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Showing posts with label Saudi Arabia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saudi Arabia. Show all posts

Indonesian migrant workers continue to face ordeals

Antara News, Fardah, Saturday, December 18, 2010

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Over four million Indonesians have become migrant workers (TKI) overseas particularly in Malaysia, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait.

Bank Indonesia (BI) has recorded that per September 2010, Indonesian migrant workers` remittances totaled 5.03 billion US dollars, up 2.44 percent from 4.91 billion US dollars in the same period last year.

Difi A Djohansyah, a spokesman of the central bank, said in Jakarta recently that per September 2010, Indonesia sent 427,000 workers abroad, down 12 percent from 479,000 workers in the same period in 2009.

With the additional workers, the total number of Indonesian workers abroad in September 2010 reached 4.32 million people.

Poverty and inadequate numbers of jobs in the country are among factors which have forced them to work overseas.

There are many happy stories, but also some sad ones. Human tragedy and suffering sometimes befall migrant workers. Several of them came back home in coffins due to illness, murder or accidents, and some domestic helpers have become disabled due to torture by their employers.

One of the notorious incidents and its legal dispute is still going on, is the case of Nirmala Bonat (23) from Kupang, West Timor, who has suffered horrific injuries caused by her employer Yim Pek Ha in Malaysia in 2004.

Bonat`s employer had beat her and pressed a hot iron on her breasts and back as punishment for mistakes in ironing clothes. Following her rescue, Bonat was treated for second and third-degree burns and she is still fighting for her rights now.

Recently Sumiati binti Salan Mustafa (24) from West Nusa Tenggara (NTB), was reported of having been pressed with a hot iron and part of her lips was cut by her Saudi Arabian employer in Madina.

The violence happened despite the Saudi workforce minister`s regulation number 1/738 dated on 16/5/1425 H, that prohibit all sorts of human trafficking, working contract violation, and inhuman and immoral treatment.

Saudi Arabia currently employs 927,500 Indonesian migrant workers, making it the second biggest user of Indonesian manpower after Malaysia.

Non-governmental organization (NGO) Migrant Care Executive Director Anis Hidayah recently said the kind of maltreatment experienced by Sumiati had frequently happened to other migrant workers but it seemed that the government did not deem it as a serious problem needing concrete action.

On the occasion of Labor Day in Jakarta in May 2010, Migrant Care called on the government to set up a national commission for Indonesian migrant workers (Komnas BMI) to handle matters related to worker protection, supervision, mediation and coordination.

In response to the Sumiati case, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono last November instructed State Minister for Women`s Empowerment and Child Protection Linda Ameliasari Agum Gumelar and her team to go to Saudi Arabia to deal with violence problems.

The joint team, consisting of officials among others from the foreign affairs ministry and the manpower ministry, as well as a representative of BNP2TKI (national agency for migrant workers` protection), was tasked to monitor the condition of the victims at various hospitals, the restoration of their health, advocacy and legal protection, and secure legal process, and meet the rights of the victims.

The Sumiati torture has also revived a call for s moratorium om Indonesian female domestic helper dispatches overseas.

Twelve Islamic organizations including the largest Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah as well as smaller ones such as Al Irsyah Al Islamiyah, Al Washliyah, Al Ittihadiyah, Perti, Persis, Syarikat Islam Indonesia, PITI, Rabithah Alawiyin, Parmusi and Mathlaul Anwar, have conveyed their concern after holding a meeting at the NU headoffice in Jakarta.

The Islamic organizations called for the government to stop temporarily sending workers to countries with which it had signed no memorandum of understanding or agreement on the protection of workers.

The authorities of NTB, a major migrant worker supplier, has positively responded the moratorium call.

Speaking in Surabaya, East Java, recently, President Yudhoyono urged regional leaders to create more job opportunities to reduce the number of informal Indonesian migrant workers.

The head of state said the government, however, could not stop its people choosing jobs and locations they want to.

Yudhoyono also ordered regional government heads to check the standards of Indonesian workers (TKIs) education and of the administration system of manpower supplier companies (PJTKI) to avoid dispatches of substandard workers abroad
The head of state instructed mayors and district heads to make sure that TKI also get appropriate and adequate trainings before being sent overseas.

"If the supplier companies are professional, there will be less problems to arise. Their services must be improved, because they don`t sent goods, but human beings who have heart, so there must be no negligence," he said.

To protect migrant workers, Hikmahanto Juwana, professor of international law of the University of Indonesia, recently suggested that the Indonesian government take fundamental and strategic.

He said that there were at least three fundamental and strategic steps the Indonesian government should take. The first step is that Indonesia`s representatives abroad should really monitor the legal process taken against employers who inhumanely abused Indonesian workers.

Second, the government should be serious in handling manpower suppliers (PJTKI) which acted as agents of the workers. PJTKI should not send a worker who had the potential to be maltreated by his or her employers.

The Third, the government must be able to negotiate and conclude a bilateral agreement with the recipient countries, which should accommodate regulations on the protection and rights of workers.

Manpower and Transmigration Minister Muhaimin Iskandar recently suggested that all manpower recruitment agencies in the country should be required to equip migrant workers with cellular phones.

The "cellular phone solution" has been criticized by various parties, as the problems faced by migrant workers are too complexes.

As a temporary measure, the government would restrict the dispatch of migrant workers to Saudi Arabia by implementing tighter selection of workers to be sent to the country, he said.

Problems related to migrant workers in Malaysia, which has reportedly reached nearly three million, have also frequently occurred.

Thousands of them, mostly working in plantations, construction works and households, have been regularly deported by the Malaysian government citing them as illegal workers.

Another serious problem facing Indonesian migrant workers in Malaysia, was criminalization charge, according to Mohamad Jumhur Hidayat, chairman of the National Agency for Protection and Placement of Indonesian Workers, in Mataram (NTB) last August 2010.

A number of Indonesian housemaids were brought to court for alleged violent crimes, while in fact they did it in self-defense against their employers.

"In the courts, the workers were often pronounced guilty. It`s a criminalization practice that we should be wary of," he said.

Over 300 Indonesian migrant workers are reportedly facing the death sentence in Malaysia.

Indonesia and Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, last May 2010 signed a Letter of Intent (LoI) which serves as a prerequisite to revise the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed in 2006 on the placement and protection of Indonesian migrant workers in the neighboring country.

Indonesian Minister of Manpower and Transmigration Muhaimin Iskandar and Malaysian Minister of Home Affairs Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein signed the LoI following a bilateral meeting between President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Prime Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Najib Tun Abdul Razak at the latter`s office.

In fact, early January 2010, Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa had announced the government`s determination to improve its services to protect Indonesian migrant workers abroad in 2010.

"Indonesia`s foreign ministry along with other related government agencies will set up a better legal framework to ensure that migrant workers` rights are respected properly," the minister said in his annual press statement.

He said migrant workers were contributing significantly to the national economy during their employment abroad.

Last December 2009, Indonesia had declared its commitment to be a party to the UN convention on protection of migrant workers.

Perhaps Indonesia could learn from India, also a major migrant worker supplier, in protecting migrant workers.

Indian President Pratibha Patil last November in Dubai opened a counseling centre for Indians working in the United Arab Emirates.

The Indian Workers Resource Centre (IWRC), which is apart from giving assistance including counseling, provides a 24-hour helpline for workers and also manages a shelter for the runaway housemaids in the UAE, where an estimated 1.7 million Indians work.

Concrete actions are immediately needed to help around 0.1 percent (of Indonesia`s 4 million migrant workers), who are facing problems.

"However, we must not underestimate it although it`s just 0.1 percent. It should be handled properly. Ambassadors and consul generals must be responsible for TKI in the countries of their jurisdiction," he said.

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Two Indonesian migrant workers reportedly missing in Saudi

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 12/17/2010

Two Indonesian female migrant workers are allegedly missing in Saudi Arabia, with one of them having disappeared 11 years ago.

The workers are Ade Suryani and Jamilah, residents of Padabenghar village, Sukabumi, West Java. Both have been reported missing since 1999 and 2002 respectively.

“We have tried to coordinate with the relevant institutions, but apparently both names were not recorded,” village head Mamat said as quoted by metrotvnews.com.

Mamat claimed that he had also reported the two to the secretariat of the Indonesian Migrant Workers Union and Migrant Care to assist the search.

Meanwhile, the chairman of the Sukabumi Migrant Workers Union, Jejen Nurjanah, said she would report the disappearance of the two workers to the National Board for the Placement and Protection of Indonesian Overseas Workers, and the Sukabumi Manpower and Transmigration Subagency.

"But unfortunately, from the results of our preliminary research at the subagency, there is no data on the two missing maids," she said.

"We're trying to coordinate with local governments so that cases like this do not happen again," added Jejen.

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Garut bans migrant workers

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 12/15/2010

The Garut administration has imposed a temporary ban restricting people from the city from working as maids in Saudi Arabia or Malaysia.

“I feel very sorry for the abused migrant workers. Our nation’s dignity has been trampled,” said Garut Regent Aceng H. M. Fikri in Garut, West Java, on Wednesday, Tempointeraktif.com reported.

Aceng said he had learned about the poor conditions faced by Indonesian migrant workers in Saudi Arabia during his recent hajj.

This year, the local government reported two cases of Indonesian migrant workers who were missing in Saudi Arabia.

From 2005 to 2010, 3,186 people from Gaurt went abroad to work as migrant workers, 95 percent of them traveling to the Middle East to work as domestic maids.

The suspension will apply to those working as domestic helpers or in the informal sector, Aceng said.

He said the suspension was a reaction to the poor treatment of Indonesian workers in both countries.

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Indonesian Maid Breaks Her Back to Escape Abusive Employer

Jakarta Globe | December 14, 2010

Jakarta. An Indonesian maid jumped from the second floor of her employer's house in Medina, Saudi Arabia last Saturday in a bid to escape from alleged abusive conditions.

Indonesian maid Juju Nurhayati jumped off from the second
 floor of her employer's apartment to escape from
alleged abuse. (Photo courtesy of Metro TV)
  
It was the second such incident in less than two weeks after an Indonesian maid in Jeddah died after falling off from the third floor of an apartment building in a similar attempt.

Juju Nurhayati suffered from a broken spine and ankles from the fall and is currently hospitalized at King Fahd's hospital, Didi Wahyudi, an Indonesian Consulate official involved in providing protection for citizens in Saudi Arabia, told The Jakarta Globe.

Juju came to Saudi Arabia seven months ago and worked with the family of Bahur Harja.

“She said she was abused by her employer so she tried to escape by jumping from the building,” Didi said. Juju was rescued by a neighbor who took her to the hospital.

Didi said Indonesian migrant workers should be taught to stand up for themselves if their employers abused her.

“They should be taught to scream as loud as they can, for a start. If they keep silent about the abusive treatment, how can we help them?” Didi said.

On Dec. 3, local newspaper The Saudi Gazette reported that an Indonesian maid fell to her death from the window of a third-floor apartment in Jeddah.

The police said she had attempted to escape using a rope of knotted clothes.

However, according to Didi the victim's identity has still not been verified.

“There's still confusion about her identity, and her nationality is not certain,” he said.

The maid's body is currently at the Forensic Medicine Administration to determine whether there are injuries other than those caused by the fall.

If the forensic examination concludes that no foul play was involved, the hospital will send a letter to the victim's consulate to begin funeral proceedings.

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Police arrest two in migrant worker Sumiati torture case

Antara News, Thursday, December 9, 2010 21:09 WIB

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian police`s criminal investigation department has arrested two people in connection with the case of Sumiati, the female domestic helper who was seriously mistreated by her employer in Saudi Arabia.

"A team of criminal investigation officers has been probing the Sumiati case and, as a result, arrested JL and MM as suspects on December 4, 2010." Brig Gen Agung Sabar Santono, director of general crimes at the National Police Headquarters, said here Thursday.

JL was the person who had sponsored Sumiati, a resident of Dumpu in East Nusatenggara, as a would-be migrant worker and MM was an employee of manpower recruitment agency PT Rajana Falam Putri who had made the arrangements for Sumiati`s employment in Medina, Saudi Arabia, he said.

"These two people are suspected of a crime, namely sending an underage girl overseas for monetary gain and putting her in a situation where she was physically and otherwise exploited," Agung said.

Apart of having sent a migrant worker abroad in deviation from the existing regulations, both suspects had also illegally changed the victim`s date of birth from August 21, 1992 to January 2, 1987 in order to be able to present her as an adult , he said.

Sumiati eventually was recently hospitalized in Medina for serious injuries inflicted on her by her Saudi employer. She had been rarely given food, sustained serious wounds on the back of her head, a broken nose, a cut off upper lip , skin lesions from a hot iron, cracked ribs, a broken middle finger. In addition, she had never received her promised salary.

Agung said both suspects had violated articles in Law no.21/2007 on human trafficking and in Law no.23/2002 on child protection.

"They both also violated articles in Law no.69/2004 on placement and protection of migrant workers abroad and articles in the Criminal Code," he said.

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Saudi Arabia, Indonesia pledge more protection of domestic helpers

ARAB News, By GHAZANFAR ALI KHAN, Dec 7, 2010

Labor Minister Adel Fakieh holds talks with his Indonesian counterpart
in Riyadh on Tuesday. (SPA)

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia and Indonesia pledged at an event here on Tuesday to ensure more protection to domestic workers and have agreed to explore possibility of formulating an agreement on migrant-worker protection.

The announcement came following wide-ranging talks between Labor Minister Adel Fakieh and Muaimin Askandar, Indonesian minister of manpower and transmigration, who is currently visiting the Kingdom.

Hendrar Pramutyo, a senior Indonesian diplomat entrusted with the task of citizens' protection, said: "The two sides have also agreed to provide insurance to cover Indonesian workers deployed in the Kingdom."

Pramutyo said that Muhaimin also met with Ahmed Ibn Mohammed Al-Salem, undersecretary at the Ministry of Interior, and sought his support, especially for protecting Indonesian domestic helpers and prosecuting erring Saudi employers.

Indonesia's Women's Affairs Minister
Mrs. Linda Agum Gumelar
The trip of Muhaimin to the Kingdom, immediately following the visit of Linda Agum Gumelar, Indonesia's women affairs minister, comes amid pressures mounting on the government in Jakarta to work out a comprehensive plan and formulate an agreement to protect workers.

The visit comes after the reports to torture of two Indonesian migrant workers — Sumiati Binti Salan Mustapa, 23, who is recuperating from torture in hospital, and Kikim Komalasari, 34, who was murdered — were widely publicized in local and Indonesian media. Saudi officials have said the incidences of maid abuse are no more common in the Kingdom than in any other country. Some have blamed the media for exaggerating the problem.

Muhaimin, who will wrap up his visit to Riyadh on Wednesday, said he hoped his meetings and bilateral talks with his counterparts in Saudi Arabia will produce long-term improved security and working environment.

"We are here to ask the Saudi side to recognize our domestic workers so that they could earn some respect," said Muhaimin, in a press release issued here on Tuesday.

On the question of banning Indonesian female workers from working in the KIngdom, the minister denied there was any political momentum to do so. Pakistan and Egypt both do not allow women to come to the Kingdom to work as maids.


Indonesian workers shout slogans during a protest against the alleged abuse of Sumiati, an Indonesian worker in Saudi Arabia, outside the Parliament, Jakarta last month. Twelve Indonesian Muslim organizations are pushing for an end to women seeking employment abroad without being accompanied by a blood relative. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)


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Official Says Indonesian Hajj Pilgrim Died of Swine Flu

Jakarta Globe | November 26, 2010

Jakarta. An official at the Hajj Health Center in Mina, Saudi Arabia, confirmed that two Indonesian pilgrims were found positive for the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu. One had died and another was still at the hospital.

Millions of hajj pilgrims praying in front of the
 Kabah in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. On Friday, an official
 confirmed that an Indonesian pilgrim died from
 the H1N1 virus. (Antara Photo)   
Wan Alkadri, head of the center, said that ST died two days ago after being declared H1N1 positive on Nov. 12. ST was originally from Surabaya, East Java.

“The other one is still being treated at the Al Wadi Hospital in Mina. Both pilgrims were suspected to have contracted the disease in Mecca,” Alkadri was quoted as saying by news portal Detik.com, adding that the two were not the carriers of the virus.

“We have conducted investigations and monitored everyone who shared the same floor with them, including members of their entourage. Nobody else showed symptoms of the disease,” he said.

Previously, Saudi's Health Ministry had said that four pilgrims had died due to swine flu and 67 others have been diagnosed with the virus. The casualties were a Moroccan woman, a Sudanese man and an Indian man who were all older than 75, and a 17-year-old girl from Nigeria.

The Saudi Gazette reported that meteorologists predicted more rains at the pilgrimage sites after Wednesday's sudden downpour. It was initially feared that the rains would hasten the spread of the virus, but Hasan Al-Bushra an epidemiologist at the Cairo office of the World Health Organization, said that this was not the case.

“It is carried in the air, by sneezes, coughs and touch. It is not waterborne. The rain could even be beneficial if it means crowds are smaller,” he told Saudi Gazette.

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Indonesian Maid Sumiati Tortured for Alleged Poor Work

Jakarta Globe | November 23, 2010

Jakarta. A Saudi Arabian woman has admitted to burning her Indonesian maid, Sumiati, with an electric iron and other forms of torture because she was “reckless” in performing her duties, it was reported on Tuesday.
The Saudi Investigation and Prosecution Bureau has
formally charged and jailed the employer of tortured
Indonesian maid Sumiati, pictured here recovering after
surgery for her horrific injuries. (Antara Photo)

The Saudi Gazette said the Saudi Investigation and Prosecution Bureau (IPB) had formally charged the employer, who was not identified, and sent her to the General Prison in Madina.

A source close to the IPB, the Gazette reported, said Sumiati had alleged that she had been abused over a period of three months.

“Her body was burned on many places, both legs were almost motionless, some parts of her skin on her head were removed and there were marks of old wounds on her body including skin loss on her lips and head, a fractured middle finger and a cut near an eye.”

The paper quoted Sultan Bin Dhahim, Head of the Lawyers’ Committee in Madina, as saying the employer had also been charged with premeditation to commit physical assault.

He said that such cases of abuse in Saudi Arabia were rare — claims that have previously been rejected as false by a number of migrant worker organizations.

The Gazette also reported that the employer’s son had initially contacted police to report the abuse.

“He also said that his mother tried to deceive the police by saying Mustapa had tried to commit suicide.”

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RI admits lack of cooperation with Saudi over migrant workers

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 11/22/2010 9:54 AM

The Indonesian government has admitted it proposed but never signed a draft of a memorandum of understanding intended to improve protection for Indonesian migrant workers in Saudi Arabia, a top official says.

Manpower and Transmigration Ministry Secretary-General Setyoko said Sunday that Indonesia had a long time ago proposed a legal basis to guarantee protection for Indonesian migrant workers in Saudi Arabia.

“We proposed the MoU a long time ago. But, the agreement requires the political will from both parties to sit together and cooperate,” Setyoko said as quoted by Tempointeraktif.com.

Setyoko declined to comment on why both Indonesian and Saudi Arabian had not signed the agreement.

“We keep trying to use our diplomatic channels to talk about the issue. We are still waiting for the outcome of the talks,” he said.

“We will also invite the Saudi Arabian manpower ministry to discuss the draft of the agreement as soon as possible,” he added.

More than 4,300 Indonesian migrant workers were currently facing hardship, ranging from illness to sexual abuse, the Indonesian government said earlier.

That number constitutes 0.1 percent of the total 3.27 million Indonesian migrant workers worldwide.


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Maids Share Stories of Nearly Being Worked to Death by Saudi Employers

Jakarta Globe, Fitri R. | November 21, 2010             

Mataram. Selvia, a 27-year-old former maid from Sumbawa, a district of West Nusa Tenggara, has been partially paralyzed since 2007.

Activists in Malang, East Java, demanding the government
 investigate allegations of torture of Indonesian maids in
Saudi Arabia. (Antara Photo) 
 
It happened when she worked as a domestic worker in the Saudi Arabian city of Nabuk, where she says her employers nearly worked her to death.

“They didn’t torture me, but they frequently scolded me and I had to work very hard, lifting heavy objects like gas canisters,” she says.

The back-breaking work did just that — it broke her back, and now Selvia cannot walk properly.

Such stories are common, but only receive sporadic attention, such as the recently discovered horrific abuse of Sumiati, an Indonesian maid, by Saudi employers.

Selvia returned to Indonesia in July 2010.

“When she tried to walk, bent over, I could see that it was costing her a lot of effort,” says Endang Susilowati, an activist from the Panca Karsa Foundation (PPK), which helps former migrant workers who have suffered abuse. “Now her condition is getting worse.”

Endang accuses the government of ignoring its obligations to Selvia by not allowing her full treatment the West Nusa Tenggara General Hospital in the provincial capital Mataram without a government-issued insurance card known as a Jamkesmas.

Selvia’s injury, she argues, stems from a workplace accident, and as such the migrant worker placement agency (that sent her to Saudi Arabia ought to pay for her medical bills and arrange her insurance.

Yanti Yusepa, 25, from West Lombok, is another injured former migrant worker who is still waiting for her insurance payout.

She went to Saudi Arabia on Aug. 29 and arrived back in Indonesia on Oct. 6, paralyzed from the waist down after jumping from a second-story window to get away from what she called chronically abusive employers.

Yanti says she worked for three different families in Saudi Arabia, fleeing from the first two after they starved and physically abused her.

She says the third family was particularly cruel. The daughters would burn her with a hot iron while their mother would beat her. That abuse induced her desperate flight.

“I’m still traumatized. I get scared every time I remember mustering the courage to jump from the second-floor window,” Yanti says. “Not a single person was willing to help me when they saw me fall.”

She says she has not received any compensation from her Jakarta-based placement agency, Sinar Berkilau Mandiri, or her Bahrain-based agent, Al Gandir.

She says the agency only gave her Rp 100,000 ($11) to seek treatment at a community health center upon her return.

Yanti says she knows of at least 26 other Indonesian migrant workers sent out by the agent in Bahrain who have also been abused by their employers, in some cases sexually.

“I was afraid to tell this to the agents because they always threatened me and accused me of lying,” she says.

Awajir, a field recruiter for SBM in the province, said the company was fully committed to its obligations to Yanti.

“We even spent Rp 16.5 million of our own to bring her home when her parents got news that she had jumped from the window,” he said.

He added the company was also trying to process her insurance claim, but said Yanti had refused to have her injuries assessed at a hospital.

“We don’t want to be called irresponsible,” Awajir said. “She asked to be brought home, and we did it. She asked for her insurance payout, and we’re working on it.”

Baiq Halmawati, from the PPK, says more than 350 domestic workers from West Nusa Tenggara are currently stationed overseas and may be facing abuse or inhumane working conditions.

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Govt steps up heat on Saudi Arabia over worker abuse

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 11/20/2010

In reality, it will be worse: Activists from the Indonesian Workers Association and Migrant Care stage a theatrical performance with a theme of torturing Indonesian maids in Saudi Arabia in front of the Royal Saudi Arabia Embassy in Jakarta Friday. Sumiati bini Salan Mustapa, an Indonesian maid, was inhumanly tortured by her Saudi employer recently. JP/Nurhayati

Indonesia’s fury over the abuse and murder of migrant workers has found no relief. A regional government has imposed a complete moratorium while the President considered reviewing the practice of sending workers to Saudi Arabia.

Indonesia would review sending migrant workers to “uncooperative, non-transparent” countries, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono told reporters at the State Palace after a Cabinet meeting on Friday.

The President said “all out diplomacy” would be deployed against non-transparent countries to protect the interests of Indonesian workers.

Indonesian migrant worker Sumiati binti Salan
Mustapa after she was brutalized by her Saudi
Arabian employers.
(Photo courtesy of the Saudi
Gazette)
Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said that “uncooperative, non-transparent” countries were generally in the Middle East, and included Saudi Arabia.

Marty summoned Saudi Arabian Ambassador Abdurrahman Mohammad Amen Al-Khayyat on Friday for the third time this week on yet another incident involving a migrant worker.

He previously summoned the ambassador twice and sent a letter to the Kingdom’s foreign minister following the case of 23-year-old Sumiati, a West Nusa Tenggara resident who was allegedly abused by her Saudi Arabian employer.

East Nusa Tenggara (NTB) Governor Zainul Majdi imposed a moratorium Friday on sending female domestic workers from the province to Saudi Arabia following the news on Sumiati. Sumiati was reportedly tortured and sustained cuts around her mouth that suggested she was attacked with scissors. She also reportedly has burns that may have been caused by a hot iron.

“Today [Friday], we’ll also call the Saudi Arabian ambassador, again. It is not because of the case of Ibu Sumiati, but another case that was just revealed last night [Thursday],” Marty said, referring to Kikim Komalasari, another Indonesian migrant worker who was found dead in garbage bin.

Kikim’s neck was reportedly slashed, and she also had cuts to the rest of her body.

Marty said it had taken longer than usual for the Kingdom’s police to inform the Indonesian Embassy about Kikim’s death because she was previously misidentified as a Bangladeshi.

“Saudi Arabia and Middle Eastern countries in general don’t recognize [bilateral] MoUs in the informal sector. They only want to sign ones on the formal sector,” Marty said.

Manpower and Transmigration Minister Muhaimin Iskandar cited Saudi Arabia and Jordan as two countries Indonesia had not yet managed to sign good agreements on migrant workers with.

The result of the review might lead to a decision to halt the sending of workers to these countries, he added.

President Yudhoyono also said the government was mulling the prospect of equipping Indonesian migrant workers with cell phones to help them reach officers more easily when they face problems.

“Based on our experiences, we often receive reports on what has happened with our migrant workers [after it] is too late,” the President said.

Muhaimin explained afterward only migrant workers sent to Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan had been equipped with cell phones.

“Cell phones should be a means of an open communication system included in the MoUs. Agents abroad must provide the phones, and the employers should not be allowed to take them [away],” the minister said.

Yudhoyono said currently about 4,300 Indonesian workers overseas are facing various hardships, ranging from being denied their salaries, overwork, and physical and even sexual abuse. Approximately 3.27 million Indonesians are now registered as migrant workers.


A protest over the torture of Sumiati Binti Salan Mustapa, outside
the Saudi Arabian embassy in Jakarta. on Nov. 18. (Photo: CNN)


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