Ethiopian migrant workers as well as right activists
say female workers are being “beaten, robbed, imprisoned and raped” in Saudi
Arabia.
Zeneit Hussein, a 15-year-old Ethiopian girl who was in Saudi Arabia for eight
months says she has been kept in prison for 4 month.
“Life was good for three months, then employer started trouble. I don’t know
what they did to me. I became sick; they took me to the hospital...when I
arrived at Bole international airport, I was unconscious. Red Cross people took
me, I could not walk, they put me on a stretcher” said Zaneit.
Human right activists believe these female workers, being trafficked from
Ethiopia’s rural areas, refrain from expressing the true account of their
ordeal due to social constraints.
“They have faced so many problems like violence, but they don’t disclose
everything. They don’t say it but we have to consider that maybe their problem
is associated with violence and rape” said Tirubrhan Getnet from Good Samaritan
Association.
“They
cannot openly say somebody raped me but…some come [back from Saudi Arabia] with
gynecological related bleeding which means they have been raped, but they don’t
say it,” added Getnet.
This is while on November 12, 2013, the Saudi police killed three Ethiopian
migrant workers in the impoverished neighborhood of Manfuhah in the capital,
Riyadh, where thousands of African workers, were waiting for buses to take them
to deportation centers.
Between nine and 11 million of Saudi Arabia’s 27-million-strong population are
foreign workers.
On November 4, a seven-month amnesty for expatriate workers expired.
Hundreds of thousands of people were forced to leave the country during the
time they had to rectify their visa status without penalty.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) says nearly 140,000
undocumented Ethiopian migrant workers have been taken to home from Saudi
Arabia following Riyadh’s violent crackdown against illegal immigrants.
Many of the foreign workers say they could not use the amnesty due to
“bureaucratic difficulties” or disputes with their original sponsors.
Foreign workers cannot change jobs or leave Saudi Arabia without the permission
of their sponsors, who are often Saudi companies or individuals providing
workers to businesses for profit.
AY/MAM
Source: Press TV
Take Back
The Night
Trigger warning: This post contains depictions of sexual
violence.
My story is typical. It is ordinary, normal and average. I
was a first year student out at a party drinking in the fall, and a guy who
insisted on walking me home invited me to hang out in his room, where he forced
me down and raped me. It's not unusual -- practically commonplace. And that's
terrifying.
Three years ago this week, I sat down on the stone steps of
the Amphitheater at the University of Virginia as a first year student. The sun
was setting, and the darker it got, the more visible the hundreds of candles
and luminaries became. It was my first time attending the Vigil for Take Back
The Night, and during the course of the night, stories like mine carried in
voices over the Amphitheater. Their words were horrifying and comforting,
telling me I was not alone. Even though people had said it before I now
believed, there were real voices, real stories like mine. Their words seemed to
push and carve out a space that felt like home, that felt safe, that told me
this place could be mine again, that it didn't matter that I saw my assailant
on Grounds -- I was not alone, and The University was my place too.
Now, three years later, I serve as the co-Chair for the
Sexual Assault Leadership Council that not only organizes Take Back The Night
week, but also works with peer educator groups and administrators to coordinate
and push for positive change. Since that first vigil, I've told my story
hundreds of times in small panels, open discussions and at the vigil itself
each year. Each time I've been contacted by other survivors who just like me,
are learning and reaffirming that they are and have never been alone.
Take Back The Night, for me, is about more than just the
sharing. Yes, the recognition of voice is the key element of the vigil, but
it's about a community call. Survivors like me share tales of violence, pain,
struggle, and healing because these stories happen in the same place the
stories of classroom achievement, extracurricular success and weekend
debauchery happen. It is about making the community aware that the girl getting
a little too drunk one night might be trying to drink away memories, that the
guy in the back of the class almost failing out isn't lazy, he's trying to get
over a trauma. It is a call to community to recognize that we too exist, and
that this violence exists -- that it's committed by our peers, and that we have
a role in stopping it.
It is a
call to community, to understand that if my brother is not safe, I am
not safe; if my sister suffers, I too suffer. Just because I am not personally
doing wrong does not mean I am blameless when wrong happens around me. As long
as I am human, my fellow humans, their safety and their actions, are my
responsibility. To be human is to be in community, and acknowledging sexual
assault means that we as a community, as very human beings, are failing. In the
words of Mother Theresa, "If we have no peace, it is because we have
forgotten that we belong to each other."
This year, I'll be back in that Amphitheater standing behind
the microphone, sharing yet again the same story once more. I will continue to
share it until we have made these stories uncommon and have truly made a human
community.
I Take Back The Night because it should have been mine to
begin with. I Take Back The Night because we are not alone. I Take Back The
Night because women like me should be able to enjoy their right to an education
with the same feeling of safety as anyone else, because we should have the
right to bodily integrity no matter what we were drinking, because male
survivors too have the right to be heard. I Take Back The Night because it
belongs to us all, and we have the right and the responsibility to own it.
This post is part of a series produced by The Huffington
Post and Take Back the Night in conjunction with Sexual Assault Awareness Month.
To learn more about Take Back the Night and how you can help prevent sexual
violence, visit here. Read all posts in the series here.
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