Hundreds of Sierra Leonean domestic workers in Oman victims of human trafficking: report

Hundreds of Sierra Leonean domestic workers in Oman victims of human trafficking: report
A report by an organisation that works to support migrant workers in the Gulf states found that all but one of the 469 women from Sierra Leone they interviewed in Oman had been victims of human trafficking.
3 min read
07 September, 2022
The report found that 468 out of 469 domestic workers interviewed were victims of human trafficking [Getty]

Hundreds of victims of human trafficking end up trapped working in abusive households and subjected to physical and sexual violence in Oman, a new study has found. 

Do Bold, an organisation that works to support migrant workers in the Gulf states, interviewed 469 domestic workers from Sierra Leone working in Oman, and found that all but one were victims of human trafficking. 

The report highlights the harsh realities of these migrant workers living and working in Oman. 

Most experienced deceptive recruitment tactics and worked between 16 and 20 hours a day with no days off, while more than half had experienced physical abuse.

A little over a quarter experienced sexual abuse, according to the report. 

There are more than 158,000 documented migrant women who are employed by Oman’s domestic work sector, most of whom are from the Philippines, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Ethiopia.

The country’s domestic work sector is not well regulated, according to the report, and creates an imbalance of power entirely in favour of the employers - as is often the case under the kafala system used in many Gulf and Middle Eastern countries. 

Access to the justice system for those who have been abused or otherwise subject to wrongdoing is usually beyond reach.

Do Bold’s report highlights the stories of multiple migrant workers, such as one woman called Mariama. She was convinced by a recruiter in Sierra Leone that she could earn a lot of money in Oman. She paid the agency $500 and obtained a passport that falsified her age. 

She said that once she was in Oman, she worked 19 hours a day seven days a week, and was denied access to medical care when ill. When she complained to an agent that her life in Oman was not what was promised by the recruiter, she was beaten and locked in a room without food or water for a week. 

Oman has established an International Labour Organisation Decent Work Country Programme for officials to receive assistance in protecting migrant workers.

It is unclear if domestic workers are prioritised in the programme, according to Do Bold, as there was no mention of them in the latest edition DWCP report.

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The Do Bold report calls for "a system change from one where domestic workers do not have equal status as other workers in other sectors, and whose rights and human dignity are not protected or respected, to a system that allows domestic workers to earn a decent living with dignity and access to opportunities to thrive".

The New Arab has reached out to the Omani embassy in London for comment.