Maids
A national blip
Overworking and abuse of
maids affecting region's image of Singaporeans as spoilt,
insensitive people.
The Age.
Jul 28, 2002
SINGAPORE - Muawantul Chasanah weighed 50 kilograms when
she first arrived in Singapore two years ago, a slightly
built 17-year-old recruited to the big city state to work
as a housemaid in a job that would help support her village
family back home in Indonesia.
By the time she died last December, she was just 36 kilograms
and her emaciated body bore the scars of 200 separate injuries.
Repeatedly bashed by her employer with his fists, a cane
and a hammer, burnt with cigarettes and scalded with boiling
water, the young woman's skin had been turned into a patchwork
of scars, bruises and open wounds.
"There were so many times I beat her, I lost count
of them," Ng Hua Chye, a 47-year-old tour guide, later
told police.
Muawanatul had also been starved, often given only packets
of instant noodles for her lunch and dinner, and it was
hunger that provoked the assault that finally ended her
life.
Accused of stealing leftover porridge from Ng's infant daughter,
the maid was kicked so severely that her stomach ruptured.
She died several days later of peritonitis, lying in agony
in a vomit-stained T-shirt before police arrived too late
to save her.
A neighbour in the public housing estate where Ng lived,
told the Straits Times newspaper he had seen the young woman
occasionally before her death, always appearing tired and
unhappy. "She was 19 but she looked like she was in
her 40s," he said.
Last Friday, Ng was sentenced to a total of 18 years and
six months' imprisonment and 12 strokes of the cane for
what the prosecution described as the worst case of abuse
of a domestic worker in Singapore.
"How do you describe a man who would subject a helpless
human being to such pain and suffering?" said Deputy
Public Prosecutor Lee Sing Lit. "Your honour, only
one word: inhuman.
The case has opened a window on the life endured by a small
minority of the tens of thousands of foreign women who work
as maids servicing the rich and, increasingly, lower middle-class
households of Singapore.
While this is the first time one is known to have died because
of violent mistreatment, a spate of high-profile abuse cases
over the past year has highlighted the vulnerability of
many of the young women drawn from the poverty of the Philippines,
Indonesia, Sri Lanka and other neighbouring nations to Southeast
Asia's most affluent city.
Last November, television news anchor Zahara Abdul Lateef
was jailed for two months for pouring a jug of boiling water
over her Indonesian maid.
In March this year a 30-year-old hospital worker was sentenced
to five years' jail for repeated violent attacks on her
maid. The beatings, slashings and scaldings had culminated
in an attack during which one of the maid's nipples was
bitten off.
But beyond such shocking headlines in a society that prides
itself as a clean and law-abiding enclave in an untamed
region, the cases have drawn renewed attention to a largely
hidden and far more pervasive culture of abuse.
It is the exploitation that stems from the lack of rights
and protection for a class of workers seen by many in Singapore
as a cheap, compliant and inexhaustible commodity.
Like most other maids in Singapore, Muawanatul Chasanah
was not guaranteed a minimum wage, could be required to
work all her waking hours and was not automatically entitled
to even one day off each week.
Like most maids, she could be dismissed without notice or
right of appeal and sent home immediately on the whim of
her employer. If regular medical screening revealed she
had become pregnant, she would also have been put on the
next plane out.
"These people are not second-class citizens, because
they are not even citizens," says Singaporean social
researcher Vivienne Wee, an associate professor at City
University in Hong Kong.
"Because they are not citizens they are denied proper
rights and protections. Equity is only for those who belong."
Dr Wee says that while "top down" punitive measures
are now being pushed by the government to counter serious
cases of violence against maids, little attention is paid
to the plight of women who suffer more subtle forms of physical,
psychological and economic abuse.
"It seems to be that it is only the extreme cases that
are taken seriously, but these crimes are just the tip of
the iceberg," she says.
"There is a lot of abuse, harassment and exploitation
going on, but it's just not visible. If this Indonesian
woman had not died she would still be suffering abuse from
her employer and probably nothing would have happened."
Melissa Kwee, the Singapore president of the United Nations
Development Fund for Women, says many foreign maids also
suffer from a common community attitude that they are inferior.
"Culturally, Singaporeans don't respect the service
class," she says.
"We've had access to cheap labour for so long and we've
got used to always having someone to clean up after us.
There's a real mentality in the community of 'serve me'.
There is exploitation and often a lack of empathy for these
women."
Hong Kong - better protection
Unlike Singapore, Hong Kong - the region's other main centre
for foreign domestic workers - has legislation enforcing
minimum wages and working conditions and a tribunal that
adjudicates complaints by maids.
In Hong Kong, the minimum wage for a maid is HK$3670 a month
(A$847). In Singapore, unless the woman is protected by
an individual contract, she can be paid as little as her
employer chooses.
According to Wee, the average income of Filipino maids in
Singapore is about S$300 a month (A$313), while Indonesians
earn between S$160 and S$200.
But she says most Sri Lankan and Thai maids get considerably
less and she is aware of one Bangladeshi maid paid just
S$30 a month - far less than the global benchmark for dire
poverty of US$1 a day.
It is not surprising, given such bargain-basement pay rates,
that the number of foreign domestic workers in Singapore
has more than doubled to 140,000 in the past decade.
Noodle sellers have maid
Now
even bus drivers and noodle shop owners have full-time home
help.
But the biggest beneficiary is the Singapore Government
which, as well as requiring employers to post a S$5000 bond
for each foreign domestic worker, imposes a monthly levy
of S$345 - more than most of the women themselves receive.
The tax, designed to cap the inflow of foreign workers,
nets the country about S$400 million a year.
"The government is making a lot of money and none of
it is being spent to provide support services for these
women," says Wee.
"The high levy also has the effect of driving down
the wages employers are prepared to pay."
The government insists it is serious about giving greater
protection to foreign workers. It has amended the penal
code to substantially increase penalties for maid abuse.
"The government is sending a very clear signal to employers:
treat the foreign workers well because if you abuse them
you will pay the penalty," says Then Yee Thong, a director
in Singapore's Ministry of Manpower.
The ministry recorded 40 cases of maid abuse last year,
which led to criminal convictions and 49 people were barred
from hiring foreign domestic workers.
A new accreditation system has also been introduced to tighten
controls on the country's 600 maid recruitment agencies,
many of which have been accused of unscrupulous practices
and physically abusing maids themselves.
The courts have joined the crackdown. "A maid sells
her services, she does not sell her person,"
Chief Justice Yong Pung How said last year when, on appeal,
he raised from three months to nine months the jail sentence
of a woman who attacked her maid with a broom handle and
a shoe.
"A maid's abased social status does not mean that she
is any less of a human being and any less protected by the
law."
Yet, despite the tougher judicial line, the court that tried
Ng Hua Chye inexplicably agreed a day before the hearings
ended to change the original charge of murder - which carries
the death penalty in Singapore - to manslaughter.
The court also bowed to a plea from defence lawyers not
to go "overboard" in sentencing Ng to the maximum
penalty of life imprisonment.
Despite acknowledging there was "little by way of mitigation
that merits a lenient sentence", Judicial Commissioner
Choo Han Teck sent Ng to jail for just 10 years on the principal
charge of manslaughter and a further eight years and six
months on four other abuse charges.
But the Philippines - which provides about half of the maids
working in Singapore and saw bilateral relations severely
strained by the 1995 hanging of a Filipino maid convicted
of murdering another maid and the three-year-old son of
her employer - believes the authorities are heading in the
right direction.
"There has been a lot of improvement and the government
of Singapore has been showing its resolute determination
to punish employers who abuse their maids," says Merriam
Cuasay, Labour attache at the Philippines Embassy.
Despite failing to persuade Singapore to legislate basic
working conditions for foreign maids, the Philippines has
moved to protect its own workers by promoting a standard
contract with minimum wages and maximum working hours, and
by providing extensive support, training and counselling
help for women coming to work in Singapore.
"We want to show not only to Singapore, but also to
all countries that host our workers that we are determined
to protect them," says Cuasay.
"We want people to recognise that these workers are
not just here for the money. They are helping these countries
with their work and their skills and they deserve respect
and acknowledgement for that."
(This article "Hells kitchen for Singapore maids"
by Mark Baker, the Asia editor, The Age, Melbourne, was
first published in the Melbourne daily on July 24, 2002.)