Thursday, October 6, 2016

The Philippines saved a Filipino house keeper from her manager in Bahrain


The Philippines saved a Filipino house keeper from her manager in Bahrain after she posted an edgy weep for help on her Facebook page.

Staff at the Philippine international safe haven were alarmed to the situation of Abby Luna, who claims she was r@ped and beaten by her manager's child, after she posted the video on her Facebook page. The video pulled in around 78,000 shares and 19,000 preferences.

"The salvage was provoked by the video message... She is currently under the consideration of our consulate," remote service representative Charles Jose said. Philippine international safe haven authorities and staff from Luna's business organization lifted her up from her manager's home, Jose said, including that police were examining the episode.

Luna's claimed aggressor denied assaulting her, Ricky Aragon, bad habit delegate at the Philippine international safe haven in Bahrain, said.

In the three-minute long video, which seems to have been made on a webcam, a wailing Luna denounced her boss' "medication fiend" child of r@ping her. She likewise posted a composed claim for viewers to contact the Philippine international safe haven for her benefit.

"Help me leave. I'm terrified. Up to this point, my private parts hurt. My leg is wounded. He (assailant) punched my leg to immobilize me," said the 28-year-old, who had been working in Bahrain for a year.

"After my boss' child manhandled me, he debilitated to slaughter me and cover me in the desert in the event that I inform anybody concerning what happened."

Luna said her boss did not trust her cases of being r@ped and beaten and demanded she complete the staying two months of her agreement before she could go home. Her manager likewise advised her to have a premature birth in the event that she fell pregnant, she included.

Luna is among an expected 10 million Filipinos working abroad to escape destitution and large amounts of unemployment in the Philippines.

Numerous abroad Filipino laborers, who represent a tenth of the nation's populace of 100 million, work in humble employments and persevere through unsafe working conditions.

A year ago, a Filipino servant, Nargelene Mendez, was protected from a house in Saudi Arabia in the wake of posting a video on her Facebook page asserting her boss had mishandled her.

In Hong Kong, Erwiana Sulistyaningsih, an Indonesian local laborer blamed her manager for subjecting her to six months of physical misuse.

Erwiana, 23, experienced treatment at the Amal Sehat Islamic Hospital in Sragen, Indonesia, in the wake of getting onto a flight from the SAR.

Photos of Erwiana's wounds rapidly spread through online networking and prompted a show of a large number of individuals through Hong Kong's Central locale. Police captured her boss previous beautician Law Wan-tung on January 20, 2014, as she attempted to get onto a flight to Thailand. She was sentenced to six years in jail and fined HK$15,000 not long ago.

Cleaning specialists working in the Middle East every now and again endure misuse.

Human Rights Watch has approached the United Arab Emirates to change a prohibitive visa framework and pass a work law to stop residential specialists are not misused.

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