http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lawandorder/indonesian-embassy-warns-maids-to-avoid-malaysia-after-abuse-scandal/559767

Indonesian Embassy Warns Maids to Avoid Malaysia After Abuse Scandal

December 04, 2012

Kuala Lumpur. Indonesia on Tuesday warned its nationals not to work as maids in 
Malaysia after a weekend raid freed 105 women who were confined against their 
will and forced to work without pay.

In the latest maid abuse scandal to hit Malaysia, authorities said they had 
freed 95 Indonesians, six Filipinas and four Cambodians who toiled as 
housemaids by day but were locked inside a building near the capital Kuala 
Lumpur at night.

Recurring reports of abuse of Indonesian maids have soured relations between 
the two Southeast Asian neighbors and in 2009 prompted Jakarta to angrily cut 
off the supply of domestic workers to Malaysia.

The two sides announced a year ago that the ban would be lifted after reaching 
an accord to provide maids better protection and working conditions.

But the latest case showed Indonesians were still at risk, especially those who 
come to Malaysia illegally without going through proper recruitment channels, a 
spokesman for Jakarta's embassy said.

"The Malaysian authorities should take tough action... It's better for 
Indonesian maids not to work in Malaysia," spokesman Suryana Sastradiredja told 
AFP.

"They [Malaysia] are asking for Indonesian maids but they cannot protect them 
well." 

The women freed on Saturday — who according to Malaysian media reports had 
arrived illegally over the past several months — have been taken to a shelter 
and will eventually be sent back to Indonesia, Suryana said.

Suryana said that since the ban was lifted, fewer than 100 Indonesian maids had 
arrived through official channels, turned off by the low salaries and abuse 
reports.

But, citing reports from Indonesian and Malaysian activists, he said Jakarta 
fears thousands more may have been duped into coming illegally with promises of 
well-paid work since the ban was set in 2009, and were now working in 
vulnerable situations.

Malaysia has long attracted women from its neighbors, mostly Indonesia, seeking 
work as maids. Before the ban, some 300,000 Indonesians were legally registered 
as working as maids in Malaysia.

Recurring incidents in which foreign maids have been confined, abused, beaten 
or even killed have repeatedly rankled Malaysia's neighbors.

In October, an advertisement in Malaysia that offered Indonesian maids "on 
sale" went viral online in Indonesia, sparking new outrage.

Last month, police said they were investigating a man in northern Malaysia for 
allegedly raping his 15-year-old Indonesian maid, while in a separate case, 
three police officers were charged with raping a 25-year-old Indonesian woman 
at a police station.

Cambodia also banned sending maids to Malaysia last year following numerous 
abuse complaints.

Agence France-Presse





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