Rights group raises concerns over stranded Filipino maids in Lebanon

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Human rights groups have raised concerns about the plight of 26 Filipino women sheltering at the Philippine Embassy in Beirut, for being held in over-crowded conditions and unable to go home because of lockdown restrictions.

An economic meltdown and the coronavirus pandemic have led to unemployment and a shortage of foreign currency in Lebanon, with people ditching domestic help or workers fleeing to their embassies as their employers have stopped paying them.

The women, most of whom were employed as domestic workers, have been confined since borders closed in late March to stem the spread of the coronavirus, said Bassam Al Kantar of the National Human Rights Commission of Lebanon.

“These women have not seen the light of day for more than 40 days. It’s like a place where people are deprived of their freedom,” Kantar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The Philippine Embassy and Lebanon’s foreign affairs department declined to comment but said in an earlier statement that the allegations “do not depict an accurate description of the condition of the shelter and care given to the Filipinos”.

In a social media video uploaded by the embassy on May 18 a pregnant shelter resident says “there is plenty of food daily as well as regular medical attention and medicine”.

Thousands of undocumented foreign workers in Lebanon, mainly from Africa and Asia, are out of work and left stranded by border closures, with many unable to access state services and others subjected to abuse in confinement, according to Amnesty.

Lebanon is home to up to 250,000 foreign workers, some working illegally, who are employed under the country’s kafala sponsorship system which binds them to one employer.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have blamed the kafala system and the inability to change jobs, which exists in many parts of the Middle East, for the abuse of migrant workers.

After visiting the shelter to investigate complaints about the treatment of the Filipino women, the National Human Rights Commission of Lebanon issued a report asking the embassy to enforce social distancing and requirements for outdoor time.

“We also asked them to ensure that the women have the right to seek help from us or any third party they choose – the right to access lawyers, to access doctors, to access mental health professionals,” Kantar said.

Dima Haddad at the International Organization of Migration (IOM) in Lebanon, said employers who can no longer afford wages have stopped paying workers, leading to pay dispute tensions.

She said the IOM was coordinating with U.N. agencies, Lebanese authorities and embassies to help stranded migrants.

“Even if someone wanted to end their contract what are their options? They can’t go back home because of movement restrictions,” Haddad said. (Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation)

 

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