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Al Jazeera reports - Maids in a living hell

On August 1, 2007

Maids

Thousands of Asian women leave their homes each year to seek better jobs abroad as domestic workers.

Many of them are treated well, but some – subjected to physical and mental abuse – endure a living hell.

Most who venture abroad as domestic workers come from Indonesia and the Philippines, with Indonesia alone recording 2.5m workers, some of them as young as 12.

These women earn a wage of $100 a month, but the combined worth of their remittances adds up to an estimated $5.4bn a year.

The jobs take the workers to other Asian countries and to the Middle East, where they often find themselves unprotected by local labour laws, leaving the women open to exploitation.

At a school for maids near the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, women take the first step to escape from unemployment and poverty by enrolling on courses in housework.

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They are among an estimated 700,000 Indonesians, 80 per cent of them women, who embark on a journey abroad each year leaving behind partners and children.

But their journey ends in Terminal 3 – specially designated for returning migrant workers – at Jakarta's international airport.

Indonesian officials say an increasing number of domestic workers are returning home without having been paid, or much worse. One case is that of a 20-year-old woman, her name withdrawn to protect her identity, who worked as a maid in Kuwait.

She claimed the father and son of the household had raped her.

She said her hands were black from exposure to chlorine used to clean toilets without gloves.

The worst cases of maid abuse can be found at Jakarta's police hospital, such as a woman with scars she claims were inflicted by her female employer in Kuwait because she worked too slowly.

"My arm and my buttock were ironed. Then my head was hit with a metal bar, my hair was cut, and my eyes were poked," she told Al Jazeera.

The Migrant Care organisation in Jakarta says such reports are becoming all too familiar, and are quickly filling up their database of abuse claims.

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