E/CN.4/1997/71/Add.2
page 8
that supply manpower and domestic workers in order to establish a common
policy. It has also been suggested that an act setting a minimum wage for
employees of cleaning agencies, guards and domestic workers should be adopted;
that the regulations governing residence permits (for workers, the work permit
takes the place of a residence permit) should be changed; that the
repatriation of those who wish to return home, or who are obliged to do so
owing to illness or lack of a visa, should be facilitated; and that the
situation of shepherds should be improved. The latter are the most neglected
category of workers: they live in inhuman conditions, have no contact with
the city, and are supplied with food by their employers only once every two
weeks, even though the law explicitly prohibits the employment of shepherds
unless their contract stipulates that they are to be provided with food - a
requirement which employers blithely ignore. So-called seasonal fishermen
also live in sub-standard conditions in makeshift huts near Doha.
32.
The Philippines is a major exporter of manpower to Kuwait, where
55,000 Filipinos, including 28,000 domestic workers, of whom 15,000-20,000 are
illegal, are employed. Domestic workers are recruited by illegal agencies in
the Philippines; although the exploitation of workers has been prohibited by
its Government since 1988, 25-30 persons without visas are recruited each
month, for a fee, by private agencies. Philippine domestic workers are in the
greatest demand because they are the most educated, and they command higher
recruitment fees than nationals of other countries. Recruitment agencies
charge KD 450-480 for Philippine housekeepers, whose monthly wages are
KD 45-65; consequently, their employers are more demanding, a fact which leads
to stress and violence and causes the workers to run away. Because domestic
workers from the Philippines are more educated than others, they display more
confidence and protest ill-treatment and abuse, a fact which irritates
employers and leads to incidents, some of which are tragic and are exposed by
the press. Domestic workers from other countries, owing to their level of
education and to the language barrier, are less likely to complain.
33.
The Philippine embassy maintains a shelter that houses about a hundred
domestic workers in breach of an expulsion order issued at their employer's
request after ill treatment, violence or rape or because they are pregnant or
ill. Most of them are women; of the 102 cases mentioned during the Special
Rapporteur's visit, only one involved a man. While it is estimated that
60-70 per cent of those who take refuge at the embassy do not tell the whole
truth, there are photographs of domestic workers sporting black eyes. Some
point out that it is comforting to realize that the Kuwaiti authorities are,
at least, aware of such lapses and willingly cooperate with the embassy; an
example of this cooperation is the recent opening of a Kuwaiti embassy in
Manila.
34.
There are 80,000 domestic workers and 20,000 skilled workers from
Sri Lanka in Kuwait; the latter are protected by the country's labour
legislation, but the former have serious problems. Employers often refuse to
arrange for the issue of a residence permit, even after two or three years of
service and, generally speaking, these workers, most of them women, cannot go
home without that permit. They are sent to the Dasma Centre, where two or
three months pass before their cases are dealt with.