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The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by IhateYouMan: 4:56pm On Feb 06, 2022
In the holiest of the holies, the cradle of Islam, the keepers of the secrets, precepts, tenets and statues of Islam, Africans scream and plead for help. In their own words " The Saudis Treat Us Like Animals".

'In Kenya, I bought you. You will do what I want.' Riyadh formally abolished slavery in 1962, but migrant workers, especially women, offer shocking testimony about what it’s like to be one of Saudi Arabia’s African 'slaves'

"The worst was the grandmother [...] She is sick, so rude and racist. She thinks I am dirty because I am black and would not let me drink from her glasses; but I washed them! It is so humiliating. I am a human being."

Brenda Carol Adhiambo, a Kenyan citizen, worked as a maid for a Saudi household in Dammam, a coastal city on the Persian Gulf, from 2019 to 2021. Her experience of racist abuse in Saudi Arabia is far from unusual for Kenyans working in the Gulf.

Estimates vary wildly, but there are believed to be between 100,000 to 300,000 Kenyan citizens employed throughout the Gulf region.

Feith Shimila, 30, is also haunted by her Saudi employer’s words: "In Kenya, I bought you. And now that you are in my house, you will do what I want."

For a year and half, until mid-2021, she worked as a domestic worker in a Saudi town on the border with Iraq, enduring racist and degrading comments, physical violence, including being burned with boiling water, death threats and working over 18 hours a day, all for 900 Saudi riyals ($240) a month.

Kenyan citizen Murunga Feith Shimila migrated to Saudi Arabia to work as a domestic worker: She was repeatedly beaten, threatened with death, forced to work 18 hour days, and burned with boiling water.

"I cannot even count how many times the husband beat me, but I stayed on, like a victim of domestic violence, not knowing what could be next, scared that he could simply kill me," Shimila recalls.

The problem is so far-reaching that Kenya's own Foreign Ministry recommended a temporary ban on sending domestic workers to Saudi Arabia, after news broke that 41 Kenyans had died there in the first nine months of 2021, with reports of workers in distress topping 1000: the suffering of Kenyan workers had "drastically worsened" over the last few years, the ministry stated.

The Kenyan embassy in Riyadh offered little assistance. Shimila called to ask for help and was reportedly told to sleep with her employer, "like other women do," to avoid further confrontations.

In the absence of official statistics on the issue, the gruesome testimonies of domestic workers are crucial evidence of the persistent and deeply exploitative attitudes towards African employees common in Saudi Arabia. This mindset is reminiscent of the Arab slave trade that fed Gulf economies with African slaves right up until the early 20th century.

Saudi Arabia formally abolished slavery as late as 1962, but slavery-like employment patterns and conditions remain rampant in the kingdom and across the region, already infamous for some of the worst employment laws in the world.

Nowadays, transient armies of migrant workers form the backbone of Gulf economies, making up more than 80 percent of Saudi Arabia’s private sector workforce. There are an estimated 1.4 million domestic workers in Saudi Arabia alone in 2021. Across the Gulf, Jordan and Lebanon, foreign workers constitute nearly half of these countries’ combined total population.

Migrant workers sustain Gulf cities, driving cabs, operating restaurants, cleaning houses and treating COVID-19 patients, yet, they are still victims of widespread racist abuse.

Remittances sent back home by migrant workers prop up economic development in their home countries, but for a number of domestic workers, like Adhiambo, migration was a failure. Sitting in the mud house she once dreamt of renovating, the mother of seven wearily points out that employers do not fear the law - and don’t consider their domestic workers as worthy of basic rights.

'The grandmother thinks I am dirty because I am black. It is so humiliating, I am a human being':

Abused by her employer’s son, Adhiambo was reportedly told: "My children can do what they want to you because the Saudi police will not take any action, the Saudi government does not recognize you, Africans, just like Kenya does not consider you to be human beings."

One of the core institutional causes of the abuse of foreign workers in the Gulf, and the impunity for their abusive employers, is the kafala system, which is particularly merciless in Saudi Arabia.

Kafala is a private sponsorship system that allows employers to exert tight control over their employees and is described by human rights groups as a conduit to modern day slavery. Private employers exert total control over migrant workers’ ability to change jobs, leave a workplace, and to enter or exit the host country.

The kefala system is particularly prone to racist and gender-based abuse, with African migrant workers reporting being relegated to low-status, low-income jobs and women facing sexual violence.

In March 2021, Riyadh announced changes. The reformed kafala grants migrant workers the right to request an exit permit without the employer’s permission, at long last conforming to Article 13(2) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which states "everyone has the right to leave any country." Henceforth, workers would be able to change job after a year, once their contract has expired or if they are not paid for three consecutive months.

Right groups acknowledged progress but remained skeptical over implementation, given the country’s poor track record on putting rhetoric into practice. Notably, the reforms excluded workers not covered by the labor law, such as domestic workers, and it did not abolish what are called "absconding charges," a legal tool used to legitimize forced labor.

Saudi employers can file charges against migrant workers who allegedly leave without consent, even when the employee is attempting to run away from modern day slavery. Some employees are also known to file false cases. Migrant workers convicted of "absconding" face imprisonment and deportation, without receiving the wages owed to them.

"As long as any sort of tool of control remains at the hands of employers, workers will continue to suffer exploitation," said Hiba Zayadin, Gulf Researcher at Human Rights Watch.

Employers, empowered by the kafala, often feel entitled to confiscate workers’ passports to force them into working or keep a hedge against them. Saudi Arabia has made it unlawful to seize private sector workers’ passports but did not explicitly prohibit it for domestic workers.

Conditions for migrant workers in some Gulf states have deteriorated during the COVID pandemic: Kuwaiti authorities, for instance, have been slow, even reluctant, to offer vaccinations to their migrant workforces. Across the region, lockdowns, sackings and wage theft forced workers to beg for food, while being humiliated by xenophobic local news reports, at risk of contracting the virus in overcrowded labor camps to which they were confined.

Living on Kenya’s coast, Mwanza Mungiri, 51, is seated in front of the family’s mud house. He bitterly regrets letting his daughter migrate to Saudi Arabia in 2019 to take up a position as a domestic worker. Mistreated, forced to toil seven days a week (despite Saudi law mandating one day off a week and 30 days of holiday every two years), Zainab ran away, hoping to find another job.

In retaliation, her initial employer held her passport and dropped an “absconding” case against her. Mungiri said sorrowfully: "I don’t know how she will leave Saudi Arabia to come back home."

It won’t be an easy journey: Zainab’s family cannot afford to pay for legal representation. It is likely she will go through a deportation process, which is a criminal prosecution in Saudi Arabia, involving the payment of a fine as well as perhaps visa-overstay fees, while being detained in a deportation center, where conditions, according to Human Rights Watch, are dire: Overcrowded rooms and alleged beatings and torture.

“I feel so bad about what happened to my daughter; I would never allow her to migrate again. The Saudis treat us like animals; it is similar to what occurred when they locked us up with balls and chains. They may have removed our chains, but now they confiscate our passports,” he added.

The racism faced by Kenyan domestic workers is mirrored by the experience of other African workers. "Saudi children would call me 'the black' when I visit shops. Their parents and big brothers taught them that black men are violent, poor, ignorant," said Mohammed Hassan, a Sudanese citizen who worked in Saudi Arabia’s marketing industry.

"Sometimes, between returnees, we talk about it, and warn those going to the Gulf that they should not expect to be treated as human beings. Saudi citizens think that they own us, so of course we feel like modern slaves when working in the kingdom, because that is what they want us to feel like. They will never change. They will be exploiters for eternity," Hassan added.

Saudi Arabia is not the only Gulf state where workers suffer and racism runs rampant. In Qatar, the "inequality and subordination of certain racial and ethnic groups" are "fundamentally shaped by Qatar’s history of slavery and its contemporary legacies," a 2019 United Nations report noted. "Combatting racism and racial discrimination in Qatar, including against non-nationals, requires confronting this history of slavery."

Slavery in Qatar was only abolished in 1952. With accusations of modern-day slavery abounding in relation to the number of foreign workers who have died constructing Qatar’s football World Cup stadiums and other infrastructure, Doha has opened the Arab world’s first museum dedicated to the slave trade.

Neither Oman, which coordinated the Arab slave trade, and therefore holds the greatest responsibility, nor any of the other GCC states, who participated in it, have ever formally apologized to African nations for the region’s role in the enslavement and exploitation of millions of Africans over the centuries.

Edward Muzungu Kiringi, chief of the Kenyan village of Sosoni, stood next to the graves of dozens of 19th and 20th slaves century who died from disease in the detention centers they were held in, after being captured but before they could be shipped off to be sold in the Gulf. He puts the blame on the agents, whether Arab or African, who exploit the desperation and naivety of young Kenyan women and arrange their passage to exploitative workplaces.

"They take our girls to the Gulf, where our ancestors were tortured, to work as maids, or I should say, as slaves," he says. "These migration agents are the 21st-century slave traders. They are repeating history, and this is shameful."

Quentin Müller is a journalist and author who specializes in Yemen and the Gulf Arab states. Twitter: @MllerQuentin

Sebastian Castelier is a journalist covering Gulf Arab states and labor migration. His work has appeared in several Middle Eastern and international media outlets. Twitter: @SCastelier

https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/.premium-the-saudis-treat-us-like-animals-1.10594142

Photos shown below are in the following order :

1. "Saudi children kids used to call me 'the black' when I would visit shops": Sudanese migrant worker Mohammed Hassan, 44, worked in marketing in Saudi Arabia from 2006-2017Credit: Sebastian Castelier

2. Migrant workers, like these in Dubai, often live in isolated, substandard, overcrowded conditions with poor healthcare access. During COVID lockdowns they were isolated, often hungry and unpaidCredit: REUTERS

3. 'The grandmother thinks I am dirty because I am black. It is so humiliating, I am a human being': Kenyan citizen Brenda Carol Adhiambo worked from 2019-2021 for a Saudi household in DammamCredit: Sebastian Castelier

4. "The worst was the grandmother [...] She is sick, so rude and racist. She thinks I am dirty because I am black and would not let me drink from her glasses; but I washed them! It is so humiliating. I am a human being.

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Conwarden: 5:00pm On Feb 06, 2022
Hmmm
I find it annoying when Nigerians keep staring, gawking and famzing at any white-skinned foreigner in Nigeria.

Imagine minding my drinks at Quilox some years ago, and a stupid waiter asks me and my guy if we can move to anotber seat and make way for some Arab-looking guys and their naija runz gals. We changed the Club's atmosphere that night grin grin grin

Or a Customer Service officer in a bank attending to a whitey foreigner before me? Operations Manager and Branch Manager had to come and placate me and other customer's that morning angry

These same Arabs that barb my hair, or load my trash can into the city's dumpster truck in US, where they rush to do menial jobs?

Anyway, it's their shithole country, where they can be kings.



Meanwhile . . .


angry

Life sentence for all scammers . . . Including paternity fraudsters! Leviticus 19:13 KJV fall on you all angry angry angry

46 Likes 5 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Nobody: 5:08pm On Feb 06, 2022
you are leaving illegally in their country.. expect anything..most people leaving in Saudi Arabia are there illegally. I'm not in support of this action. what i said its a most to be in a country with this hardship.. come to northern Nigeria and some African.countries,and see how people are struggling to get there. someone will go there for Umrah and will spend morethan ten years there. so like what i said or not,its the raw truth

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by IhateYouMan: 5:10pm On Feb 06, 2022
Hisbah21:
you are leaving illegally in their country.. expect anything


But Saudi is supposed to be a HOLY country ??

84 Likes 8 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by LILTJAY1: 5:11pm On Feb 06, 2022
Stop electing useless leaders then they won't treat you like slaves because you wont have to migrate to work as a maid in their countries. .

68 Likes 8 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by dawnomike(m): 5:15pm On Feb 06, 2022
Poverty in Africa and a search for greener pastures have turned our fellow Africans into modern day slaves.

85 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by eagleu: 5:17pm On Feb 06, 2022
Hisbah21:
you are leaving illegally in their country.. expect anything

Free your self from Islamic Saudi brainwashing. Saudi women are dirtiest in the world.
Mental slavery will not help you.

93 Likes 5 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by bmdmix11: 5:23pm On Feb 06, 2022
LILTJAY1:
Stop electing useless leaders then they won't treat you like slaves because you wont have to migrate to work as a maid in their countries. .

them don dey call atiku tinubu but wont vote in someone without political god father

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Triangles1(m): 5:44am On Feb 07, 2022
Stay in your home and repair it I don't know why you are all running.

14 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Judybash93(m): 5:45am On Feb 07, 2022
The day Africans would arise is fast approaching.

8 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by AntiChristian: 5:45am On Feb 07, 2022
When you denigrate yourself all because of money/better life. No one forces you to traffic yourself illegally!

Our ancestors were enslaved and it was strongly enforced even with death. We betrayed ourselves to the foreigners for money! Now we trade our dignity for money!

Some will still go there for greener pastures tomorrow only to come and complain tomorrow!

26 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by devigblegble: 5:46am On Feb 07, 2022
Then leave their FuCk1nG country so simple

16 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Obagofixxy: 5:46am On Feb 07, 2022
When you were rushing for greener pastures you don't know..... This men are evil... I pity all these maids because Na wiping dem go turn them to

8 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Benjaniblinks(m): 5:47am On Feb 07, 2022
lipsrsealed
Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Tumbulum: 5:47am On Feb 07, 2022
Hisbah21:
you are leaving illegally in their country.. expect anything
the way Muslims think eh is something that i can't fathom. They should expect anything because they are living illegally in Saudi Arabia.

31 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by athaboi(f): 5:47am On Feb 07, 2022
You are a maid in saudi Arabia?? My goodness

2 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Doyou2019: 5:48am On Feb 07, 2022
bmdmix11:


them don dey call atiku tinubu but wont vote in someone without political god father

MOST Nigerians are eternally stupid. They just can't help themselves.

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by freddie009(m): 5:49am On Feb 07, 2022
IhateYouMan:



But Saudi is supposed to be a HOLY country ??

They don't like you but yet still want to go there. You will be surprise Kenyans are still trooping there.

2 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Ndukwe007(m): 5:50am On Feb 07, 2022
devigblegble:
Then leave their FuCk1nG country so simple



Don't understand why it's so difficult to comprehend. Leave the useless country if you're not happy. Must they slave themselves to make money

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Auxtin85(m): 5:50am On Feb 07, 2022
That’s what they are known for
Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Deeprooted: 5:51am On Feb 07, 2022
Return to your base if you would be treated better at home!

No thanks to our politicians!
Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Fiscus105(m): 5:53am On Feb 07, 2022
Conwarden:
Hmmm





angry

Life sentence for all scammers . . . Including paternity fraudsters! Leviticus 19:13 KJV fall on you all angry angry angry


May you and your entire lineage destroy by stupidity and ignorance, they are talking about how ur fellow Africans treated like slaves yet you still religion in religion bigotry, indeed Islam is a curse to the world.

Anyway, did we expect any good thing to come out from Allah demon's SLAVES

4 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by adaxme(m): 5:53am On Feb 07, 2022
the Arabs are worst Racist than the Europeans and Americans. ever wondered why there isn't much black in Saudi Arabia?
it's because during slave Trade the Castrated all black and healthy males so the couldn't reproduce.

30 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Jerryherd: 5:53am On Feb 07, 2022
cool


Yet Arabs pays you so much that you keep rushing back to the so called Arabs to be maids

You hear of the huge salary and bonus you rush to work without reading the agreement you consent and. Sign to


I have truly seen this Nigerian made in UAE and Dubai and I think the Jobs of Maids are meant for serious people like Bangladesh, Philippines and Indians who can actually work without complaining and demanding

Most recruitment agency in Gulf countries now paste it outside that no vacancies for Nigerians, other Nationalties can apply




.

2 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by SALIMAN(m): 5:55am On Feb 07, 2022
Na jeje dem dey, na una dey Find work and live in Saudi Arabia up and down . They weren't here to pack people . Although not all of them treats people any how , we have seen expats spent over 30 years of service that got retired with a well celebrated ceremony when going back to his country in that same Saudi Arabia

1 Like

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by kingthreat(m): 5:57am On Feb 07, 2022
Judybash93:
The day Africans would arise is fast approaching.

In your fantasies

5 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by planetx: 5:59am On Feb 07, 2022
The same Saudi Arabia that African's troop in yearly by the thousands to perform Hajj.

12 Likes

Re: The Saudi Arabians Treat Us Like Animals - Black African Maids Cry Out For Help by Judybash93(m): 6:00am On Feb 07, 2022
kingthreat:


In your fantasies

You'd live to see it my man

7 Likes 1 Share

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