The Citizen (Gauteng)

Rights activists deny that ‘militant maids’ are joining IS

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– Indonesian domestic workers in Hong Kong are being radicalise­d by extremists from the Islamic State (IS) group, a security think-tank said in a report yesterday.

About 150 000 of the city’s domestic helpers are from Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country. Against a backdrop of growing religious conservati­sm at home, a small number of militant maids has emerged, according to a report from the Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (Ipac).

But rights activists and the Indonesian Muslim community in Hong Kong said they were unaware of radicals and feared that reported links with IS would breed unfair suspicion.

The Ipac investigat­ion described a “radical fringe” of about 45 Indonesian domestic helpers, who may have been attracted to militant circles by “the search for a sense of community in an unfamiliar environmen­t”.

“Some of these women were drawn by jihadi boyfriends they met online,” says Ipac analyst Nava Nuraniyah. “But some joined IS as a path to empowermen­t.”

A string of abuse cases has highlighte­d the exploitati­on of domestic workers in Hong Kong by unscrupulo­us employment agencies which confiscate their passports, claim their wages and keep them in the dark about their rights.

Hong Kong

But the Ipac report said ill-treatment did not seem to have played a direct role in radicalisa­tion, although it had led to the establishm­ent of an Islamic advocacy group to act as a kind of union.

The war in Syria has fuelled interest in militant groups as jihadi social media stoked sympathy for Sunni victims, the report said. It told the story of one woman who turned to radicalism after years of turmoil in her personal life and became a key player in helping Indonesian jihadis get to Syria, sometimes via Hong Kong.

A handful of the women ended up going to Syria themselves, said Ipac, a leading think-tank which has published numerous reports on conflicts in Southeast Asia.

Hong Kong media has previously reported about IS supporters handing leaflets to Indonesian domestic helpers as they gathered in public spaces on Sundays, their day off. One pregnant helper who went missing in 2015 was said to have told friends she was planning to link up with IS militants in Syria alongside her husband, according to the South China Morning Post.

The Indonesian community in Hong Kong has tripled in the past 17 years due to the demand for domestic helpers.

But Indonesian migrant rights activist Eni Lestari said while the threat of extremism was always a possibilit­y, she was unaware of IS supporters among them. –

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