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Friday, October 28, 2011
Horror of South Africa's 'corrective rape'
WORLD'SUNTOLDSTORIES
By Nkepile Mabuse, CNN
October 28, 2011 -- Updated 1344 GMT (2144 HKT)
Zukiswa Gaca was 15 when she ran
away from her home in rural South Africa after being raped. In
Khayelitsha, near Africa's 'gay capital' she was again targeted again, a
victim of what's called 'corrective rape.'
HIDE CAPTION
'Corrective rape' in South Africa
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- In South Africa the full scope of 'corrective rape' is not known because cases are not separated from other forms of rape
- 'Corrective rape' is where men rape lesbians in the belief it can can make them straight
- Zukiswa Gaca tells how she was raped and had to push police to investigate properly
- In South Africa, gay rights are constitutionally protected and activists want 'corrective rape' to legally be a hate crime
Lesbians in South Africa say they are
threatened and victimized by men who believe they can "cure" them by
raping them. Watch CNN International's "World's Untold Stories" Saturday and Sunday.
Cape Town, South Africa (CNN) -- It was supposed to
be an ordinary night out with friends for 20-year-old Zukiswa Gaca but
it ended with her lying on a railway track attempting to take her own
life.Gaca was at a bar, drinking with friends in Khayelitsha township, less than 40 kilometers outside Cape Town, South Africa, when a man tried to ask her out.
"I told the guy that no I'm a lesbian so I don't date guys and then he said to me, 'no I understand. I've got friends that are lesbians, that's cool, I don't have a problem with that.'"
Gaca says he was nice and she trusted him, and they left the bar to go to the home of one of his friends, and that is where his friendly exterior turned nasty.
"He said to me, 'you know what? I hate lesbians and I'm about to show you that you are not a man, as you are treating yourself like a man,'" she told CNN.
'I was raped for being a lesbian'
'Corrective rape' unrecognized in S.A.
S. African youth ask for economic freedom
South Africa's protest against poverty
"I tried to explain 'I'm not a man. I never said I'm a man, I'm just a
lesbian'. And he said, 'I will show you that I am a man and I have more
power than you.'"Then he raped her, she says, as his friend watched.
Gaca said: "[Afterwards] I went to the railway train road, because I was suicidal at the time. I was lying on the tracks. I think the train was 100 meters away from where I was. Then some other guy came and grabbed me. The train passed. He called the police."
It is called "corrective rape" - where men force themselves on lesbians, believing it will change their sexual orientation.
The extent of the problem is hard to know as South African police do not compile corrective rape statistics separately from other rape cases.
But human rights groups in the country -- where gay rights are constitutionally protected -- are outraged.
Cherith Sanger, of the Women's Legal Centre in Cape Town, which provides legal support for rape victims who cannot afford good lawyers, said: "We believe that corrective rape warrants greater recognition on the basis that there are multiple grounds of discrimination.
"It's not just about a woman being raped in terms of violence against women, which is bad enough, but it's also got to do with sexual orientation so it's another ground or level of unfair discrimination leveled against lesbians."
It was not the first time Gaca had been raped. She says she ran away from her home village, in the rural Eastern Cape, after the first rape when she was 15 years old and too afraid to press charges.
She says running was easier than dealing with a community that didn't accept lesbians.
She moved to Khayelitsha Township, a sprawling shanty town near Cape Town, Africa's "gay capital" where she hoped to find tolerance.
Instead, she was confronted by more hate. "Being a lesbian in Khayelitsha is like you are being treated like an animal, like some kind of an alien or something," she said.
While there are no official statistics on corrective rape, there have been enough publicly reported incidents to spark widespread alarm.
This time Gaca is fighting back.
New York-based Human Rights Watch recently conducted interviews in six of South Africa's nine provinces and concluded: "Social attitudes towards homosexual, bisexual, and transgender people in South Africa have possibly hardened over the last two decades. The abuse they face on an everyday basis may be verbal, physical, or sexual -- and may even result in murder."
The group added: "This is a far cry from the promise of equality and non-discrimination on the basis of 'sexual orientation' contained in the country's constitution."
Most known victims, like Gaca, are poor and black and so are the perpetrators, prompting many to ask how a people who fought against discrimination during apartheid can today treat some of its most vulnerable in such a violent manner.
Siphokazi Mthathi, South African director at Human Rights Watch, said: "We've failed to make it understood that there is a price for rape. Sexism is still deeply embedded here. There is still a strong sense among men that they have power over women, women's bodies and there's also a strong sense that there's not going to be consequences because most often there are no consequences."
Interpol estimates that half of South African women will be raped in their lifetime. But corrective rape is not even recognized as a hate crime and rights groups say few victims report their cases to the police.
But Gaca did.
In many African countries being gay is illegal. In South Africa, those entrusted with enforcing the country's "tolerant laws" now stand accused of re-traumatizing victims.
"When a woman is raped she is re-raped by the system and for me this is a big thing because it's a serious violation of our constitution and the duties that are placed on the state in terms of what the state needs to do for survivors," Sanger said.
CNN saw the treatment meted out to survivors firsthand with Gaca as she trekked from police station to police station trying to first find, and then get answers from, her investigating officer.
He was the third assigned to her case since she reported the attack in December 2009 and she eventually found him at the sexual offences unit in Bellville, a 30-minute drive from her home.
Despite the sensitive nature of her case, he met her in the wide, open office.
When Gaca asked why the police had failed to interview her alleged attacker's friend, who witnessed the rape, another officer in the room told her: "I never take a statement from a suspect's friend."
He added: "The suspect's friend is obviously going to say you are in a relationship with the suspect or that he didn't see anything. The only statements that are important here are the ones from your friend, a neutral person or a neighbor. Not someone who was there watching while you were being damaged and he wasn't helping."
CNN requested an interview with the investigator and was referred to his superiors, before being granted an interview with South Africa's Minister of Police, Nathi Mthethwa, who promised an investigation.
"I feel bad," the minister said. "I feel bad about all these things. That is why I'm saying people who are responsible have a case to answer."
No action has so far been taken against the police officers who not only treated Gaca with disdain but who she also had to push every step of the way to do their job.
When they let her alleged attacker go without taking DNA evidence, potentially crucial in proving his guilt, it was Gaca who insisted they re-arrest him.
After neglecting to question the eyewitness who was allegedly there throughout the incident, it was Gaca who forced the police to talk with him.
She says she sat in a car while they questioned him, as he leaned in through an open window to tell the police officer what he saw of the assault, forcing Gaca to once again relive the experience.
South Africa's Victims' Charter was drafted in 2004, granting seven fundamental rights to every victim of crime. Among them is the right to be treated with fairness and with respect to your dignity and privacy.
Gaca says these rights are ideals she has never experienced. Yet she's determined to press on.
She said: "They always get away with it. I'm just pushing so that there will be a different story on my case. Maybe if this guy could be sentenced or something happens to him I think a lot of my friends will report their cases because some of the lesbians, they don't report their cases, they don't go to the police station because they know that it will just be a waste of time."
Nearly two years after reporting her case, Gaca is still awaiting her day in court, still hoping for justice, and still fighting.
Two abortion clinic employees plead guilty to murder
Reuters
Thu Oct 27, 2011 5:57pm EDT
Story contains graphic descriptions in paragraphs five through eight.By Dave Warner
(Reuters) - Two employees of a Philadelphia abortion clinic where live, viable babies were allegedly killed and a patient died after being given on overdose of painkillers pleaded guilty on Thursday to murder.
Guilty pleas to third-degree murder were entered by Adrienne Moton, 34, and Sherry West, 52, who both worked for Dr. Kermit Gosnell at what prosecutors have described as a decrepit and unsanitary clinic known as Women's Medical Society in West Philadelphia.
Due to a court-issued gag order, attorneys declined to comment on reports that no plea agreement was reached in the case.
Sentencing was set for December 2 by Common Pleas Judge Benjamin Lerner. The maximum penalty for third-degree murder is 40 years in prison.
Seven more defendants face charges in the case, including Gosnell, who a grand jury in January said, "killed babies and endangered women. What we mean is that he regularly and illegally delivered live, viable babies in the third trimester of pregnancy -- and then murdered these newborns by severing their spinal cords with scissors."
The grand jury said that a clinic co-worker of Moton's testified that a woman gave birth to a large baby at the clinic, delivering the child into a toilet. The jurors identified the newborn as "Baby D."
The jurors said the co-worker told them that the baby was moving and looked like it was swimming.
"Moton reached into the toilet, got the baby out and cut its neck," the grand jury said in its report.
West was accused of murder in the death of a 41-year-old patient, Karnamaya Mongar.
"The evidence presented to the grand jury established that Karnamaya Mongar died of cardiac arrest because she was overdosed with Demerol," the grand jurors said.
The grand jury said West and another employee administered the drug at Gosnell's direction and that Mongar died as a result of "wanton reckless conduct."
(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Greg McCune)
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Analysis & Opinion
Related Topics
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Tracking factory slaves across Asia
By Dan Rivers, Senior International Correspondent
Penang, Malaysia - We traveled to Cambodia planning to tell the story of an escape from modern-day slave labor but what we found were tales of more women trapped in debt-bondage in Malaysia.In Cambodia, we found the women who had escaped, but we also learned about dozens of other workers stuck in similar circumstances, unable to get home unless they paid off their "debt" to a recruitment agency.
One mother, who we can't name because of her fear of retribution, explained how she had already sold her small landholding to free one daughter from this terrible situation.
She was now desperate to free her youngest daughter, age 22, who we've called Chanary to protect her identity.
We approached the agency, which had recruited both Chanary and the other women, and after initially inviting us into their compound for an interview, we suddenly found we'd been locked in. I was genuinely worried for our safety.
The owner, Ung Rithy, has powerful contacts with the police and government.
By the time Ung Rithy arrived we'd managed to persuade her staff to unlock the gates and we were waiting out on the street.
But Ung Rithy immediately ordered her staff to grab our equipment. She lunged for our camera and a tussle ensued. We managed to break free with our video and left. Rithy later offered an interview, then changed her mind, referring us to the Ministry of Labor. It was clear the company didn't appreciate the spotlight being shone on the business.
And that's because their business seems to follow some very questionable and unethical practices.
Witnesses have told us they target young, naïve girls from villages promising them lucrative jobs abroad.
But we discovered that the reality of those jobs was very different.
Over the next days, we tracked down Chanary, who said she was trapped in Malaysia and that her passport had been taken by the agency. She said she was not being paid the $250 she'd been promised, taking home just $100 a month after various 'deductions.'
Perhaps most shockingly, she'd been told she was now in debt to Ung Rithy's agency. For her to get home she'd have to pay $1,000 - a sum that would take years for her to save.
In practice she was enslaved; debt bonded far from home with no way to escape.
She and some friends had already tried to flee but they didn't get far without passports and were soon picked by the Malaysian police and forced to return to Penang and the factory where they worked 12-hour shifts, often seven days a week.
One of Chanary's friends says she is just 17 years old and claims she was given a falsified passport showing she is 22, because it's illegal to employ foreign workers under 18 in Malaysia.
We approached the JCY electronics factory where Chanary worked.
In a statement JCY insisted: "Most workers willingly give their passports to their respective agents for safe-keeping, and they are able to obtain their passports at anytime upon their request.
"Nevertheless we will investigate this matter with all our agents and ensure their compliance.
"Further all workers in our plants have free access to our human resource department and our management to report any grievance they may have. We try to resolve all grievances in a fair and equitable manner."
Regarding the issue of one of their workers being under 18, JCY added: "This is an extremely serious allegation. Malaysia has very strict laws in regards to human trafficking and false passports.
"We urge that if you do indeed have such evidence or information, to immediately make a report to our Malaysian authorities including the police. Further, as a matter of company policy, we do not employ any foreign workers below 18 years old."
JCY supplies computer hard-drive equipment to a number of global electronics giants, including Western Digital which also refused an interview.
In a statement Western Digital told CNN: "Critical to our approach is our commitment to complying with the guidelines set out in the Electronics Industry Citizenship Coalition (EICC) code for labor standards, which can be found as part of the EICC Code of Conduct at [this link]"
"CNN's recent inquiry accelerated our scheduled audit of a second JCY facility, which was completed last week (June 2011). We reviewed our findings with JCY management, and we are partnering with them to put corrective actions in place to insure JCY meets all EICC provisions...
"Absent effective and sustained improvement, other actions would be taken, up to and including discontinuing our relationship with that supplier."
It would be nice to report that as a result of our investigation Chanary is back home with her elderly mother in Cambodia.
But she's still stuck working long shifts at JCY to pay-off her 'debt' to the Ung Rithy Agency. And Western Digital is still supplied by JCY.
However, Chanary does say her pay and conditions have improved dramatically since CNN started its inquiries.
I only hope that by exposing what is happening, perhaps soon Chanary and her friends will finally be allowed to go home.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Two Western aid workers kidnapped in Somalia
Tuesday, 25 October 2011
By Al Arabiya with Agencies
Somali gunmen kidnapped three aid workers working for Danish Demining Group in northern Somalia on Tuesday, the humanitarian agency said, the second capture of Western aid agency staff working in the region this month.“Today, at 3 p.m. (1200 GMT) in Somalia, three staff members from the Danish Demining Group have been kidnapped. One is a Somali man, two are international staff members, an American woman and a Danish man,” it said in a statement.
“We have reports that two foreign aid workers from DDG were kidnapped from near the airport at Galkayo by gunmen. We are following up to get further details,” Ali Mohamed, a Somali security official confirmed.
DDG clears landmines and other unexploded ordnance in the area to open up the use of land. It also provides mine risk education to reduce injuries, and has been present in the region since 2007.
Abshir Diini Awale, minister of the interior and national security in Galmudug, said the aid workers were seized shortly after arriving at Galkayo airport.
“We don't know who kidnapped them but we have alerted our security forces to track down the hostages,” he said.
Somalia is one of the world’s most dangerous regions for aid workers, several of whom have been kidnapped in the past by ransom-seeking militia groups.
It is also home to a number of pirate gangs who earn a living by seizing boats, but who have recently been accused of capturing hostages on land as well.
A lack of effective central government since Somalia plunged into civil war two decades ago has allowed a flourishing of militias, Islamist insurgencies and pirate gangs ruling mini-fiefdoms.
Both Galmudug and Puntland signed a nation-building roadmap last month with the weak Western-backed government in Mogadishu and oppose the Islamist al-Shabaab insurgents who control Somali regions further south.
Four European women have been abducted in recent weeks from Kenya by gunmen who later fled to Somalia.
Somali gunmen kidnapped two Spanish staff working for Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) from the Dadaab refugee camp in northern Kenya on October 13.
A British tourist was kidnapped from Kenya’s coastal areas last month, followed shortly afterward by a Frenchwoman, who later died in captivity.
Kenya sent troops and tanks into southern Somalia last week to fight the Shabaab, whom it blames for the spate of kidnappings of foreigners, but the rebels have denied being behind the seizures.
The hardline insurgents have vowed to retaliate against the attacks, and Kenyan police say they suspect two grenade attacks Monday in Nairobi could be linked to Shabaab operatives.
Kenyan Foreign Minister Moses Wetang’ula repeated Tuesday his country’s determination to protect its borders through its military assault in Somalia.
“Kenya cannot watch unwarranted kidnaps of its tourists (and) aid workers and violation of territorial integrity,” he said in a statement.
Police: Two Nebraska children found in animal kennel
From Nigel Walwyn, CNN
October 26, 2011 -- Updated 0044 GMT (0844 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Police: Four face multiple charges after children found in unsanitary home
- Four children in North Platte, Nebraska, are now in government custody
- Two were housed in a wire animal cage, authorities say
- Preliminary hearings are scheduled for Thursday
Four suspects, all adults who lived at the trailer home, face multiple charges, officials said.
Police got an anonymous tip and did a welfare check on the residence Monday, said Lincoln County Attorney Rebecca Harling.
"Upon arrival and subsequent entrance into the residence, the officers found the residence to be highly unsanitary and unsafe for children to reside in," police Lt. Rich Hoaglund said in a statement. "There was trash, dirty clothing, food and animal feces and urine throughout the residence."
Two young children, ages 5 and 3, were found in the metal kennel, which was secured by a wire tie, Hoaglund said. The cage reportedly had a mattress.
The other two children, ages 8 years and 8 months, were not in the kennel but were considered to be in unsafe conditions.
Officers did not see any signs of obvious physical abuse to the children, Hoaglund told CNN.
Police said the four adults, whose exact relationships with the children were unclear Tuesday, were aware of the conditions They were charged with felony child abuse, first-degree false imprisonment and misdemeanor child abuse, police said.
They were identified by police as Bryson L. Eyten, 25; Samantha J. Eyten, 24; Ashly A. Clark, 22; and Lacy J. Beyer, 20.
The children were placed in state custody, officials said.
The suspects were arraigned Tuesday afternoon and remained in jail with $50,000 bond each, authorities said. Their preliminary hearings are scheduled for Thursday.
A phone number listed for Clark was not working Tuesday evening. CNN left a message at a number listed for Bryson Eyten. A person answering a number listed for Samantha Eyten said it was the wrong number. Beyer's listed phone number did not accept messages.
Malaysia, Singapore Struggle With Maid Bans
VOA Asia
October 24, 2011
Yong Yen Nie | Kuala Lumpur
Photo: AFP/Saeed Khan
Indonesia is among the largest suppliers of domestic helpers to Malaysia and Singapore, given the higher wages and demand for foreign labor for the two neighbors.
However, it is cracking down on sending Indonesian citizens to work as domestic workers overseas because of an increasing number of reports of maid abuses.
In September 2011, the ministry of Manpower and Transmigration released a list of countries that Indonesians will send domestic helpers to. The countries are Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
While the ministry has claimed that the list is not conclusive, maid agencies in Singapore are surprised that it has not been named alongside the countries.
The Jakarta Globe quotes the director-general of the ministry's labor supervision and placement unit, Reyna Usman, as saying the government would only allow maids to work in destinations that are strongly committed to their protection.
Indonesia halted sending maids to Saudi Arabia in June, following the beheading of a maid who was convicted of murdering her employer's wife. The ban is presumed to have been lifted after both countries negotiated terms for better maid protection there.
The Indonesian Migrant Worker Trade Union says the omission of Singapore is puzzling, as the country seems to have a better track record of maid protection compared with those on the approved list.
Both countries have denied they are in talks with one another over increasing maid protection policies in Singapore before it gets approval from the Indonesian government to send new domestic workers.
Maid protection policies are at the top of the Indonesian government's agenda, given its heavy supply of workforce to neighboring countries as well as some countries in the Middle East. In Singapore, it is estimated that 90,000 of the maids working in the countries are Indonesians, making up almost half of the domestic workforce there.
It was just several months ago when Indonesia finally allowed its citizens to be domestic workers in Malaysia again, after a two-year ban triggered by several reports of maid abuse in the country.
But not all of the Indonesian migrant workers in Malaysia are happy about the new policy, fearing it may end again at some point.
An Indonesian domestic helper by the name of Nur says she is unwilling to return to her home country after knowing about the freeze, because she would be unable to return to Malaysia for work. The mother-of-one has not seen her daughter for seven years, but Nur says at least the wages that she has obtained over the years is sufficient to raise her daughter and provide her education.
Migrant workers flow within Southeast Asia is inevitably active and heavy, given the countries' close proximity both geographically and culturally that makes it easier for employers and employees to adapt with one another.
According to a report by the Asian Development Bank on migration trends, Southeast Asian countries have increasingly benefited from, and in some cases come to rely on, migrant foreign earnings.
There are approximately two million migrant workers in Malaysia, as few locals want to take up jobs in the construction and domestic help sectors. About 73% of the total number of migrant workers are believed to be Indonesians.
However, more Indonesians are looking at Hong Kong and Taiwan for employment as maids, given the higher wages and mandatory day-off policies in the two destinations.
Malaysia has also started receiving more domestic workers in the past few years from countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
Nevertheless, Malaysia was slapped again this month (October) with another ban, this time from Cambodia. The country barred its citizens from entering Malaysia as foreign workers after news reports highlighted the beatings and sexual assaults of Cambodian maids.
According to Cambodia's Community Legal Education Center, which works with abused domestic workers, there were three reports of killings of maids, while another two were raped, kept in isolation and their passports withheld.
The Malaysian police force has denied that there were serious cases of abuse among Cambodian maids in Malaysia, and says that there were only two deaths reported since 2004.
A manager of a domestic helper agency, who wishes to remain anonymous, says the ban will affect the supply of maids into the country as more households seek domestic helpers, especially in the cities. “The ban is too harsh, as it comes without warning and this will disrupt our businesses as well. We hope that it is only temporary,” he says.
However, it is cracking down on sending Indonesian citizens to work as domestic workers overseas because of an increasing number of reports of maid abuses.
In September 2011, the ministry of Manpower and Transmigration released a list of countries that Indonesians will send domestic helpers to. The countries are Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
While the ministry has claimed that the list is not conclusive, maid agencies in Singapore are surprised that it has not been named alongside the countries.
The Jakarta Globe quotes the director-general of the ministry's labor supervision and placement unit, Reyna Usman, as saying the government would only allow maids to work in destinations that are strongly committed to their protection.
Indonesia halted sending maids to Saudi Arabia in June, following the beheading of a maid who was convicted of murdering her employer's wife. The ban is presumed to have been lifted after both countries negotiated terms for better maid protection there.
The Indonesian Migrant Worker Trade Union says the omission of Singapore is puzzling, as the country seems to have a better track record of maid protection compared with those on the approved list.
Both countries have denied they are in talks with one another over increasing maid protection policies in Singapore before it gets approval from the Indonesian government to send new domestic workers.
Maid protection policies are at the top of the Indonesian government's agenda, given its heavy supply of workforce to neighboring countries as well as some countries in the Middle East. In Singapore, it is estimated that 90,000 of the maids working in the countries are Indonesians, making up almost half of the domestic workforce there.
It was just several months ago when Indonesia finally allowed its citizens to be domestic workers in Malaysia again, after a two-year ban triggered by several reports of maid abuse in the country.
But not all of the Indonesian migrant workers in Malaysia are happy about the new policy, fearing it may end again at some point.
An Indonesian domestic helper by the name of Nur says she is unwilling to return to her home country after knowing about the freeze, because she would be unable to return to Malaysia for work. The mother-of-one has not seen her daughter for seven years, but Nur says at least the wages that she has obtained over the years is sufficient to raise her daughter and provide her education.
Migrant workers flow within Southeast Asia is inevitably active and heavy, given the countries' close proximity both geographically and culturally that makes it easier for employers and employees to adapt with one another.
According to a report by the Asian Development Bank on migration trends, Southeast Asian countries have increasingly benefited from, and in some cases come to rely on, migrant foreign earnings.
There are approximately two million migrant workers in Malaysia, as few locals want to take up jobs in the construction and domestic help sectors. About 73% of the total number of migrant workers are believed to be Indonesians.
However, more Indonesians are looking at Hong Kong and Taiwan for employment as maids, given the higher wages and mandatory day-off policies in the two destinations.
Malaysia has also started receiving more domestic workers in the past few years from countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
Nevertheless, Malaysia was slapped again this month (October) with another ban, this time from Cambodia. The country barred its citizens from entering Malaysia as foreign workers after news reports highlighted the beatings and sexual assaults of Cambodian maids.
According to Cambodia's Community Legal Education Center, which works with abused domestic workers, there were three reports of killings of maids, while another two were raped, kept in isolation and their passports withheld.
The Malaysian police force has denied that there were serious cases of abuse among Cambodian maids in Malaysia, and says that there were only two deaths reported since 2004.
A manager of a domestic helper agency, who wishes to remain anonymous, says the ban will affect the supply of maids into the country as more households seek domestic helpers, especially in the cities. “The ban is too harsh, as it comes without warning and this will disrupt our businesses as well. We hope that it is only temporary,” he says.
Related Articles
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Hong Kong Court Rules in Favor of Domestic Worker Residency Rights
Decision marks big victory for 300,000 predominantly Indonesian and Filipino maids
Migrants Flock to the Middle East with Meagre Preparations
As making a living and supporting one’s self and family becomes more and more challenging
in Ethiopia, women go to great measures seeking employment abroad. Without any knowledge of the country, women, fearing the alternative, are confident and eager to be domestic workers in places like Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, writes EDEN SAHLE, FORTUNE STAFF WRITER. | ||||
Outside the compound of the Ministry of Labour & Social Affairs,
peoplde hope and wait to get their employment approve.
Medina Yalelet, in her late teens, came all the way from Lalibela town, 642Km away from
Addis Abeba in the Amhara Regional State, six months ago planning to go to Saudi Arabia to work as a domestic worker.
Although she has no formal education, she has heard that the pay is good and she is
confident that she will be able to manage the communication gap and work there. However, despite her confidence, she only knows three words of Arabic.
She heard about the employment opportunity and the lucrative pay two years ago from
an agent of one of the agencies involved in sending migrant workers to the Middle East. At the time, she was working as a daily labourer earning 15 Br a day. The income supported her family, parents, two younger brothers and a sister, in addition to the income they get farming on the half a hectare of land they own.
However, Medina says she did not hesitate to make up her mind when she heard that
she could get 180 dollars a month, which the Ministry of Labour & Social Affairs (MoLSA) has set as the minimum wage recruitment agencies have to offer domestic workers travelling abroad.
This is not the only requirement that the 135 recruitment agencies registered with
the Ministry have to fulfil to be able to facilitate and send workers to the Middle East. Due to the complaints of abuse of domestic workers who have gone to these countries, the Ministry has put forth a set of stringent rules on them.
Agencies which plan to recruit 500 people have to deposit 30,000 dollars with the
Ministry while those planning to recruit 1,000 people have to deposit 50,000 dollars. This money is to be used to bring back employees who are injured or have died while abroad, according to the employment exchange service proclamation of 2009. This is to make the agencies accountable to whatever harm and complaints that come to the employees, states the proclamation.
Indeed, a few years back, there were a lot of women coming back from these
countries with stories of physical abuse and denial of pay for the services they had provided.
Despite the horror stories that have been published in many newspapers and talked about
around town, the number of women looking to work abroad does not seem to be decreasing.
One simply needs to go to the Labour Ministry to see the amount of people looking for
employment in Middle Eastern countries, standing in long queues, waiting to get their employment approved.
There were 15,323 Ethiopians employed abroad in the period between July 8, 2009
and July 8, 2010, a majority of whom, 86.9pc, were female, according to the Labour Market Information (LMI) bulleting for 2009/10 published by the Ministry. According to the bulletin, these employees originated largely from Addis Abeba, 49pc, while those from Oromia and Amhara Regional States followed with 19.6 and 14.6pc, respectively.
Medina only speaks three words of Arabic and plans to move Saudi Arabia as a domestic worker.
The bulletin identified Kuwait as the most popular employment destination with 72pc of
the total going there. Out of this 72pc, only 435 were male. The second major destination was Saudi Arabia with 23pc.
This data also shows that 90pc of those who were placed abroad were mainly employed
in domestic work, which is what the majority of the people you see queued up at the Ministry are hoping for.
In the process of her application, Medina was shown an orientation video illustrating what
to expect in the work place and environment.
The video shows types of appliances used in the kitchen and home as well as how to
operate them. It also includes what types of food they are expected to prepare. Despite never having used the appliances or the foods shown in the video, Medina was not worried, saying she will learn quickly.
“I am really impressed with the country,” Medina, who could not contain her excitement,
told Fortune. “I can learn the language quickly.”
However, getting used to the language is not as easy as one expects, according to
Frehiwot Asseged, who has worked in Saudi Arabia as a domestic worker.
“It did not take me that long to learn the recipes of the foods there and the operation
of the equipments,” she told Fortune. “But the language took me more than a year to learn.”
However, many of the would-be employees who had watched the orientation video along
with Medina did not hide the fact that they barely understood the explanation on the equipments they were expected to operate. They seemed at a loss about how to get about getting information on the application process and so forth within the compound of the Ministry, let alone grasp what life abroad would be like.
They lounged outside the offices during lunch hours, talking among themselves while
waiting. Announcements were heard, telling people to be careful with their belongings and be careful of people trying to take advantage of them.
Cluelessness and ignorance was not the only thing these individuals had in common, they
could barely contain their excitement and eagerness to get there.
For Medina this is a dream that has been in the making for two years since she heard about
the opportunity. She had saved close to 1,526 Br in that time. When Fortune talked to her two weeks ago, Medina has been in Addis for six months processing paperwork for her departure.
Expenses for air tickets, insurance, visa application, residence and work permits are to be
paid by employers, while the placement agencies are expected to cover the cost of health checkups and passport issuances, according to the Ministry. However, Medina says she had to pay 605 Br to procure an insurance policy and 350 Br to get her passport.
During the time it took her to process her passport, Medina, like many others with nowhere
to stay in Addis, spent her nights around Sidest Kilo paying two Birr a night, eating one meal a day. Nonetheless, despite spending as little money as possible, the money Medina brought with her from Lalibella was not enough to last her the six months she stayed in Addis processing her application.
“I do odd jobs that do not take up most of my day to make some money,” she told Fortune.
“I bake injera for people or wash clothes.”
This is a sacrifice Medina says she is willing to make to get to Saudi Arabia and earn a decent
wage to help herself and her family.
“It is a better salary than I would get as a full time domestic worker in Addis,” Medina told
Fortune.
Aynalem Daniel, a working mother of three is none too close to this reality having lost five
maids, who left their jobs pursuing the same dream as Medina, during a three month period.
She was in Megenagna on October 12, 2011, dealing with a broker to hire a new maid.
“It has become very difficult to find or retain a maid these days,” Aynalem, who was
paying a broker 20pc of the 500 Br monthly wages she had negotiated, she told Fortune. “It has become so expensive to have a maid.”
The desire to go abroad as a domestic worker seems to be so high that women would do
anything to get there. Many change their name to one sounding similar to those in the countries they want to go to and lie about their age. This is true for Medina as well.
“This is not the name my parents gave me,” she told Fortune.
Along with changing her name when she was applying for her passport, she also filled in
her age as 24. For her, anything goes to make it to Saudi Arabia, without pausing to consider what difficulties she may face once she gets there.
Nevertheless, the Ministry holds placement agencies responsible for those things. They
are required to submit reports to the Ministry every three months on the status of the employees they place until the contract is over, according to Basazen Derbe, senior expert in the public relations and communication directorate of the Ministry.
Looking at the number of women who visit the Ministry on a daily basis, it is easy to see
that business is lucrative for the agencies. They charge 500 dollars from employers looking for domestic workers, according to an employee of one of the agencies who requested anonymity.
Their business is bound to increase in light of the recent ban by Saudi Arabia on migrant
domestic workers from the Philippines and Indonesia. In a move to fill the gap that has been left, Saudi Arabia has turned to Ethiopia as its source of domestic workers. It hosts around 1.5 million migrant workers, according to a Human Rights Watch report published last year.
After having spent half a year trying to secure the job in Saudi Arabia, Medina has passed her
last hurdle and will soon be joining the 1.5 million migrant workers in Saudi Arabia. On Thursday, October 20, 2011, she told Fortune over the phone that all her processing has been completed.
Medina, after having dreamed of this for two and a half years, now looks forward to her
departure to Saudi Arabia, a country she has only been exposed to for about an hour through video footage and a language she doesn’t speak, in 20 days.
By EDEN SAHLE,
FORTUNE STAFF WRITER
| ||||
Monday, October 24, 2011
Kenya backstreet abortions kill thousands every year
Reuters
By Katy Migiro
Tue Oct 25, 2011 10:04am EDT
"It is the most painful thing I have ever experienced in my life. Even giving birth is not as painful as doing abortion."
One reason the world's population is soaring -- to 7 billion, by U.N. calculations, on October 31 -- is because many poor women have little control over their bodies or their fertility.
One place where that is most apparent is in Kenya, where high rates of sexual violence, limited access to family planning and poverty mean 43 per cent of pregnancies are unwanted.
The majority of these women and girls have no choice but to give birth because abortion in most cases is technically illegal, although enforcement of laws around abortion are ambiguous, leading to one standard for the rich and another for the poor and uneducated.
As a result, at least 2,600 Kenyan women die in public hospitals each year after having botched backstreet abortions. Many more die at home without seeking medical care. And another 21,000 are admitted for treatment of abortion-related complications.
When Emily, 28, found out she was pregnant in 2009, her boyfriend denied it was his child and left her. She was jobless and already had a seven-year-old daughter, Ashley, to care for. Emily's friends advised her to terminate the pregnancy.
"I have seen what my girls have gone through with abortion. I was very afraid," she said, adding how she found a 20-year-old friend dead alongside a note explaining how she had drunk a bottle of bleach hoping to cause a miscarriage.
After two months debating what to do, Emily borrowed $10 from friends -- the equivalent of two months' rent -- and sought treatment from a well-known local abortionist.
The elderly woman inserted a plastic tube into Emily's vagina and told her to sit for several hours on a bucket until she heard a pop.
"I felt something hot from my stomach coming out. She gave me some medicine and I went home," Emily said, sitting in a friend's one-room corrugated iron shack off a muddy alley.
After a week of bleeding, Emily's friends brought her more medicine from the abortionist but it didn't help. Eventually, they carried her to a nearby clinic where she was given an injection that stopped the hemorrhaging.
Her ex-boyfriend beat her when he found out about the abortion.
"He told me that I am a murderer, that I killed his baby," Emily said.
WOMEN DIE IN POLICE CUSTODY
Kenya is a deeply religious Christian country and the church is vocal in its condemnation of abortion.
The implementation of the law, which prohibits abortion except in cases where the mother's life is in danger, is ambiguous, however.
The penal code says women who abort illegally can be jailed for seven years. But wealthier and more educated women take advantage of "medical guidelines," which allow terminations in the interests of a woman's physical or mental health but require the signatures of multiple doctors.
"In Kenya, we don't know whether to procure an abortion is legal or illegal. We are just in between," said one doctor who performs abortions.
Public hospitals rarely provide the service but it is easily available in private practices, such as the prestigious Nairobi Hospital where women pay around $1,000 for a termination.
International charity Marie Stopes performs abortions in clinics for $25 to $60, which is still unaffordable for the majority of Kenyans.
"If we were to charge a lower price, we would be overwhelmed," said a doctor working for Marie Stopes.
NEEDLES AND STICKS
Women and teenage girls who are poor often have no option but to turn to quacks in backstreet hovels.
"They use bicycle spokes, knitting needles ... putting sticks, pens through the cervix," said Joseph Karanja, an obstetrician-gynecologist who works at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi.
Other painful, often lethal, methods include drinking detergent or overdosing on malaria pills.
The hospital's acute gynecology ward receives five women each day seeking post-abortion care. It has 30 beds, sometimes shared between up to 70 women.
Women often delay seeking treatment until they are very sick due to fear, lack of money or emotional turmoil.
"They come at the point of death," said Karanja, who estimates one or two women die from post-abortion complications at the hospital each month.
"They stay at home scared because they are afraid they will be arrested. So the uterus goes rotting inside. They get a very bad kind of infection called septic shock, where there is tissue damage, kidney damage, and then they finally die."
Unsafe abortions account for 35 percent of maternal deaths in Kenya, versus the global average of 13 percent.
"We are losing many people through the botched and backstreet abortions," said the Marie Stopes doctor.
"If we legalize it, we shall find that the number of deaths will go down or maybe there won't be any deaths at all."
For Karanja, the problem is the divide between Kenya's rich and poor.
"The high and mighty don't have a problem. In those ivory tower hospitals, these services are available as a routine," he said.
"These services should be provided in all public health facilities because that is where ordinary people go."
(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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