Refleksi: Berapa banyak TKW Indonesia mengalami seperti wanita Sri Langka di 
Arab Saudia?


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=67450&d=25&m=7&y=2005

            Monday, 25, July, 2005 (18, Jumada al-Thani, 1426)



                  Police Free Sri Lankan Maid From Virtual Prison
                  Mohammed Rasooldeen, Arab News 
                    
                  RIYADH, 25 July 2005 - A Sri Lankan housemaid who essentially 
had been imprisoned and unpaid by her sponsor for the last six years will be 
heading home soon thanks to the detective work of Saudi police.

                  Authorities handed over Shanthi Menike Herath to the Sri 
Lankan Embassy here yesterday following her rescue from a Saudi home near the 
Kuwait border, some 800 km from the capital.

                  Shanthi Menike, 42, who hails from a rustic village in the 
district of Kurnegala, 70 km from the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo, was 
virtually imprisoned for the past six years in a remote suburban household.

                  Although she was prevented from leaving the residence, she 
reported no abuse, and family members at the home actually had tears in their 
eyes when she left.

                  The Sri Lankan Embassy in Riyadh reported the situation to 
Saudi authorities after officials in Colombo passed on word of a complaint from 
her 22-year-old son alleging that his mother was in distress at her workplace 
and had not corresponded with her family for more than three years.

                  "I came here in June 1999 to earn some money to educate my 
three children since my husband was sick," Shanthi Menike said, recalling that 
her husband developed heart problems following an industrial accident in Sri 
Lanka.

                  Shanthi Menike said her sponsor prevented her from sending 
letters to her family and kept her within the four walls of the house without 
any outside contact.

                  "Due to my persistent efforts, the sponsor gave me his mobile 
phone to call home for a few minutes, and I made use of that opportunity to 
inform my relatives that I was in a virtual prison and requested them to pursue 
action from Colombo to rescue me from this troubled home," Shanthi Menike said.

                  Shanthi Menike had no complaints of ill-treatment; however, 
she said her sponsor once tried to assault her when she tried to flee the 
house. "I had enough food to eat, and there was no harassment whatsoever. But 
the workload was heavy since there were 10 children in the family," she said.

                  Throughout the six-year period, the sponsor paid her only 
SR4,000 in cash and purchased her gifts worth SR3,000, which she wants to 
retain. After deducting these payments, she said her sponsor is in arrears to 
her in the amount of SR22,000.

                  P.R.L. Wickremesinghe, second secretary (labor) at the Sri 
Lankan Embassy, said it was a herculean task to find the sponsor since neither 
the mission nor the maid's family had the location of her sponsor.

                  "The police helped a great deal in tracking the evading 
sponsor," Wickremesinghe said, adding that embassy officials were successful in 
getting his mobile telephone number, which eventually helped the police to 
locate her workplace.

                  The diplomat said the interesting part of the whole rescue 
operation was that the sponsor's wife and children were in tears when the maid 
was leaving their house. "She seemed to have won the hearts of all the family, 
and the children were practically begging the maid not to leave their home for 
good," Wickremesinghe said.

                  After police mediation, the sponsor has agreed to pay SR9,000 
within a week. The balance SR13,000 is to be paid within three months from the 
date of the maid's repatriation to Colombo.

                  Currently under the custody of the Sri Lankan Embassy, 
Shanthi Menike will be repatriated shortly to Colombo on receipt of the partial 
payment of her accumulated salary arrears, the official said.

                  More than 70 percent of the 350,000 Sri Lankan workers in the 
Kingdom are housemaids.
                 
           
     


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