Refleksi: Seharusnya Arab Saudia  bermurah hati kepada kaum seiman Indonesia 
yang kesusahan karena miskin melarat  harus membudak. Tetapi apa mau dibilang 
bila negeri yang kaya raya ditakdir illahi untuk demikian. 

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=96531&d=23&m=5&y=2007&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom

            Wednesday, 23, May, 2007 (06, Jumada al-Ula, 1428)

                  '40,000 Indonesians Risk Migration Crackdown'
                  M. Ghazanfar Ali Khan, Arab News 
                   
                 
                  RIYADH, 23 May 2007 - About 40,000 Indonesian workers, 
including 500 housemaids, currently taking shelter at the Indonesian Embassy 
are facing deportation from Saudi Arabia following the near completion of an 
amnesty period that ends on May 31. The Saudi government earlier announced a 
grace period for illegal workers to correct their work permits and residential 
papers or opt to leave the country as early as possible.

                  "There are 500 maids who have run away from their employers 
because of misbehavior and they are being looked after by the embassy," said 
Arif Suyoko, a spokesman of the Indonesian mission, yesterday.

                  Suyoko said that the Indonesian ambassador and the embassy's 
labor attaché have gone to Jakarta to discuss the pathetic situation created by 
an ever-growing number of runaway workers, mostly women working as housemaids.

                  He said that there are thousands of workers currently facing 
deportation but could not give a precise number. The embassy official also 
could not say how many Indonesian nationals are currently residing in 
deportation centers or are being held in Saudi prisons.

                  But, Anis Hidayah, executive director of the Jakarta-based 
organization Migrant CARE, said in a press statement that the Indonesian 
Embassy told the organization that "about 40,000" Indonesian nationals in Saudi 
Arabia do not have proper immigration papers and that starting on June 1 the 
Saudi government would begin taking "stern action against overstaying 
foreigners."

                  The embassy says that there are about 650,000 Indonesian 
workers in Saudi Arabia. "Some of them are minor Haj (Umrah) pilgrims who 
overstayed in Saudi Arabia without legal immigration documents," said Hidayah.

                  A large number of Indonesian workers have fled their 
employers and have sought shelter with the Indonesian mission in Saudi Arabia 
after lodging complaints against their employers. A number of NGOs in Indonesia 
like Nahdhatul Ulama and Center for Indonesian Immigrant Workers have protested 
against the growing number of cases of abuse and maltreatment.

                  Many migrant workers especially maids in the Gulf states 
suffer from harassment, non-payment or payment that is delayed for months, 
violence and sexual abuse. The Indonesian Embassy says that more than 60 
percent of their labor-abuse cases involve unpaid salaries. About five percent 
of the complaints involve sexual abuse.

                  Officials at the Indonesian mission say they receive between 
10 to 15 complaints about mistreatment and non-payment of salaries on a daily 
basis. In one recent case, four maids were rescued from a house used as brothel 
in Riyadh. Several housemaids have also committed suicide during the last three 
years. Unscrupulous private employers, recruiting agents and sponsors are often 
blamed for labor exploitation.
                 
           
     


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