A/50/476
English
Page 10
the training of domestic workers and related personnel was adopted. Act
No. 617 of 1993, establishing the conditions to be met in order to obtain
authorization to establish an employment agency for domestic workers is
also relevant within this context.
Along with the efforts made by the authorities to protect the rights
of this category of employees, the following initiatives taken by the
legislature and non-governmental bodies should be noted:
(a) The National Assembly has established a new standing committee to
consider all questions relating to human rights, including the rights of
foreign workers;
(b) In August 1993, the General Workers’ Union of Kuwait established
as part of its administrative set-up an office responsible for matters
relating to foreign workers in Kuwait and protection of their rights.
In addition to these guarantees, domestic workers in Kuwait enjoy a
number of advantages. The following should be noted, in particular:
-
Freedom to change employers, which is guaranteed by law;
-
Employer’s responsibility for travel costs (both directions) for
the employee between his country of origin and Kuwait;
-
Employer’s obligation to provide for all his employee’s needs
(housing, food, clothing, medical care etc.). Since there is no
income tax in Kuwait, the employee can send all his wages back to
his family in his own country; in addition there are the gifts he
receives from time to time;
-
Services provided by the State to domestic workers which,
according to a study published in September 1991 by the Supreme
Planning Council, are estimated at 500 Kuwaiti dinars (about US$
1,700) per year for each worker.
In the legal area, it may be noted that the Kuwaiti courts sentenced
to penalties ranging from a few months in prison to 10 years’ imprisonment
a number of persons found guilty of sexual assault on housekeepers". 8/
3.
Allegations of racist and xenophobic incidents in Germany
16. In connection with the racist and xenophobic incidents in Germany which the
Special Rapporteur described in his reports to the General Assembly
(paras. 60-68) and to the Commission on Human Rights at its fifty-first session
(paras. 22-58), the German Government has asked that the following comments
should be transmitted to the General Assembly:
"The Federal Republic of Germany supported the appointment of a
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance. It considers the appointment of the
/...