Indian Gov. Restricts Women From Migrating....

topic posted Tue, June 26, 2007 - 4:50 PM by  أنا Ayah
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Indian Government restricts women from migrating for domestic work

29 May 2007

In a worrying move, the Indian Government announced plans to prohibit women under 30 from migrating to work as domestics in an effort to tackle trafficking for sexual exploitation.

The ban will apply to women seeking domestic work in 17 countries in Africa, the Gulf and Southeast Asia. Minister for Women and Children Renuka Chowdhury earlier this month said the ban was in response to repeated cases of migrant domestic workers in these countries being sexually exploited.

Trafficking women into domestic work is a significant problem. They are promised good work and pay which they cannot find at home, but on their arrival they are forced to work long hours, often up to seven days a week without holidays for little or no pay. They have to carry out all of the household chores, have no privacy and their employers keep their passports to prevent them from leaving.

Rather than tackling trafficking and providing protection from exploitation, this measure will only penalise the women concerned. By not addressing the poverty and lack of opportunity that pushes women to look for work abroad and removing legitimate means for them to migrate for work as domestics, they will become even more vulnerable to traffickers. It is vital the Indian Government takes effective steps to penalise traffickers and not the people who are vulnerable to this abuse.


www.anti-slavery.org

I'm new to this tribe and don't know if something about this has previously been posted but I thought
i'd give it a shoot.
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  • hmm. this is the same kind of problem we see in israel. women from the former ussr (don't the russian women know that we like philippinos for home health care and the like? {sarcasm}) are offered domestic work at decent pay, arrive and are chained to a wall, passports obviously taken away, and forced into prostitution. they are very badly abused, but nobody seems too interested in the issue. how is slavery in 2007 a non-issue? maybe the politicos are all having sex with the slave-prostitutes? and the media too? or maybe there's just no money in fighting this? aaron's been fighting this issue for years and maybe could tell us, but he seems to be too busy to stop by this forum lately. maybe i'll email him.

    i agree that taking away women's opportunities for legitimate foreign labor can only serve to make the problem worse.