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An Indian housemaid working in Saudi Arabia, who broke her back trying to escape abusive employers, has raised fresh concerns over the working conditions of domestic workers in Gulf countries.
Dhatchayani Uma Shankar, 29, jumped from the first floor balcony of her employer’s residence in Dammam a month after she began working there in March, officials from her home state in Tamil Nadu confirmed.
After spending a month in a Saudi hospital she was flown back home to Chennai on 16 June, with a steel plate in her back and shattered dreams.
She escaped barely six months after another Indian maid from Tamil Nadu, Kasthuri Munirathinam, also tried to run away from her employers and lost an arm in the process.
Like Munirathinam and Shankar, many migrant workers move to Gulf countries to support their families at home.
Government figures show there are an estimated six million Indian migrants in the six Gulf states of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Oman.
In 2015, more than 700,000 Indians moved to the Gulf states where domestic help is in high demand.
In a complaint lodged with state government officials, she stated that she was not allowed any breaks, was expected to take care of a 10-month-old baby while doing all other chores, given leftovers to eat and wasn’t paid for the month she was employed.
Officials at the Saudi Arabian embassy in New Delhi were not immediately available for comment.
A migration survey by the Tamil Nadu state government released in 2015 showed that a migrant spends an average of 108,112 rupees ($1,600) to a secure a job overseas, with half going to recruitment agencies and the rest for visas and travel.
But the survey of 20,000 households also revealed that 39 percent of women and 21 percent of men who work abroad reported not receiving the promised wages.
Ali, who is associated with cultural group Navodaya in Dammam, added that while many successfully adapt to the working conditions, those used to certain levels of freedom back home find it difficult to deal with the virtual “house arrest”.
The Tamil Nadu government has announced a compensation of 1 million rupees ($15,000) to Shankar.
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