Lebanon launches hotline for abused domestic workers

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanon has launched a 24-hour hotline for female domestic workers to allow them to report abuse or mistreatment and receive help.

The country hosts more than 200,000 migrant domestic workers, according to the International Labor Organization (ILO), employed under the “Kafala” sponsorship system, which binds them to a single employer and leaves them vulnerable to abuse.

Social workers operating the hotline will document complaints and provide referrals to healthcare, legal assistance and relevant government institutions.

“This project is the practical implementation of the Ministry of Labor’s concern for human rights,” Sejaan Azzi, Lebanon’s minister of labor, said in a statement.

“Every domestic worker now has an address to turn to lodge a complaint in the event she is subjected to any kind of harm or violation of her dignity, and that address is the Ministry of Labor.”

Eighty three percent of the world’s 53 million domestic workers are women, according to ILO. Often unregistered and unprotected by labor laws, they are among the most vulnerable groups of workers in the world.

The Kafala system, used throughout the Middle East, requires migrant workers to seek permission from employers to change jobs and excludes them from the protections of labor laws. Many of Lebanon’s domestic workers are from Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Philippines and Sri Lanka.

Maids are often kept under lock and key by their employer, forced to work long hours, deprived of food and wages or threatened and physically and sexually abused, activists say.

In March, Human Rights Watch called on the Lebanese authorities to recognize a union for domestic workers and said Azzi should make good on promises to protect the rights of domestic workers and bring their abusers to justice.

The hotline, accessible through a quick-dial number 1740 from within Lebanon, is being promoted with billboards in several languages to alert migrants of its existence.

Lebanese business offers “special offer” on Kenyan, Ethopian maids for Mother’s Day

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — An advertisement by a maid provider in Lebanon sparked outrage on Monday, after the business sent out a mass message offering “special offers” on Kenyan and Ethiopian “nationalities”.

The SMS advertisement was sent to thousands of phone users in Lebanon through mobile providers Alfa and MTC Touch, which allow businesses to purchase advertising that reach mobile users in the country.

READ the advertisement:

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The advertisement was shared by Lebanese NGO, “KAFA”, which advocates against “gender-based” discrimination and violence.

Several Facebook users commented in anger, calling the message “racist” and comparing the sale of maids to the sale of “potatoes.”

“I’ve heard an officer at the airport call on a domestic worker by her country name in a very disrespectful and demeaning manner,” wrote one user on Facebook. “She should have answered back saying at least we have electricity in my country!”

Despite the outrage, one blogger says it’s unlikely any action against the company will be taken.

“Today, the fair citizens of Lebanon are in shock,” wrote Beirut-based blogger Claude El Khal. “Tomorrow they’ll forget all about it. Until the next SMS or the next suicide.”

But Labor Minister Sejaan Azzi said the maid agency would be shut down, if it turns out to be a registered company.

The listed phone number in the advertisement traces to Alice Chalhoub, who owns a Beirut-based agency in Ain El Remmaneh that places domestic workers in Lebanese homes, according to MaidXchange.com.

According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), Lebanon hosts dozens of other maid agencies that connect more than 250,000 migrant domestic workers with potential employers.

Human Rights Watch reports that, on average, more than one migrant domestic worker dies in Lebanon per week.

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Labor minister calls for end of migrant worker abuse

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese Labor Minister Sejaan Azzi called for the urgent need to regulate the employment of migrant workers on Wednesday, calling for enforcement of human rights and dignity for the workers.

“We want to organize migrant labor within the framework of human dignity and the Labor Ministry will be firm in confronting abuses committed by employers against housemaids,” Azzi said at a conference aimed at tackling the conditions of workers.

The conference was held amid increased cases of housemaid suicides in Lebanon. According to Human Rights Watch, about 200,000 domestic workers work in Lebanon. In 2008, HRW recorded an average of one maid death per week in Lebanon by unnatural causes, including suicides.

More than 600 recruitment offices across Lebanon, human rights activists, and NGOs attended the conference.

Azzi said the conference was aimed at opening discussions between the labor ministry and migrant employment offices, some of which are operating illegally and without licenses.

The minister also called on employment offices to remove “indecent and discriminatory” advertisements starting next month, or face a freeze of their transactions.

“It is a shame to keep such offensive banners that give the impression that the business is about human trade,” Azzi said.

Human rights activists called for the abolishment of the Kafala system that ties domestic workers to one employer for the duration of their contracts and does not guarantee them the absolute right to quit.

The activists say that while trying to escape abusive employers or poor working conditions, many migrant domestic workers get killed or commit suicide.

RELATED: An Ethiopian maid attempts suicide in Beirut; expected to be fine. Read more.

Ethiopian maid attempts suicide in Beirut; expected to be fine

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — An Ethiopian maid who attempted suicide on Monday from a fourth floor Beirut apartment is expected to be fine, according to media reports.

The incident reportedly occurred in Beirut’s Mousaitbeh neighborhood near Lebanese International University. Videos uploaded on YouTube show the woman throwing herself from the window as nearby spectators let out screams.

The woman slammed into a car, shattering the glass and smashing its roof, which media reports say may have saved her life.

According to Human Rights Watch, about 200,000 domestic workers work in Lebanon. In 2008, HRW recorded an average of one maid death per week in Lebanon by unnatural causes, including suicides.

Watch the suicide attempt below. *Warning: Video may be considered graphic to some viewers*

Domestic worker commits suicide in South Lebanon

SIDON, Lebanon: An Ethiopian domestic worker died over the weekend in an apparent suicide in the southern city of Tyre, security sources told The Daily Star Sunday.

The woman allegedly threw herself off a balcony of the apartment building where she worked, the sources said.

Media reports said the woman had fled last week from her employer’s home. Security forces later detained the Ethiopian and returned her to her employer.

Reports of suicides among Lebanon’s approximately 200,000 domestic workers have become increasingly frequent, with many citing maltreatment and abuse.

Source: The Daily Star

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