Jakarta Globe – AFP, January 16, 2014
Domestic workers took to the streets of Hong Kong Thursday, demanding justice for an Indonesian maid allegedly tortured by her employers and better protection for the city’s hundreds of thousands of foreign domestic workers.
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| A protester answers questions from the media as maids and rights activists protest over allegations that an Indonesian maid was abused in Hong Kong. (AFP Photo/Philippe Lopez) |
Domestic workers took to the streets of Hong Kong Thursday, demanding justice for an Indonesian maid allegedly tortured by her employers and better protection for the city’s hundreds of thousands of foreign domestic workers.
Erwiana
Sulistyaningsih, 22, was reportedly left unable to walk following eight months
of abuse in the southern Chinese city and was admitted to an Indonesian
hospital in a critical condition last week after returning home.
Her case is
the latest in a spate of abuse claims and has renewed concern about the
treatment of domestic helpers in the former British colony following recent
criticism by rights groups.
“We are
very angry. So many cases have happened on Indonesian migrant workers in Hong
Kong,” Sring Atin, vice chairperson of Indonesian Migrant Workers Union, told
reporters.
Dozens of
protesters including maids, rights activists and migrant group members rallied
outside the office of the maid’s employment agency before marching to the
city’s Indonesian consulate.
As they
marched through the bustling shopping district of Causeway Bay they chanted
slogans including “We are workers. We are not slaves. Justice for Erwiana.”
The
building where the office is located saw heightened security with its grille
lowered down and security refusing to allow the protesters to go upstairs.
“It is not
only an issue of her being an Indonesian, but her being a migrant worker and a
human being,” Eman Villanueva of the Filipino Migrant Workers’ Union of Hong
Kong, told AFP.
“We from
the Philippines are also migrant workers. We know the feeling, being away from
home and suffering,” Villanueva added.
He called
on the Hong Kong government to improve legal protection for maids, and to allow
them to choose their own accommodation instead of being required to live with
their employers.
Sulistyaningsih
remains in hospital in Sragen, on the main Indonesian island of Java.
Her
condition is improving and medics hope her injuries will be healed in two
weeks, Dita Indah Sari, spokeswoman for the Indonesian minister of manpower and
transmigration, told AFP Wednesday.
Hong Kong
police said Tuesday they had launched a criminal investigation after migrant
worker groups expressed anger at earlier reports that authorities were not
pursuing the case.
The
semi-autonomous Chinese city is home to nearly 300,000 maids from mainly
Southeast Asian countries — predominantly Indonesia and the Philippines — and
criticism from rights groups over their treatment is growing.
A Hong Kong
couple were jailed in September for attacks on their Indonesian domestic
helper, which included burning her with an iron and beatings with a bike chain.
Amnesty
International in November condemned the “slavery-like” conditions faced by
thousands of Indonesian women who work in the Asian financial hub as domestic
staff and accused authorities of “inexcusable” inaction.
It found
that Indonesians were exploited by recruitment and placement agencies who seize
their documents and charge them excessive fees, with false promises of high
salaries and good working conditions.
Maids in
Hong Kong are paid some HK$4,000 ($515) a month.


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