine officials say the treaty, by laying out common principles, has given
them a new weapon in an old fight.
It is
"a landmark accomplishment," said Carlos Cao Jr., who runs the
Philippine government's overseas work program. "But you don't
change cultures overnight."
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