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MANPOWER AGENCIES AND WOMEN'S POWER:
MISERY AT HOME FORCES NEPALI WOMEN DOMESTICS IN THE GULF TO ENDURE
ABUSE
By JB Pun Magar
July 30 - August 5, 2004 - (Nepali Times) Increasingly desperate
Nepali women are fleeing conflict and hardship at home to work
as domestics in the Gulf even though they know about the abuse
and exploitation they are likely to face.
There are many levels of mistreatment: daughters
pressured to leave homes to earn money, the low status of women
in the family and the community, the pimps who dupe them, the
border guards who need to be paid off and finally the employers
in the Gulf who overwork, beat or rape them.
Three years ago, when Kani Sherpa came home in a casket from Kuwait,
her suffering and death was reported widely in the Nepali media.
Kani was employed as a domestic in Kuwait. She was raped and beaten
almost every day, and when she finally attempted to go to the
police, her employer pushed her off a balcony. The Kuwaiti man
was never tried.
Kamala Rai was also working for a family in Kuwait. She suffered
multiple rapes from her employer and his friends. She fled the
house and was finally sent home, traumatised and sick.
To be sure, not all Nepali women who go to the Gulf to work are
abused, and conditions in Hong Kong are better (see box). The
work is difficult and they are often homesick but they manage
to send money home to their families. This is why activists lobbied
three years ago to lift a ban on female migrant workers.
But as more and more women go abroad, cases of abuse have become
increasingly common. Most women are aware that they may be exploited
by middlemen or abused by employers, but their desperation is
such that they go anyway.
I have already spent a lot on my daughters passport,
visa and citizenship. If I dont send her now, how I will
repay my debt? asks Lal Bahadur Tamang from Sindhupalchok
whose daughter Israni was caught near Gorakhpur by volunteers
with the anti-trafficking group, Maiti Nepal. This was the second
time Israni was stopped on the Indian border, but Lal Bahadur
is still determined to send his daughter to Kuwait.
Israni and Bimala Tamang Sindhupalchok were turned back at the
border twice, but their parents are still determined to send them
to Kuwait.
Although it is now legal for Nepali women to work in the Gulf,
they face such harassment at immigration in Kathmandu airport
that most prefer to fly from India. But travelling overland to
New Delhi or Mumbai exposes them to risks of being sold to brothels
en route.
Many agents are actually pimps and have no intention of taking
the girls to the Gulf, and sell them off in brothels in Mumbai
instead. Dipa KC from Pokhara and Barsha Rai from Dharan were
recently rescued by an Indian activist group in Mumbai. They had
been sold to a brothel owner by their Nepali recruiters, Narayan
Shrestha and Gokarna Thapa.
They think they are going to the Gulf, but most get trafficked
in India, says a Nepali police officer at the Sunauli border.
The police and Maiti Nepal are working to warn the girls, and
send those they suspect are being duped, home to their families.
But parents of the girls are so burdened with debt that many want
their daughters to try again.
Maiti stopped some 700 girls at the border this year alone, but
many others are getting through. One New Delhi-based agent, Agni
Thapa, says he has already taken 200 girls to the Gulf in the
past three years. He charges up to Rs 20,000 for each girls
travel documents and another Rs 70,000 in fees for a placement
office in the Gulf to find them jobs.
The recruitment and dispatch of Nepali girls is organised by a
network of middlemen. Village-based recruiters do the marketing
and get a cut for every girl they send to Kathmandu, promising
them easy work and huge salaries. Interviews with rescued girls
reveal that agents even organise passports for underage girls
by paying off officials. The girls are then sent to Gyaltzen Lama
and Agni Thapa in New Delhi, who put them on a plane to Kuwait
where the girls contact Iswori Rai, Pemba Lama and Rupa Gyawali
to find them jobs.
Some women who have worked as domestics abroad return to Nepal
and become agents themselves. Usha Neupane from Rupendehi worked
in Oman for a few years and is now running a racket promising
to take Nepali girls to the Gulf. Most get stuck in India.
Parbati KC and Agni Thapa are New Delhi-based agents for Nepalis
girls who want to work as maids in the Gulf.
Traffickers are getting smarter, and have found ways to get around
increased vigilance at the border. Girls travel with their parents
so they cant be stopped. All we want is to ensure
they are not cheated. We cant stop girls seeking employment
abroad of their own free will, says Prabha Khanal of Maiti
Nepal in Bhairawa.
Shobha, 19, from Rupendehi was so determined to get a job as a
domestic in Qatar that she tolerated being raped repeatedly by
her agent, Shyam Neupane. She trusted the man because he was from
her village and promised to send her to the Gulf. After three
weeks, Shobha did fly to Qatar where she washed dishes and cleaned
floors. One night her employer, Sahid Sheikh and six of his friends
raped her until she became unconscious. She was hospitalised for
15 days and sent back to Nepal. Shahid Sheikh was never charged.
Maya GC spent five years in Oman and Bahrain where she was exploited
and sexually abused. But she says the situation in her village
is so bad, she wants to go back to Qatar and hopes that she will
be lucky enough to find a better employer this time. I know
it may happen again, but look at the situation in our country,
she tells us.
Bhagbati returned to Nepal two years ago after being sexually
abused by her employer in the Gulf. Unable to go back to her village
because of the stigma, she tried to return to the Gulf but was
turned back from New Delhi airport for being HIV positive. She
is determined to give it another try. My familys state
is bad and if I get a chance, Ill go again, says Bhagbati.
Horror stories of abuse are not stopping Nepali women wanting
to find work. Such is the despair that the passport office in
Rupendehi is now issuing 1,000 passports a month, a quarter of
them for women.
Some of the names of women have been changed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anitas agony
A few months after Anita from Palpa reached Kuwait to work as
a maid, she sent home a tape with her voice and a letter (right).
When her family listened to the tape, they started weeping with
worry. The neighbours came over to listen and they cried, too.
Excerpts from the tape:
We all believed Raju Rana from our village when he told
us we could earn a lot of money here. But to enter India in Sunauli
we had to pay Rs 2,000 in bribes. When we got to Delhi, they herded
20 of us like goats and locked us up. They did not give us enough
to eat. We started eating banana peels. They used to send us out
with men who abused us. If we refused, they warned us wed
never go abroad. Finally, a month later we got to Kuwait. The
master doesnt let us go out, or meet anyone. His children
often beat us up. What am I to do? I am in deep trouble.
Anita managed to escape the clutches of her employers with the
help of a kind-hearted Indian woman and returned home to Nepal,
penniless.
Anitas name has been changed.
From: http://www.nepalnews.com/ntimes/issue207/nation.htm
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