KOMENTAR:

Pengiriman TKW/TKI ke KSA yang masih berbudaya jahilliyah, menurut terminologi 
Al-Quran, secara sadar adalah menjerumuskan puluhan ribu Muslimah dan Muslimin 
ke dalam sistim masyarakat perbudakan abad-abad sebelum diutusnya rasulullah 
Muhammad saw melakukan reformasi masyarakat perbudakan Arab. 

Peristiwa ini adalah suatu peristiwa pengulangan di dalam sejarah Bangsa 
Indonesia setelah proklamasi kemerdekaan Indonesia di tahun 1945. Di zaman 
penjajahan Kerajaan Belanda dan penjajahan Kekaisaran Jepang telah terjadi 
pengiriman budak-budak perkebunan dan budak-budak kerja paksa dari berbagai 
suku-suku Bangsa Indonesia yang telah dikorbankan secara tak bertanggungjawab, 
tak berperikemanusiaan, di hutan belantara tanpa jaminan kesehatan dan pangan 
serta keamanan pribadi yang manusiawi. Korban yang telah jatuh dan penderitaaan 
yang membekas dalam kisah dan cerita akan membakar abadi para pelaku kekejaman 
yang sadar dilakukan tersebut. Setiap orang tidak memikul dosa orang lain dan 
setiap orang bertanggungjawab atas apa yang telah diperbuatnya. 

Dengan alasan apapun, baik atas nama hukum peradaban maupun kepercayaan akan 
sesuatu, perbuatan tidak bertanggungjawab yang dilakukan dengan sadar 
menjerumuskan manusia ke dalam jurang kehinaan, kesengsaraan, penindasan, 
perbudakan dan kematian, adalah tidak manusiawi dan ridak etis serta a-moral 
kemanusiaan yang bertentangan dengan Pancasila.

Seruan saya adalah HENTIKAN PENGIRIMAN TKW/TKI ke Kerajaan Saudi Arabia, selama 
negeri itu belum beranjak ke budaya masyarakat BERADAB yang ditetapkan dalam 
firman-firman Allah swt.

Wassalam,
A.M


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: mediacare 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; media jabar ; zamanku ; [email protected] ; 
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mediacare 
  Sent: Friday, July 11, 2008 5:58 PM
  Subject: [ppiindia] TKW Indonesia di Arab Saudi diperlakukan sebagai budak


  Maids 'treated as slaves' in Saudi Arabia

  The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Wed, 07/09/2008 10:48 AM | Headlines

  Working conditions for migrant domestic workers in Saudi Arabia --
  including thousands of Indonesian workers -- sometimes amount to
  "slavery", according to a global human rights watchdog.

  "In the best cases, migrant women in Saudi Arabia enjoy good working
  conditions and kind employers, and in the worst they're treated like
  virtual slaves. Most fall somewhere in between," said Nisha Varia,
  senior researcher in the women's rights division of Human Rights Watch
  (HRW).

  But the rise of a "young, reformist elite" in Saudi Arabia offers
  opportunities for change -- opportunities labor advocates and countries
  that send migrant labor, such as Indonesia, should take advantage of,
  according to HRW executive director Kenneth Roth.

  He said the new generation did not want the country to be known as one
  that "closes its eyes to the abuse of domestic workers".

  Roth and Varia presented the findings of HRW's latest study in a
  discussion Monday, hosted by the National Commission on Violence against
  Women.

  The study, "As if I am not human: Abuses against Asian domestic workers
  in Saudi Arabia", involved interviews with Indonesian, Filipino,
  Nepalese and Sri Lankan workers in the kingdom, conducted between 2006
  and early 2008.

  Indonesia has been sending migrant workers, mainly maids, to the Middle
  East and other regions since the 1980s, and media reports of abuse have
  repeatedly surfaced.

  The Saudi embassy did not reply to requests Monday to respond to the
  study.

  The study quotes from HRW's interview with Saudi labor minister Ghazi
  al-Qusaibi, who said "radical reforms" were being planned to establish
  better protection for migrant domestic workers.

  But according to Varia, "the Saudi government has some good proposals
  for reform but it has spent years considering them without taking any
  action".

  Reform for the kingdom's 1.5 million domestic workers is needed "so that
  women desperate to earn money for their families don't have to gamble
  with their lives", Varia said.

  One of HRW's recommendations is to reform or abolish the sponsorship
  system known as kafala, which ties migrant workers' visas to their
  employers. This system means employers can prevent workers from changing
  jobs or leaving the country.

  Reform is also needed in Saudi Arabia's criminal justice system, HRW
  said. The study found in many cases employers were not prosecuted for
  abusing domestic workers.

  HRW cited the example of abused Indonesian worker Nour Miyati, who lost
  her case despite "the employer's confession, ample medical evidence, and
  intense public scrutiny".

  Nour Miyati had to have her fingers and toes amputated as a result of
  being starved and beaten daily by her employers, HRW said.

  The maids "are more likely to face counter-accusations of witchcraft,
  theft or adultery", the study said.

  But tight competition among labor suppliers is leading to cost cutting
  at the expense of migrant workers, according to one Indonesian official.

  "Some labor suppliers are complaining they don't make profits and have
  had to cut expenses such as training," Jumhur Hidayat, head of the
  National Labor Export and Protection Agency, said Monday.

  Jumhur said some suppliers cut the mandatory 200 hours of training for
  migrants scheduled to work in the Middle East "to one hour, or even 10
  minutes".

  He said a number of measures, including ongoing negotiations with the
  Saudi government, were being taken to address the problems.

  Legislator Tuti Lukman remarked that while it was easy to blame the
  problems on the countries that receive Indonesian labor, "they will note
  that we also fail to give formal recognition and protection to our own
  domestic workers".

  [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



   
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