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Absender   : Bob_Ramsay@fiet.org
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Betreff    : ICFTU OnLine: Slaves in Europe
Datum      : Mo 07.09.98, 14:16  (erhalten: 10.09.98)
Groesse    : 14896 Bytes
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INTERNATIONAL CONFEDERATION OF FREE TRADE UNIONS (ICFTU)
ICFTU OnLine...
184/980907/SG
Feature:
Slaves in Europe
By Samuel Grumiau
In France, "the home of human rights", thousands of domestic workers are
reduced to the status of slaves. In Geneva, "the capital of human
rights", Syndicats sans fronti?res (Trade Unions Without Borders) has
been fighting for eight years to get the UN to ensure that its own
diplomats implement UN charters in their own homes. The other Western
countries are certainly not spared the scourge of modern slavery, but
all of them feel they can lecture the rest of the world on the matter.
This investigation takes us behind the fa?ades of elegant residences to
reveal their sometimes darker side.
Brussels, September 7 1998 (ICFTU OnLine):  When Masruroh, a 24-year old
Indonesian woman, responded to the advertisement placed by a Jakarta
employment agency, little did she suspect that she was taking a first
step on a path leading to hell. The offer seemed attractive: for $150 a
month, she would be employed in the private home of a consular attach?
of the Saudi Arabian embassy in France. Unaware of French wage
standards, Masruroh realized that she had fallen into a trap when she
discovered her living and working conditions. At 7 o'clock in the
morning, she started working for the diplomat's family: preparing meals,
doing the laundry, watching over two children, cleaning the
five-bedroom, three-bathroom flat and so on. Her work did not end until
midnight, sometimes even later, when her employers stayed on into the
morning in the living room where she slept on the floor. All she
received was a slice of bread in the morning and in the evening and a
bowl of rice at noon. Kept confined, regularly beaten, and insulted by
the diplomat's wife, she escaped on May 12, four weeks after arriving in
Paris, via the balcony of her ninth-floor prison, finding refuge with a
neighbour, who happened to be a solicitor.
The Committee Against Modern Slavery (CCEM), which was set up in Paris
in 1994, has recorded 135 such cases in the last two years. Masruroh's
employer, who is protected by diplomatic immunity, could not be taken to
court. The Committee therefore relied on its most effective weapon, the
threat of making the affair public, to obtain financial compensation
from the consular attach?. He promised to pay his victim $4,000 and buy
her return ticket. So far, he has paid only $300, and Masruroh,
disgusted, has gone back to Indonesia. In fact, it is difficult for the
victim who flees to land a new job anywhere in France: such work depends
on the Office of Privileges and Immunities (at the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs) issuing a special card; usually workers who switch employers
lose their authorization to live and work on French territory.
Liberation Under Stress
Since French television broadcast a report on the desperate situation of
some foreign domestic workers, the telephone at the Committee Against
Modern Slavery has not stopped ringing. Neighbours, social workers and
members of the victim's community now know where to report abuses which
they suspect are going on or find out about. "When the person being
exploited has not yet escaped, we try to free her", explains Philippe
Boudin, the Committee's general secretary. "We first establish contact
to find out if they are in agreement, and then we arrange a time.
Everything has to happen very quickly. She has to pack her things in a
garbage bag to avoid attracting her employer's attention when she goes
to the door. We are waiting on the other side, usually with a TV camera
that enables us to put pressure on the employer if he is unpleasant or
violent. Sometimes the police are called in, particularly when some part
of the operation takes place out in the street. We had one case of an
Ethiopian woman to whom a Frenchman had promised marriage and a good
life in France. When she got here, she had to work in confinement for 16
months, in Bordeaux then in a grocer's shop in the Paris region, all for
no wage. When we freed her, the police watched us intervene from a
distance but did not take down the identity of the perpetrators, who are
now on the run".
Relearning Freedom
It takes a great deal of courage for someone who has been the victim of
such exploitation to break the bonds that tie her to her employer, in
spite of herself. In a country where they know nobody and usually cannot
speak the language, employers have replaced the chains normally used to
confine slaves with the confiscation of identity papers and constant
warnings to their domestic workers that they will be thrown in prison if
they leave the house without a passport. Under circumstances such as
these, it takes a particularly serious act (such as rape, a very violent
beating or death threats) to convince the slave to flee. It is then that
a difficult re-education process begins in freedom, emancipating them
from the psychological submission and feelings of guilt which have the
victim in their grasp.
The Committee Against Modern Slavery places them in the care of a
"guardian", someone who will act as their intermediary, handling
questions to do with papers and housing. Initiating legal proceedings is
a further threshold to be crossed, especially bearing in mind the
uncertainty surrounding the court's decision. "If the employer is a
member of the administrative and technical staff of an embassy or
diplomatic mission, we run up against diplomatic immunity, at least
under criminal law", Philippe Boudin says. "But Trade Unions Without
Borders' experience in Switzerland shows us that cases against diplomats
can be won in civil proceedings as well as before industrial tribunals.
If the perpetrators are not protected by diplomatic immunity, the
Committee goes after them in court and everything then depends on the
good will of the public prosecutor's office: if it decides to open a
judicial investigation, the case will then follow its own course.
Otherwise, the victim can file a complaint and claim for damages in
their capacity as a private individual, but that entails paying a
deposit, meaning that they have to deposit a sum of money (about $800).
For an association like ours, that is a heavy burden, even if we should
be able to recover this money when the case is resolved".
Courts' verdicts can prove very surprising. For example, in a case
involving a Congolese couple who had exploited a fellow national for
eight years, subjecting her to multiple rape, torture and deprivation of
food, it was impossible to provide proof of ill treatment, and the
judge, who ruled that the abuse of household staff is not a criminal
offence, but an infraction (a less serious violation of the law),
dismissed the case.
A Maid for $15 a Month
Most of the domestic workers unearthed by the CCEM come from four
geographic areas: Madagascar, Asia (Sri Lanka and Indonesia), West
Africa and East Africa (Somalia, Eritrea, Ethiopia). "Madagascar is one
of the poorest countries in the world", Philippe Boudin notes. "The
average salary of a civil servant is around $20, while a young maid
seven or eight years old is paid $2 a month. Travelling around the
island it is easy to spot the domestic workers, who wear rags and often
sleep outside the houses. When a Madagascan or a Westerner who has lived
in Madagascar comes to live in France, he goes and finds a poor family
and offers to take one of its daughters in exchange for $15 that he pays
the family each month. In France, they work 18 hours a day and are
regularly mistreated, being forced to eat only the employer's leftovers,
to sleep on the floor, in toilets or the garage, be insulted and beaten,
and so on. Sometimes they realize they are being exploited, but know
that if they flee their family will lose the $15 a month that enables it
to survive".
Unlike the Madagascans, the victims from West Africa (C?te d'Ivoire,
Benin, Togo and Mali, to name but a few countries) usually receive no
wage at all. They have been wrenched away from their families by the
promise of an education in a French school, but they never even get as
far as seeing its front gates.
Death Threats
Plunging people into slavery is often 'justified' by ethnic and racial
considerations, and many employers will treat their worker differently
depending on whether it is a man or a woman, a Muslim or someone of
another faith. For example, in a recent case involving a diplomat from
the United Arab Emirates who had been posted to Paris, a non-Muslim Sri
Lankan employee was paid close to five times less (700 francs a month)
than a Muslim Indian employee, even though the latter had a much lighter
workload. Employers often have trouble understanding that what is
tolerated in their home country, such as the unbridled exploitation of a
domestic worker, is no longer accepted in most countries. If his victim
lodges a complaint, he will use every means possible to dissuade her
from taking  it further. The risks run by the victim if she has to
return to her country are easily imagined. People of Madagascan origin
or from C?te d'Ivoire often receive telephone death threats, including
at their host family, when they decide to lodge a complaint. One of them
has an eight-year-old daughter in Madagascar. The CCEM has asked the
Madagascan police and the French embassy to keep a watchful eye on the
child, who has been taken to a safe place, but her mother still trembles
at the thought that her employers might take revenge on her. The
chairwoman of the Committee, Dominique Torres, has also received death
threats by phone.
Geneva, the United Nations' second most important nerve centre after New
York, is not immune from instances of slavery either. "The situation is
all the more serious in that the perpetrators are employers who have
been posted to Switzerland to work for the World Health Organization
(WHO) and other UN agencies, including in one case the ILO, or
diplomatic missions accredited to them", says Luis Cid, president of
Trade Unions Without Borders (SSF), an affiliate of the Swiss Trade
Union Confederation (USS). "We are defending some 3,000 workers in
Geneva: chauffeurs, secretaries and servants employed by diplomats. The
most frequent form of abuse is non-payment by the employer of an
insurance policy covering the worker against accident or illness.
Medical costs in Switzerland are extremely high, much higher than the
miserable wages paid by some senior officials".
Trade Unions Without Borders is currently involved in a number of cases,
most of which entail demanding financial compensation following the
non-payment of wages or a level of remuneration well below the standards
set in Switzerland. Although cases are normally won in court, the
enforcement of judgements leaves much to be desired. Several cases were
presented to the 54th meeting of the UN Commission on Human Rights in
Geneva  last March. One involved an Asian employed as a servant by an
advisor to his country's mission to the World Trade Organization. He has
received no salary for nearly two-and-a-half years, except for the
equivalent of $1,700 paid directly to his father back in his home
country. He hardly received any food while working days which started at
six o'clock in the morning and ended at two o'clock the next morning,
had no days off and was banned from leaving the residence. Another case
involved the African servant of a female American official at the ILO
who was paid just $200 a month. Once these two cases - and several
others besides - had been taken up by the authorities, judgements were
reached in favour of the workers in question, and their employers were
sentenced to pay arrears and damages ranging from $14,000 to $70,000.
Some of these court decisions go back nearly five years, but apart from
the payment of barely a third of the sum required in one case and of
$140 in another, not a single judgement has been enforced. This is all
the more discouraging for the victims concerned in that they will have
had to await the outcome of the trial for many months, living without
resources in a very expensive country. They only manage thanks to the
financial support they receive from Trade Unions Without Borders.
Conciliatory and Useless?
The wrath which fires Luis Cid to defend the cases brought to him is
earning him the hatred of the very affluent, right-thinking circles of
senior UN diplomats. While no-one doubts his sincerity, few of the big
shots in Geneva agree to negotiate directly with trade union activists.
They prefer to turn to "professional conciliators" belonging to a
service set up by the Geneva canton to serve as an intermediary in
disputes between diplomats and their domestic staff. Luis Cid does not
conceal his contempt for this system: "It comprises three mediators but
most of the time they are of little help. In one case involving a
Mauritanian chauffeur who was exploited by a diplomat from the same
country, the conciliators offered him $700 and a return ticket to
Nouakchott, whereas his employer owes him months of wages and overtime".
In Paris, Geneva or London, where the non-government organization
Anti-Slavery International is very active, human rights activists must
also learn how to identify the profiteers who come to them with the sole
aim of making easy money. Some workers arrive in a country with the goal
of being hired under exploitative conditions and then six months later
taking their case to an organization that will support them in a court
case where they might hit the jackpot. "There are times when we refuse
cases because there is no criterion of slavery", Philippe Boudin
stresses. "The cases we accept fulfil several conditions, including: the
confiscation of identity papers, confinement, abnormal working  hours
(there was one case of a servant who was working 19 hours a day - and
even 22 hours when she was in Saudi Arabia), lack of pay or payment of a
wage which is so low that it precludes economic independence, inhuman
accommodation, lack of meals, the forced severing of family ties
(letters are not passed on to the victim and the victim's letters are
not posted), and cultural isolation".
Consequently, 150 years after the so-called "abolition" of slavery,
emancipation remains a dream for 200 million people. Today's slaves have
been switched from ships to planes, and their chains have been replaced
by the confiscation of their identity papers. But the distress suffered
by the victim has not changed.
Contact: ICFTU-Press at: ++32-2 224.02.12 (Brussels). For more
information, visit our website at: (http://www.icftu.org).

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