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CSO HRW Abuse Against Asian Domestic Worker in Saudi Arabia
Oct 05 2010
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Approximately 1.5 million women domestic workers, primarily from Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and the Philippines, work in Saudi Arabia. These workers, viewed at home as "modern-day heroes" for the foreign exchange they earn, receive less protection in Saudi Arabia than other categories of workers, exposing them to egregious abuses with little or no hope of redress. Domestic workers comprise less than a quarter of the eight million foreign workers in Saudi Arabia, but embassies from the labor-sending countries report that abuses against domestic workers account for the vast majority of the complaints they receive.
While many domestic workers enjoy decent work conditions, others endure a range of abuses including non-payment of salaries, forced confinement, food deprivation, excessive workload, and instances of severe psychological, physical, and sexual abuse. Human Rights Watch documented dozens of cases where the combination of these conditions amounted to forced labor, trafficking, or slavery-like conditions. More information about human trafficking on the website of HRW.
Caring for Trafficked Persons: Guidance for Health Providers Facilitator’s Guide
Caring for Trafficked Persons/Cuidados Para la Salud y la Trata de Personas- IOM 2011 Case Data on Human Trafficking
- IOM Understanding and Counteracting Trafficking
IOM The Causes and Consequences of Evidence from the IOM Human Trafficking Database Re-trafficking
IOM Manual Human Trafficking and Legalization of Criminal Profits. Russian.
IOM Manual on THB crimes typologies. Russian.
IOM Moscow CIS Executive Committee CT Seminar 2010 Russian
IOM International Conference. “Improvement of International Cooperation in Counteracting Human Trafficking” Russian
IOM Trafficking of men Belarus and Ukraine
IOM UNGIFT Caring for Trafficked Persons
IOM SACTAP 10 Questions about Human Trafficking




