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Headlines

The Ecosoc News Monitor

19 February 2008

What a maid had to endure: NO pay for 6 years NO days off, NO visits home

The Strait Times, Feb 19, 2008

Woman boss is fined $4,500 and banned from hiring maids

IT'S MY WIFE'S FAULT: 'I never meddled in my wife's affairs, so I
never knew my maid was owed salary. It's my wife's fault. If I were to
work for free, of course I'd be angry too.' - MR ALI KASMADI, 60,
whose wife Zubaidah became the employer with the worst record of not
paying her maid --

FOR more than six years, Indonesian maid Sukarti, 32, worked for a
Singapore household without getting paid.
She never got a day off, could not speak to neighbours, or call her
family back home in Central Java.

Her misery started the day she joined Zubaidah Sanluan's household in
January 2001. Zubaidah, 46, a clerk, was her second employer.

Miss Sukarti's job at the four-room Tampines flat was to wash, cook
and clean for Zubaidah, her husband, Ali Kasmadi, 60, who works in the
shipping industry, and their three daughters.

She was supposed to receive $280 a month. But each time she expected
to be paid, she was told 'next month, next month'.
When the time came for her two-year contract to be renewed, she asked
to go home but her employer refused.

'When I finally called my family last year, they were so shocked I was
still alive.' -INDONESIAN MAID SUKARTI, 32, whose family members
thought she had gone missing when she failed to contact them. She was
paid $19,398 in arrears.

'She pleaded with me to stay,' recalled Miss Sukarti. 'She promised to
pay me, but she never did.'
Asked why she agreed to stay on not once but twice, she replied that
she had grown close to her employer's three daughters, now aged 24, 21
and 15. Also, she claimed she was afraid of her quick-tempered
employer.

Said Miss Sukarti: 'I had no friends, I was not allowed to talk to
anyone, I had nobody's contact number.
'After a while, I lost interest in speaking to anyone and would just
cry alone in the room with the youngest daughter. Maybe it was my fate
that I was not paid my salary.'

Then, Zubaidah's eldest daughter got married and her son-in-law
decided in February last year to tell the Indonesian embassy of the
maid's plight. Miss Sukarti has since been staying at the embassy's
quarters.

On Feb 11 this year, Zubaidah became the employer with the worst
record of not paying her maid. She was also convicted of falsely
declaring that she had been paying Miss Sukarti when she renewed the
Indonesian's work permit in January.
She was fined $4,500 and barred from ever employing a maid again, said
the Man- power Ministry yesterday. She could have been fined up to
$5,000, jailed up to six months, or both.

Zubaidah owed Miss Sukarti $19,398 in all, which she paid in three instalments.
Miss Sukarti is going home to Pati, her village, where she intends to
use the money to set up a shop.
Neighbours The Straits Times spoke to said they knew something was
wrong with the maid.

One, who declined to be named, said Miss Sukarti was terrified of her employer.

'The maid would scurry into the flat whenever Zubaidah caught her
talking to us. But once, she mentioned she had no money to buy
anything and that she wanted to go home but could not,' she said.

She added that she could hear Zubaidah berating her maid from inside the flat.
Miss Sukarti claimed that Zubaidah was abusive, calling her names and
shouting whenever she returned home from work unhappy.

But when she returned from shopping sprees, she would show off her buys.

'I wondered how she had money to go shopping, but none to pay my
salary,' she said. 'I was so depressed I fell sick. The doctor told me
to rest more and stop thinking too much. But he, my neighbours,
everybody did not know the pain I went through.'

She did not lack food and clothes. Zubaidah's relatives passed down
clothes to her. But she missed her family who thought she had gone
missing when she failed to contact them.

'When I finally called them last year, they were so shocked I was
still alive,' said Miss Sukarti.

By Arlina Arshad
arlina@sph.com.sg