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TraffickingForeign diplomats trap and abuse domestic workers in private households across London
Posted February 4, 2023 by IronicWolf in NameTheProblem

From The Telegraph newspaper:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-health/climate-and-people/foreign-diplomats-trap-abuse-domestic-workers-private-households/

Domestic workers are being held as modern slaves in diplomatic households across London, where they are forced to work up to 18 hours a day, wash themselves with buckets of cold water and eat leftover food scraps from their employers, the Telegraph can reveal. The workers, largely women from the Philippines and Indonesia, are hired by foreign diplomats via international recruitment agencies and provided with visas to live and work in the UK. Over the past five years, London-based diplomats representing several Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian countries have subjected their domestic workers to inhumane living conditions and degrading labour abuses, according to data reviewed by the Telegraph.  These cases are “likely to be the tip of the iceberg,” experts warn. It comes despite promises made by the government in 2015 to root out the exploitation of domestic workers in wealthy private households, including those owned by diplomatic agents.

Last year, the Supreme Court ruled that diplomats who exploit workers in conditions of modern slavery cannot rely on diplomatic immunity to prevent compensation claims. The ruling was specific to a single case of a London-based Saudi diplomat, who was accused of treating a Filipino staff member as a slave, forcing her to wear a bell 24 hours a day to be at his “family’s beck and call”. Campaigners say the scale of exploitation within diplomatic households in the capital is not known precisely, but believe it could be significant. Kalayaan, a charity dedicated to supporting migrant domestic workers in the UK, has numerous cases on its books but is concerned this does not account for the true number of women – and men – who escape or fail to flee the employment of an abusive diplomat every year. ‘Tip of the iceberg’ Data shared by the charity with the Telegraph showed that, between 2017 and 2021, at least 13 overseas domestic workers were abused by 10 diplomatic agents from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE, Kuwait, Brunei and the Philippines. These workers were later entered into the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), a national framework run by the Home Office for identifying and supporting victims of modern slavery. In each case, the referral made to the NRM was accepted by the Home Office, which “decided there are Reasonable Grounds to conclude” the individual was a “victim of modern slavery,” according to documentation seen by the Telegraph. However, Kalayaan said its data is likely to be an underestimate as it does not include those cases where a worker supported by the charity decided against entering the NRM. Nor does it offer any indication on the number of people trapped in a diplomatic household but unable to escape, Kalayaan added. Other charities, such as the Voice of Domestic Workers, also help assist those fleeing abusive diplomats. “It is likely that the number of people we are able to help is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Ayesha Mohsin, a lawyer at Kalayaan.  “This abuse is happening behind closed doors, in people’s homes. It is this context that also makes it difficult for victims to seek help, which is why the government’s failure to implement proposed safeguards is so disheartening. “Diplomats know they can act with impunity because of this failure to act.”

The exploitation of domestic workers in diplomatic households appears to be largely tied to officials from the Middle East, where labour abuses and modern slavery are well-documented. Last year, the Telegraph revealed that women from Malawi were being duped into travelling to Oman, only to be imprisoned as modern slaves in the households of their wealthy employers.  Former Cabinet minister David Davis said representatives from the Middle East shouldn’t be allowed to recreate the “oppressive conditions” of their own countries within diplomatic households in the UK, adding: “These individuals should be obeying British laws.” Diwa, a mother of one and former worker who was brought into Britain in 2018 by a Saudi Arabian diplomat, described to the Telegraph how she lived as a prisoner in a house in West London. She spent three months in his employment but was never paid and would “only eat leftovers from the family,” adding: “I couldn’t eat if they weren’t in.” Diwa was unable to go out by herself and had her passport confiscated by the diplomat upon her arrival into the UK. She would divide her time between the official’s house and a property owned by his relative. On some occasions, she was expected to clean both homes on the same day. “I was angry and sad. Half the time I ended up crying,” Diwa said. “I was just exhausted and couldn’t bear the idea of carrying on, so I found my passport and eventually left.” ‘They took away my passport’ Eleanor, who is from Indonesia, recounts a similar story. She first arrived in the UK with a Southeast Asian diplomat in 2016 and remembers being woken at 1am by her employer on one of the first nights of the job.  “He came into the room and told me to unpack his shopping,” she said. “From that point I started to think this might not be a normal way of working.” Over the course of one month, before she fled, Eleanor was forced to work seven days a week and unable to leave the property, denied access to a working mobile phone, stripped of her passport, and made to clean herself with cold water out of a bucket. “I'd wake up at 5.30am and the first thing would be to clean the car and then clean the [four-storey] house,” she said. “Sometimes there were lots of guests coming to the house, so I would carry on until 10pm or even midnight. “I wasn’t allowed to leave the house or use the wifi. They took away my passport. They didn’t pay me my wages. And there was no heating in my room or hot water as the employer had turned it off. It was winter so I had to boil water in a kettle, pour it into a bucket and clean myself that way. “I was exhausted. I’d go hours without eating so was often very hungry. From when I left Indonesia to the time I ran away, I lost five kilos.” Terrified and trapped, Eleanor eventually rang the Indonesian embassy who told her “lots of people have been in this situation” and that they had successfully run away. She soon followed suit, seizing her chance to flee when her diplomat left the house to pick up his children. Both Diwa and Eleanor were eventually entered into the NRM and now live independently in London, where they work and continue to send money back to their families in Southeast Asia. Their experiences are common to the men and women supported by Kalayaan over the years, the charity said, adding that many go without pay during their period of employment in London –  despite regularly working from 6am to midnight for weeks at a time. Every year, up to 17,000 vulnerable domestic workers, many from Asia and Africa, travel to the UK with their employers, according to a government-commissioned review into the exploitation of migrant staff, published in 2015. However, not all leave the UK once their work permit runs out. In the year ending March 2020, some 15,828 visas expired for overseas domestic workers, government data show. But in nearly 10 per cent of cases (1,280), the Home Office was unable to establish if these workers went on to depart the country. James Ewins QC, who led the government’s 2015 review, said ministers were turning a blind eye to abusive labour practices occurring in the homes of diplomats and wealthy foreign nationals. “I don't think the government is taking this issue seriously … They want these wealthy families coming into the UK for political reasons and economic reasons,” he said, adding that the majority of individuals bringing over their own staff came from the Middle East. “These employers think ‘I don't have to comply with the law’ … [their homes] are places where the English law is not being applied. There’s a vacuum.”

In response to Mr Ewin’s report, the government pledged it would introduce compliance checks to ensure diplomatic households “understood” their “obligations as employers” when hiring private staff. But the Telegraph’s findings show that, for the past seven years, women – and some men – have continued to be brought into the country by diplomatic officials, who sponsor their visa applications, and subsequently abused. In one case from 2018, a female worker employed by a Southeast Asian diplomat was forced to carry on working after receiving hospital treatment for abdominal pains and vaginal bleeding, despite the recommendation of doctors that she rest for a week. The woman also resorted to eating leftovers from the diplomat’s kitchen due to hunger and was “verbally and psychologically abused” by the official, along with other members of staff in his employment, according to a referral statement provided to the NRM. Mr Ewins argued that “we’ve got to find a way to hold somebody to account.” He added: “The employer is the obvious person. You put a red flag on the sponsors’ visa if they’re found to have committed serious labour abuses against their staff.” A Government spokesperson said: “The Government does not tolerate diplomats breaking the law and takes allegations of staff mistreatment in diplomatic households very seriously. “Where there are serious alleged offences committed by diplomats, we ask the relevant government to waive their diplomatic immunity to allow them to cooperate with independent police investigations. For the most serious offences we can also request their immediate withdrawal from the UK.”

24 comments

LilithJune 16, 2022

You should try to peak her. She would probably be relieved to have someone to confide in who "gets it".

FutureBreedMachineJune 16, 2022

I agree. I'd still do it gradually and gently, since it's such a controversial topic, but it almost sounds like your friend wants someone to talk to her about it.

DoomedSibylJune 16, 2022

Yes, try to peak her even if you have to do the slow and steady thing and help her think it through herself. Most importantly because she is on the frontlines with abused girls. She needs to be peaked so she can properly help these girls.

[Deleted]June 16, 2022

It’s hard to explain what she does without making it a flashing neon sign of identifiable info, but her role that she has with the kids is fairly limited. But I did use the convo I had with her to open up a discussion with another friend so not a loss!

EstrojenJune 15, 2022(Edited June 15, 2022)

I would ask her why she thinks that is and see where she ends up... or say something like, "Abuse sounds like a good reason to opt out of being female."

WhatsGoingOnJune 16, 2022

My go-to with women is "gosh, I wish I could've opted out of womanhood. Being a girl really sucked, I totally understand why someone would choose to not go through that."

The indignation they feel is then directed inward.

RadfemParasiteEveJune 16, 2022

Agreed.

IcannotdealJune 16, 2022(Edited June 16, 2022)

I’m glad your friend picked up on it. I’ve also noticed women/girls who are super against and well-versed in the patriarchy identity as non-binary. As if they can just ~opt out~ of the things they don’t like.

ItsCalculatedJune 16, 2022

Women trying anything to run from the oppression that comes for us all.

CaeruleaJune 16, 2022

Honestly, I do understand them. Problem is that it won't help at all. They'll see that eventually.

OneOddBirdJune 16, 2022

I peaked when all of my trans friends (only the women; the men just wanted to be trans to jack off) slowly revealed that they all had horribly abusive mothers or trauma filled religious backgrounds or both. In a lot of cases it seemed to be that trauma inflicted by the mother figure got transmuted into the desire to disavow womanhood altogether as a way of rejecting the mom’s abuse. Definitely some sad and horrible findings, and people are slowly catching on

I used to know a gay man (he said he was never heard about any boyfriends ever) whom absolutely hated women, except me because apparently I wasn't like other women so I was ok he would talk to me as I was more like a guy apparently (which I found insulting), he often expressed his hate for women as a collective and it would always go back to his mother whom he hated more then anyone, he said she was abusive and it was her fault his father died, he put his death down to the stress of dealing with her.

I often wondered if he really was gay or just blinded by his hate for his mother that he projected onto all other women, its strange that with sons and even women the idea prevails that women are a collective mass, all the same and not individuals. we never see "not all women"

OneOddBirdJune 16, 2022

For violent men all women are the same. Look at all the serial killers who decided to rape and kill women and then when they were caught they whined about being abused by their moms and having mommy issues. Hell even the ones who were abused by fathers went out and killed women anyways. They just hate us

ValentineJune 16, 2022

Very accurate. I thought I used to ID as NB because of being bisexual, terminally online and being given repeated messages about how I didn't fit the ideal of femininity. Turns out I had disassociative amnesia around my mother repeatedly raping me at gunpoint and shooting my cat.

OneOddBirdJune 16, 2022

That is so awful, I hope you are healing anf far far away from her

[Deleted]June 18, 2022
SistersovermistersJune 16, 2022

It happened to me, and I doubt it is any different for my gen z peers. I'm a bit eager to see these connections being made and getting the ball rolling.

Definitely had these conversations with older (gen x mostly) women! They can most certainly sniff through the bullshit. I know they worry about the younger women, too.

pennygadgetJune 16, 2022

This is the one silver lining to this TRA garbage being pushed on the general public. Normal people (ie folks who live in the real world, didn't go to expensive universities, and don't live on Twitter) are going to be shell-shocked by this crap. And they can't stay silent forever.

WhatsGoingOnJune 16, 2022

I'm in the process of peaking my mom. She works with counterculture teens, and had been seeing an increase in TiFs and NB-identifying girls. Most women IRL don't take that shit seriously, in my experience; they want to be inclusive and kind, but they don't actually BELIEVE all of that.

[Deleted]June 16, 2022

It honestly breaks my heart. Preteen/teenage girls are among the most vulnerable members of society. They're dissociating from their femaleness and society is mostly responding with ridicule or further grooming.

FrogOnALogJune 16, 2022

You're absolutely right, and I got caught up in it. It's no coincidence that I started identifying as NB right around the same time boys at my school started making fun of girls' bodies, and men started catcalling me on the street. It was also right around the time I moved to a new city and lost most of my support system, so the built-in community that comes with being NB was a huge bonus to me. I've desisted now, obviously. It didn't last very long before I peaked.

OpusDeiJune 16, 2022

I'm glad. I know I've personally noticed this as well, tbh even back to my tumblr days; a lot of the TIFs seemed to have experienced some sort of abuse or particularly traumatic instances of misogyny/sexism (like, being treated terribly in a male dominated hobby for example). I noticed this but didn't say it out loud because I didn't want to be invalidating at the time but yeah.

maybe recommend she watch the documentary 4 part film on youtube Dysphoric.

[Deleted]June 16, 2022