A protester holds a placard outside an employment agency in Hong Kong on
March 17, 2015, following the death of Indonesian maid Elis Kurniasih,
33, after a concrete slab fell on her while sleeping on the balcony of a
guesthouse run by the agency. Online ads in Singapore offering
Indonesian maids for sale were Wednesday condemned as "unjust and
demeaning". PHOTO | PHILIPPE LOPEZ | AFP
SINGAPORE,
Online
ads in Singapore offering Indonesian maids for sale were Wednesday
condemned as "unjust and demeaning", in a rare flare-up of tensions
between the neighbours over domestic helpers.
Singapore
is home to almost 250,000 maids, mostly from poor parts of Indonesia or
the Philippines, who head to the wealthy city-state to earn higher
salaries than they can back home.
While
Indonesia regularly protests about abuse and exploitation of helpers in
Malaysia and parts of the Middle East, complaints about treatment of
maids in tightly-regulated Singapore are less common.
However
reports that Indonesian helpers were being offered for sale in the
city-state on online marketplace Carousell quickly drew condemnation
from rights groups.
The adverts under
the user name "maid.recruitment" reportedly offered the services of
several helpers from Indonesia, while some ads indicated maids had been
"sold".
The posts on the e-commerce
site, which operates in several Asian countries and describes itself as
"a simple way to sell the clutter in your life", have now been removed.
Wahyu
Susilo, executive director of Indonesian NGO Migrant Care, said the
group "strongly condemned" the adverts and called for those behind them
to be brought to justice.
"This is very unjust and demeaning to the migrant workers' dignity," he told AFP.
Singapore's
labour ministry said it was aware of cases where maids were being
"marketed inappropriately" on Singapore-headquartered Carousell, and had
got the adverts taken down and launched an investigation.
"Advertising
(foreign domestic workers) like commodities is unacceptable and an
offence" under local laws, a statement from the ministry said.
Employment agencies found guilty of such practices will have their
licences revoked or suspended, it said.
No comments :
Post a Comment