Temps de lecture : 11 minutes
References
↑1 | Islamic law uses the term to deal with the issue of guardianship without filiation of abandoned minors. |
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↑2 | ILO, Trompés et piégés, la traite des personnes au Moyen-Orient, 2013, 186 pages, https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/—arabstates/—ro-beirut/documents/publication/wcms_245789.pdf |
↑3 | Oriane Huchon, « Les migrations – Les travailleurs immigrés dans le Golfe », 17/03/2017, Les Clés du Moyen-Orient, https://www.lesclesdumoyenorient.com/Les-migrations-Les-travailleurs-immigres-dans-le-Golfe.html |
↑4 | 73.4% of migrant domestic workers are women according to ILO estimates: OIT, Estimations mondiales de l’OIT concernant les travailleuses et les travailleurs, migrants, 2013, p.5, https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/wcms_436334.pdf |
↑5 | Destremau Blandine, Lautier Bruno, « Introduction : Femmes en domesticité. Les domestiques du Sud, au Nord et au Sud », In: Tiers-Monde, tome 43, n°170, 2002. p.250, https://www.persee.fr/doc/tiers_1293-8882_2002_num_43_170_1593#tiers_1293-8882_2002_num_43_170_T1_0251_0000 |
↑6 | The Facebook page « This is Lebanon » en est un exemple : https://www.facebook.com/ThisIsLebanon961/ |
↑7 | OIT, Trompés et piégés, la traite des personnes au Moyen-Orient, op. cit., p.53 |
↑8 | While the argument of a better knowledge of English in the Philippines is often used, the criterion of skin colour remains the main factor. |
↑9 | Especially for Iraq, which is not a very popular destination |
↑10 | “The domestic worker is a young member of the family who must be protected by the head of the family just like his or her own children. In such cases, the line between paternalistic protection and coercion is not very clear.” : ILO, op. cit. p.60 |
↑11 | ILO, op. cit. p.55 |
↑12 | Ibid., p.58 |
↑13 | Ibid., p.66 |
↑14 | « Indonesia protests Saudi execution of domestic worker », 31/10/2018, Al Jazeera, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/10/indonesia-protests-saudi-execution-domestic-worker-181031094812124.html |
↑15 | Even if the contract is terminated, she remains dependent on the employer until she completes the administrative procedures for her return, requiring the payment of expenses (at the employer’s expense) and, in most countries, the signing of the attestation authorising her to leave the territory. |
↑16 | For example, an employer in Lebanon has a duty not to allow their employee to have a romantic relationship or to get married : Laure Stephan, « Au Liban, les domestiques étrangères ont interdiction d’aimer », 10/06/2015, Le Monde, https://www.lemonde.fr/m-actu/article/2015/06/10/au-liban-les-domestiques-etrangeres-ont-interdiction-d-aimer_4646477_4497186.html |
↑17 | In 2011, a law will add a condition of a minimum of one year of service to the first employer. |
↑18 | « Liban. Le nouveau contrat type unique doit sonner le glas du système de kafala », 22/06/2020, Amnesty International, https://www.amnesty.org/fr/latest/news/2020/06/lebanon-revised-contract-must-lead-to-end-of-kafala-system/ |
↑19 | “In Qatar, major labor law reforms end kafala system,” 10/16/2019, ILO, https://www.ilo.org/global/about-the-ilo/newsroom/news/WCMS_724343/lang–fr/index.htm |
↑20 | Note that it is in the absence of affordable public aid to take care of children and the elderly, that Arab families (also with low financial means) turn to the cheap alternative of Kafala. |
↑21 | The ILO report states that in Jordan, even though NGOs file complaints with the court, “no cases of trafficking, ill-treatment or sexual abuse have been reported, as recruiters are wealthy and are infiltrated everywhere. They can bribe witnesses […] Similar discrepancies can be seen in other countries in the region’: ILO, op. cit. p.52 |
↑22 | Valentine Moghadam, « Féminisme, réforme législative et autonomisation des femmes au Moyen-Orient et en Afrique du Nord : l’articulation entre recherche, militantisme et politique », Revue internationale des sciences sociales, vol. 191, n°1, 2007, pp.13-20, https://doi.org/10.3917/riss.191.0013 |
↑23 | Julie Kebbi, Stéphanie Khouri, « Racisme systémique et “esclavage moderne” : être noir dans le monde arabe », 20/06/2020, L’Orient-Le Jour, https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1222685/racisme-systemique-et-esclavage-moderne-etre-noir-dans-le-monde-arabe.html |
↑24 | This baggage is made up of misogynistic and racist ideas and regulations, some of which are still in force, brought by the colonists. On the other hand, it takes the form of reactionary behaviors: such as the increased control of women’s bodies (to avoid humiliation), or the hostility to progressivism (such as feminism) considered as the perpetuation by the ideas of a western colonialism |
↑25 | Richard Hall, « Liban. Les plages de l’apartheid », 28/06/2012, Courrier International, https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/201e2/06/28/les-plages-de-l-apartheid |
↑26 | Depending on nationality, some will be repatriated, some will be housed and some will be left to fend for themselves. |
↑27 | Detailed analysis in : Léa Polverini, « Les travailleuses domestiques au Liban ou la honte des invisibles de l’explosion », 25/08/2020, Slate, http://www.slate.fr/story/193851/liban-travailleuses-domestiques-esclaves-modernes-precaires-covid-explosion-beyrouth |
↑28 | Gaps in the literature on the origins of forced prostitution and sexual exploitation need to be filled, especially in relation to forced and temporary marriages (early or otherwise) – especially as women cannot divorce easily in the Middle East. Also, the issues of underage workers and children of migrants are little explored. |