Ethiopia is lobbying Lebanon to investigate fully the death
of an Ethiopian housemaid who killed herself after being beaten on the street
in Beirut.
In the video, Dechasa is seen being violently dragged along
the street by a man and forced into a car. One man screams at her, "Get
into the car" while another is seen helping to force Dechasa into the back
of the vehicle.
She was taken to the Pyschiatrique de la Croix hospital,
known locally as Deir al-Salib, after the incident, and was found dead there
last Wednesday morning, apparently having hanged herself using strips torn from
her bed sheets.
The Ethiopian consulate has launched legal proceedings
against the man identified in the video as the owner of the employment agency
who brought Dechasa to Lebanon. The man was questioned by police but later
released. The consulate is pressing the authorities to carry on investigating
her death.
"We had a meeting with the general prosecutor,"
Asaminew Debelie Bonssa, Ethiopia's consul general in Lebanon, said. The consul
visited Dechasa in hospital a few days before she died.
"We urge [the authorities] to co-operate and to
investigate this case," Bonssa said. "We have requested the highest
body possible to investigate, and are asking for the investigation to be done
as soon as possible. He should not have used force on her. I am just so deeply
shocked and sorrowful about her death."
Dechasa, 33, left her hometown of Burayu, a poor suburb of
Addis Ababa, in search of work overseas. According to Bonssa, her husband had
left her for another woman, and had taken custody of her three children.
"There are not many ways to earn a living where she is
from. She was not in a good situation there, and left to try to make her and
her family's life better," Bonnsa said. "She arrived here about two
months ago via Sudan. The owners of the agency who brought her here came to us
and said she was mentally unstable, and that they wanted her to be sent her
back. When I saw her in hospital, she was very upset about this.
"She had borrowed money from a neighbour in Ethiopia to
pay to come to Lebanon, and she came here with the ambition to send money back
to her family. She was worried if she was sent home now she would not have been
able to repay her neighbour."
The hospital did not return any calls regarding Dechasa's
mental health.
Ethiopia banned domestic workers from travelling to Lebanon
three years ago because of the lack of legal protection, but many still come,
through agents that help them travel through third countries to bypass the
regulations.
There are around 200,000 foreign domestic workers in
Lebanon, and reports of physical, sexual and mental abuse are widespread. Ali
Fakhry, of Lebanon's Anti-Racist Movement, which campaigns for better rights
for migrant workers, says many pay as much as $3,000 (£1,900) to agents to get
here, and then find themselves kept as virtual slaves. There is no law
protecting domestic workers in Lebanon.
"They are told to come to Lebanon, a multicultural
country where you can practise your religion freely. They are told it is more
like Europe here than the Middle East, and they will get Sundays off for
church," Fakhry said. "When they get here, their passports taken away
from them, their wages are withheld, and they are often kept as prisoners, not
allowed out of the home. Many are physically and sexually abused, and there is
nothing to protect them. It is a system of slavery."
A report by Human Rights Watch found that one migrant worker
dies in Lebanon every week, from suicide or other causes. "The police do
not investigate any reports of abuse," Fakhry said. "The authorities
must take responsibility for domestic workers in this country. This just can't
go on."
A source from the ministry of justice in Lebanon said a case
against the man identified in the video was pending.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
Video footage of Alem Dechasa being attacked outside the Ethiopian consulate in Beirut was broadcast on Lebanese television two weeks ago, causing outrage in the country about the mistreatment of the thousands of migrant workers in the country.
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