Social workers operating hotline will provide referrals to healthcare, legal assistance and government institutions
LONDON, June 22 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Lebanon has launched a 24-hour hotline for female domestic workers to allow them to report abuse or mistreatment and receive help.
The country hosts more than 200,000 migrant domestic workers, according to the International Labour Organization (ILO), employed under the "Kafala" sponsorship system, which binds them to a single employer and leaves them vulnerable to abuse.
Social workers operating the hotline will document complaints and provide referrals to healthcare, legal assistance and relevant government institutions.
"This project is the practical implementation of the Ministry of Labour's concern for human rights," Sejaan Azzi, Lebanon's minister of labour, said in a statement.
"Every domestic worker now has an address to turn to lodge a complaint in the event she is subjected to any kind of harm or violation of her dignity, and that address is the Ministry of Labour."
Eighty three percent of the world's 53 million domestic workers are women, according to ILO. Often unregistered and unprotected by labour laws, they are among the most vulnerable groups of workers in the world.
The Kafala system, used throughout the Middle East, requires migrant workers to seek permission from employers to change jobs and excludes them from the protections of labour laws. Many of Lebanon's domestic workers are from Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Philippines and Sri Lanka.
Maids are often kept under lock and key by their employer, forced to work long hours, deprived of food and wages or threatened and physically and sexually abused, activists say.
In March, Human Rights Watch called on the Lebanese authorities to recognise a union for domestic workers and said Azzi should make good on promises to protect the rights of domestic workers and bring their abusers to justice.
The hotline, accessible through a quick-dial number 1740 from within Lebanon, is being promoted with billboards in several languages to alert migrants of its existence.
(Reporting by Magdalena Mis, Editing by Ros Russell; Please credit Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, corruption and climate change. Visit www.trust.org)
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