http://dawn.com/2013/01/21/cruelty-and-injustice-in-the-desert/


Cruelty and injustice in the desert
>From the Newspaper | Irfan Husain | 

SRI LANKANS aren’t as prone to street protests as their other South Asian 
cousins. But when Rizana Nafeek, a young Sri Lankan Muslim girl, was beheaded 
in Saudi Arabia a fortnight ago, anti-Saudi demonstrations broke out in Colombo 
as well as in other cities. 

The government added its voice to the protests, recalling its ambassador in 
Riyadh. Earlier, President Rajapakse had personally appealed for clemency, but 
to no avail. Young Rizana’s fate throws a harsh spotlight on the treatment 
imported domestic staff receives across the Arab world.

This case drew worldwide condemnation because of the sheer injustice that led 
to Rizana’s execution. In 2005, she was accused of strangling her Saudi 
employer’s four-month old baby. She insisted that he had choked while she was 
bottle-feeding him.

Arrested and allegedly subjected to torture and assault, she signed a 
confession, leading to her death sentence. The accused was not provided with 
any legal representation. Subsequently, the Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights 
Commission hired a lawyer to appeal the verdict.

During these hearings, Rizana’s lawyer presented her birth certificate that 
showed that she was 17 when the baby died. And in any case, she had been hired 
as a general maid, and not a nursemaid, a task she had no experience of. 
Apparently, her recruiting agent had falsified her date of birth in her 
passport so that she could enter Saudi Arabia to work and help her desperately 
poor parents. All this was ignored by the appeals court, and the sentence 
carried out despite an international outcry.In a searing investigative report 
for The New Yorker, Basharat Peer has dug up many of the inconsistencies and 
blatant errors in the case. He has also looked at the scale of the problem: 
there are currently around 1.5 million female domestic workers in Saudi Arabia, 
and many of them suffer from routine brutality and daily humiliation. He cites 
a 2010 Human Rights Watch report “As If I Am Not Human”:

“Most domestic workers reported working 15-20 hours a day, typically with one 
hour of rest or no rest at all. None of the interviewees had a day off or paid 
leave. Domestic workers reported having to work even when ill or injured and 
had little access to medical care…

“Examples of abuse included beatings, deliberate burnings with hot irons, 
threats, insults, and forms of humiliation such as shaving a domestic worker’s 
head. We interviewed women who reported rape, attempted rape, and sexual 
harassment, typically by male employers and their sons…”

So clearly, Rizana Nafeek’s case is only the tip of the iceberg. At the heart 
of this exploitative system is the kafala, or sponsorship, of migrant workers. 
This ties them to their kafeels, or sponsors, who typically retain their 
passports, thereby making it impossible for them to leave.

Construction companies across the Middle East use the same system to exploit 
labourers, mostly from South Asia. Often, their salaries are withheld, and they 
are kept in makeshift barracks in 50-degree heat. So next time you admire those 
soaring skyscrapers in Dubai, spare a thought for those who built them, and the 
conditions which these poor labourers are forced to live in.

Following unprecedented demonstrations by workers against their salaries being 
withheld, as well as horrific accounts of this exploitative system in the 
western media, the UAE is beginning to reform its labour laws. Kuwait, too, is 
inching towards according greater rights to foreign workers. But Saudi Arabia 
remains frozen in its master-slave relationship with its imported domestic 
staff.

Underlying this gratuitous cruelty is arrogance based on Saudi wealth and the 
poverty of foreign workers. And while Europeans are well treated, Asians and 
Africans are subjected to the kind of behaviour highlighted in the Human Rights 
Watch report. Arab employers exploit the grinding poverty that forces these 
wretched people into accepting such inhuman conditions.

Governments from Indonesia to Sri Lanka are concerned about the manner in which 
their nationals are treated in the Middle East. Each time there has been a 
particularly nasty case of murder or execution, there are diplomatic protests. 
But ultimately, Arab states are all too aware that these countries depend on 
remittances from their overseas workers. Also, high domestic unemployment 
drives the poor to seek jobs anywhere they can, even in places like Saudi 
Arabia.

Sri Lankan women are particularly vulnerable to violence and sexual abuse at 
the hands of their employers because they are most likely to get jobs in Arab 
homes. Due to the observance of purdah by most adult women, specially in Saudi 
Arabia, Arab families seldom hire male domestic staff.

For similar reasons, Pakistani women rarely seek domestic employment abroad. It 
is left to mostly non-Muslim Asian women to seek lowly, high-risk jobs in the 
Middle East. Local recruitment agents promise them lots of money and an easy 
life. But the reality is very different, as they discover very soon.

After the oil boom that began in 1973, migrant workers flooded into oil-rich 
countries. They not only built the infrastructure and the skyscrapers, they 
cooked, swept, cleaned and brought up the children. Although paid a pittance, 
their salaries were still much more than they could have earned back home. 
These remittances helped plug the gap between imports and exports, and 
permitted their governments to pay for weapons, among other things.

Presently, some 25 million migrant domestic workers from Asia and Africa are 
employed across the Middle East. The sums they send back are thus significant, 
and their home countries — as well as their families — cannot do without these 
crucial remittances.

In pure economic terms, this labour market makes perfect sense: poor countries 
with surplus labour exporting workers to rich nations with small populations. 
But the statistics conceal the cruelty and exploitation inherent in the system. 
Apart from the injustice and cruelty it leads to, it also fuels the racism that 
is so rampant in much of the Arab world.

Above all, it makes a mockery of the Muslim claim that all men are equal.


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