The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Anger over calls to limit air conditioni­ng for HK maids

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HONG KONG: Calls to restrict air conditioni­ng for Hong Kong’s domestic maids amid sweltering summer temperatur­es were dubbed inhumane by rights groups yesterday, after a politician suggested helpers should get ‘used to the hot weather’.

The southern Chinese city is home to over 340,000 migrant domestic workers mostly from the Philippine­s and Indonesia, but concerns have grown over their welfare after several high-profile abuse cases.

The maids are required by law to live with their employers which rights campaigner­s say makes it hard for them to escape mistreatme­nt.

One employer’s Facebook post went viral this week after she expressed outrage that her helper had switched on the air conditioni­ng in her room at night without permission, as temperatur­es topped 30 degrees Celsius with high humidity.

“I’m very angry,” the woman — identified only as Wong — said, according to a screenshot of the now deleted post on a closed group for Hong Kong employers of foreign helpers, published by Apple Daily newspaper.

Wong described her maid to be ‘audacious to the extreme’, and said that she would remove the air conditioni­ng switch.

While she was widely criticised by some residents, others supported her.

Politician Michael Lee, who heads a group for employers of maids, said in a radio interview that helpers should be accustomed to the weather as they came from ‘hot, hot’ countries and called on employers to establish firm house rules.

“If they come from the hot country, they should get used to the hot weather,” Lee later told AFP.

He conceded that the temperatur­es of recent weeks could mean helpers should be allowed air-con at night, but only so they can continue in their household duties.

“Otherwise she can’t sleep, then she can’t work,” said Lee, a district councillor and spokesman for the pro-business Liberal Party’s Taskforce on Foreign Helper’s Problems, which speaks for the employers of maids.

“I recommend all employers in Hong Kong set up house rules saying what they can and cannot do,” added Lee.

Campaigner­s for helpers’ rights said limiting air conditioni­ng was ‘ridiculous, unfair and inhumane’.

“To regulate the foreign domestic helpers in using air conditioni­ng is inhumane and will cause deteriorat­ion to their health,” said former domestic helper Eni Lestari, spokeswoma­n for the Asian Migrants’ Coordinati­ng Body. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman walks down a path, as high-rise residentia­l buildings installed with air conditioni­ng units are seen in the background, in Hong Kong’s Mid-Levels district. Calls to restrict domestic maids from using air conditioni­ng in their employers’ homes...
A woman walks down a path, as high-rise residentia­l buildings installed with air conditioni­ng units are seen in the background, in Hong Kong’s Mid-Levels district. Calls to restrict domestic maids from using air conditioni­ng in their employers’ homes...

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