

http://www.gouv-exil.org/
F
724 - 23/03/07.
A
SAUDI teacher in Samta Governorate has confessed to the police that she tortured
an Indonesian house cleaner who was hospitalized and later died due to the severity
of her injuries.
The
woman torched the cleaner and also struck her a number of times on the head; the
cleaner suffered from broken ribs, a broken wrist and burns which had not been
treated. According to a report published in Arab News last December, on its recent
visit to the Kingdom, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) delegation received hundreds
of calls from people about their grievances and a majority of those calls were
concerned with maids and how they were treated.
In
another statement during the visit, a member of the HRW said, The domestic
labor problems in the Kingdom could be greatly reduced if the manpower-exporting
countries sent servants who were orientated befo re their departure. It
is my sad duty to inform the honorable member that orientation is not the problem.
The problem with servants and their employers is not so simply eradicable. There
can be no solution to the problem of abusing servants until Saudis learn
and put into practice what Islam teaches about the humane treatment which
each of us, Saudi or non-Saudi, is entitled to.
Our
problem has many aspects and is as delicately complex as a spiders web.
We need to take a closer look and see if the aspects can be separated from one
another. First of all, the problem is with morality; second, law and order; third,
law enforcement; fourth, official support and fifth, the Saudi mentality. Somewhere
down the list, far below these I would put orientation for those coming here to
work.
A
colleague was reading yesterdays report on the tortured maid and he made
a comment that is the essence of the problem, It is about slavery,&#
8221; he said. And he was right; the same attitude and mind-set still exists in
21st-cenury Saudi Arabia. At a time when the Royal Academy of Art in London has
mounted an exhibition dealing with the history of slavery, I am sad to say that
it has not been completely abolished in the Kingdom. Far too many Saudis think
they have the right to treat others as lesser mortals; the Saudis see themselves
as the masters of the universe and hence entitled to lord it over lesser breeds.
It seems that the dark side of human nature is dominant, rather reminiscent of
Joseph Conrads Heart of Darkness. Fiction aside, we all know
that such people exist, not only in Saudi Arabia but all over the world in every
country. Abusive behavior is all too common but what matters in the end is how
this sort of behavior is dealt with and controlled by governments and states.
Which
brings us to our next point law and order. It is right and proper to pass
new laws to pr otect the rights of workers in the Kingdom. When it comes to laws,
the right ones are on the books but the problem is getting them enforced. An unenforced
law is as good as no law at all. People here just get away with things; they commit
crimes and get away with them; they abuse their children, wives, dependants and
still live, at least on the surface, normal lives, protected and shielded by a
system which often does not report abuse and which infrequently punishes those
known to be guilty of it.
How
is it that the laws are not enforced? In many cases, it is because the guilty
person has wasta friends or relatives with influence and power
or, more likely, because the victim is too afraid to report anything to
the police, knowing that as a foreigner, he or she simply does not stand a chance
against a Saudi master. Apart from physical abuse, how do we deal with emotional
abuse? What about salary delays? Or being locked in houses and treated like prisoners?
One
of the major contributing factors to this problem is our countrys sponsorship
law. As every non-Saudi westerner or easterner who comes to work
in the Kingdom knows, he or she must have a sponsor and one of that sponsors
duties is to hold the non-Saudis passport. This sponsorship system is not
dissimilar to that in which Saudi women must have a male guardian.
It
seems that we like the whole idea of having one person in virtually total control
of another. By the way, isnt that what slavery is? We ought to ask ourselves
why we are so fond of these systems which are inherently flawed. They give power
but no obligation to account for its use to those who regularly
and habitually abuse it.