The National - News

Suspicious death in Lebanon sparks debate over abuse of domestic staff

▶ Ethiopian woman’s case comes amid allegation­s of assault and non-payment of migrants

- RICHARD HALL

The mysterious death of an Ethiopian woman in Lebanon has reopened a debate on the treatment of domestic workers in the country.

The woman, known only as Lembibo, 26, was found dead last month in a swimming pool at the home of her recruitmen­t agent. The authoritie­s have not made any arrests but activists suspect foul play and want DNA tests to identify a suspect.

The case sparked anger in Lebanon, where as many as two migrant domestic workers die each week, mainly by committing suicide or in accidents when trying to run away from employers, often by jumping from balconies.

“Lembibo is not the first migrant domestic worker to die in mysterious circumstan­ces and for nothing to happen,” said Rahaf Dandash, co-ordinator at Beirut’s Migrant Community Centre.

“Racism is so entrenched in the Lebanese community. We just don’t want to talk about it.”

An estimated 200,000 migrant domestic workers live in Lebanon officially, most of them from Ethiopia, Sri Lanka, the Philippine­s and Nepal. They arrive hoping to earn money to send back to their families, but many discover a system in which they have few rights.

Reports of non-payment, restrictio­ns on movement and physical and sexual abuse are common. Dozens run away from their employers every week.

Little is known about Lembibo, not even her last name. An investigat­ion by the local Al Jadeed television station said she came to Lebanon from Ethiopia on December 25 last year.

Months after arriving in the southern Lebanese town of Dweir to work in the home of an elderly couple, they discovered she was pregnant. The employers called the agent and asked him to send her home.

But before he could, Lembibo was taken to hospital. Her baby was delivered but died just two hours later due to birth defects, the report said.

Lembibo returned to her employers but was soon collected by the agent and taken to his home. She was found dead the next day.

The Ethiopian embassy said it was told that Lembibo had drowned in a private swimming pool, but little else.

Campaigner­s do not believe they have the full story.

The case has been taken up by the Lebanese trade union syndicate, Fenasol. The organisati­on’s president, Castro Abdallah, said witnesses had heard a row between the agent and Lembibo.

“We have been informed that neighbours reported they heard, several times, shouting from the agent towards the worker,” he told The National.

Questions were also raised about a video broadcast by Al Jadeed that purported to show Lembibo being collected from her employer’s house by the agent. The video shows Lembibo on her knees, crying and calling out for her baby.

Activists suggested Lembibo may have been raped and become pregnant after her arrival, and have called for a DNA test to determine paternity.

Lebanon’s Anti-Racism Movement said in a statement: “There is a strong chance she got pregnant here. A DNA test is important to identify the father of Lembibo’s baby.”

Mr Abdallah, the trade union leader, also called for such a DNA test.

The footage of Lembibo calling for her child was shown to a tearful church group of about 200 mourners at a memorial to mark her death in the Beirut suburb of Hazmieh on Sunday.

“There are so many questions without answers. Or maybe the answers are right there if someone cares to look,” said Banchyi, an Ethiopian community leader, addressing a crowded room at the Resurrecti­on Church.

“We do not want Lembibo to be just another statistic, her death unmarked. Another Ethiopian ‘suicide.’ A generation of young women is being lost.”

This case has added to a sense among migrant domestic workers that crimes committed against them go unpunished.

“It is not fair that she died like this,” said Lea, also an Ethiopian, outside the church. “We have no one to speak for us, no one to protect us.”

“Ethiopians are very used to the problem, to suicide and death, and they cannot say anything,” said Bizuayhou Sisay, another Ethiopian migrant worker.

“Death has become normal, just as it is for Syrians and it doesn’t lead to anything.”

Ms Dandash, from the Migrant Community Centre, said endemic racism was to blame for a lack of action on the high number of deaths.

Between January 2016 and April last year, the bodies of 138 migrant domestic workers were repatriate­d, according to numbers provided to the IRIN humanitari­an news agency by General Security – Lebanon’s intelligen­ce service. The causes of death were not provided.

Although the official number of migrant domestic workers is about 200,000 no one knows how many are here illegally.

“When you have at least 50 migrant domestic workers dying every year, shouldn’t we ask why this is happening?” Ms Dandash said. “But we don’t.”

Footage of Lembibo calling for her child was shown to a tearful church group of about 200 mourners in Beirut

 ?? AFP ?? Domestic staff from different countries demonstrat­e in a northern suburb of Beirut against exploitati­on by their employers. Many are demanding legal protection
AFP Domestic staff from different countries demonstrat­e in a northern suburb of Beirut against exploitati­on by their employers. Many are demanding legal protection
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 ?? Richard Hall for The National ?? Left, a memorial service for Lembibo, an Ethiopian domestic worker found dead in Lebanon. Above, an image of the dead woman
Richard Hall for The National Left, a memorial service for Lembibo, an Ethiopian domestic worker found dead in Lebanon. Above, an image of the dead woman

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