Thursday, 05 July 2012
David Boyle and Phak Seangly
Phnom Penh Post
A Cambodian maid in Malaysia has committed suicide, another was
allegedly raped by her employer and a third tortured, according to
rights groups and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which is investigating the cases.
An 18-year-girl is being sheltered at the Cambodian embassy
after she was rescued from an employer who allegedly raped her in April
and was arrested on Monday, Moeun Tola, head of the labour program and
the Community Legal Education Centre said yesterday.
“She was
only 16 when she was sent to Malaysia,” he said, adding that she had
been sent by the recruitment firm T&P, which has since been shut
down following a raft of exploitation and abuse scandals and was “famous
for falsifying documents”.
The girl’s Malaysian employer, Liew
Fos Chi, had been arrested after his wife found out about the alleged
rape and filed a complaint against her husband, which he later forced
her to withdraw, Tola said.
Nisha Jaya, a program officer with Malaysia-based group Tenaganita, said the victim had told her she had been raped once and molested on several occasions.
Based
on information from agents and police, another Cambodian maid who
committed suicide had become visibly depressed about two weeks before
doing so, Jaya said.
“That was the only lead that was given, upon
talking to the police, they said there was no foul play and therefore
they had classified the case under suicide,” she said.
A
ministry statement yesterday suggested the girl had been attacked by her
employer before she took her life and said the embassy was intervening
to retrieve her salary and provide support money for her family.
The
statement said a third abuse victim, who was allegedly tortured and
overworked by her boss, had filed a lawsuit against her employer but had
withdrawn it because she wanted to return to Cambodia immediately.
These
three cases come amid a recent spike in reported abuses against
Cambodian maids in Malaysia and the landmark victory last week of one
such victim, who successfully sued her employer.
In October,
Prime Minister Hun Sen put a moratorium on sending maids to Malaysia
after a wave of scandals that included alleged rapes, deaths, under-age
recruitment and overwork.
Jaya said she was not surprised there
had been “a huge increase” in cases lately, because many maids, coming
to the end of two-year contracts, had an opportunity to report abuses to
the Cambodian embassy when employers sought to renew their contracts.
To contact the reporters on this story: David Boyle at david.boyle@phnompenhpost.com
Phak Seangly at seangly.phak@phnompenhpost.com
Phak Seangly at seangly.phak@phnompenhpost.com
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