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Human Rights Watch says abuse of maids in Oman verges on slavery

by Reuters
Wednesday, 13 July 2016 09:18 GMT

The group says it has documented physical and sexual abuse, confiscation of passports and excessive working hours

MUSCAT, July 13 (Reuters) - Human Rights Watch (HRW) has accused Oman of not doing enough to tackle widespread abuse of foreign maids, which it says sometimes verges on slavery.

The group said it had documented physical and sexual abuse, confiscation of passports, excessive working hours and at least one case in which a maid was "sold" to another employer.

Omani authorities did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the HRW report, released on Wednesday.

Based on interviews with 59 of at least 130,000 domestic maids working in the Gulf Arab sultanate, HRW said it had concluded that Oman's laws did not adequately protect them and employers often mistreated them without being punished.

"It is clear that abuses are widespread and that they are generally carried out with impunity," the New York-based group said.

"Situations like those described below are at the very least dangerously close to situations of slavery."

A Bangladeshi maid said she left home to work for an employer in the United Arab Emirates before a new employer paid cash for her to be transferred to Oman.

"I was sold," HRW quoted Asma K. as saying.

Under Oman's kafala, or sponsorship, system - used in several Gulf Arab countries - migrant workers' visas are tied to their employers and may not be transferred to a new employer without the previous employer's permission.

Around half of Oman's population of 4.4 million people are foreigners sponsored by their employers to live and work there.

Oman's female domestic servants come mainly from Indonesia, Ethiopia, South Asia and the Philippines.

(Reporting by Fatma Arimi and Noah Browning; editing by Sami Aboudi and Andrew Roche)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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