Lebanon: Post Putting Up Domestic Worker 'for Sale' Causes Outrage

A domestic worker wearing a protective mask walks her employers’ dogs before the night-time curfew in Beirut, Lebanon. Hussein Malla/AP
A domestic worker wearing a protective mask walks her employers’ dogs before the night-time curfew in Beirut, Lebanon. Hussein Malla/AP
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Lebanon: Post Putting Up Domestic Worker 'for Sale' Causes Outrage

A domestic worker wearing a protective mask walks her employers’ dogs before the night-time curfew in Beirut, Lebanon. Hussein Malla/AP
A domestic worker wearing a protective mask walks her employers’ dogs before the night-time curfew in Beirut, Lebanon. Hussein Malla/AP

Human rights activists denounced on Saturday an advertisement posted online putting a Nigerian migrant domestic worker up for sale in Lebanon.

The post, advertised on a Facebook page named Buy and Sell in Lebanon, read, “Domestic worker of African citizenship (Nigerian) for sale with a new residency and full legal papers. She’s 30-year-old, active, and very clean.” It also listed the woman’s price as $1,000.

The Facebook post prompted the labor Ministry to issue a circular prohibiting such actions, which lies under the scope of human trafficking.

On Saturday, the General Security agency arrested the man who posted the advertisement, saying the publisher is subject to prosecution before the courts.

“The Justice Ministry already filed a complaint against the man who advertised the selling of the Nigerian domestic worker,” Labor Minister Lamia Yammine told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Mohanna Ishak, a lawyer with the Kafa NGO that assists domestic workers, said this form of advertisement shows that some people deal with those workers as private property, particularly due to the Kafala system, which ties the legal residency of the worker to the contractual relationship with the employer, not respecting the workers’ human rights.

“Therefore, some employers believe they have the right to sell their domestic workers for any reason,” Ishak told Asharq Al-Awsat.

However, the Facebook post reveals that a large number of Lebanese are incapable anymore of paying their domestic workers due to the economic crisis in the country, the sharp depreciation of the Lebanese pound on the unofficial market, and the high unemployment rate.

Before the government closed the airport as part of the measures taken to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, a large number of domestic workers were leaving the country after employers insisted on paying their salaries in the local currency.

“This is a newly reported case. It alarms of many problems. We receive on daily basis a large number of requests from residents unable to pay the salaries of their domestic workers,” the Labor Minister said.

Yammine uncovered that she is coordinating with both the Foreign and Public Works ministers to facilitate the departure of workers wishing to return home.

Two weeks ago, Amnesty International called on the Lebanese government to announce a set of immediate measures to protect migrant domestic workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ishak said that the current situation leads to several problems in the absence of radical solutions, particularly as domestic workers are trapped without salaries, protection, or guarantees.



Pedersen Says ‘Extremely Critical’ to Avoid Syria Being Dragged into War in Region

UN special envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen meets with Syrian Foreign Minister Bassam Sabbagh in Damascus on Sunday. (Syrian Foreign Ministry)
UN special envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen meets with Syrian Foreign Minister Bassam Sabbagh in Damascus on Sunday. (Syrian Foreign Ministry)
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Pedersen Says ‘Extremely Critical’ to Avoid Syria Being Dragged into War in Region

UN special envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen meets with Syrian Foreign Minister Bassam Sabbagh in Damascus on Sunday. (Syrian Foreign Ministry)
UN special envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen meets with Syrian Foreign Minister Bassam Sabbagh in Damascus on Sunday. (Syrian Foreign Ministry)

The UN special envoy for Syria said on Sunday that it was “extremely critical” to end the fighting in Lebanon and Gaza to avoid the country being pulled into a regional war.

“We need now to make sure that we have immediately a ceasefire in Gaza, that we have a ceasefire in Lebanon, and that we avoid Syria being dragged even further into the conflict,” said Geir Pedersen ahead of a meeting with Syrian Foreign Minister Bassam Sabbagh in Damascus.

The Syrian Foreign Ministry has not released any details about the Pedersen-Sabbagh meeting. It only issued a brief statement in which it announced the meeting.

Local sources said Pedersen's second visit to Damascus this year is aimed at exploring the possibility of resuming the Constitutional Committee meetings aimed at resolving the Syrian crisis.

The meetings have been stalled since the eighth round on February 22, 2022, due to a dispute over the venue of the reconvening of the Constitutional Committee. Russia, which is not satisfied with Switzerland's joining Western sanctions against Moscow because of the Ukraine war, refuses to hold it in Geneva.

“Pedersen is holding talks with Syrian officials in Damascus, where he arrived last Wednesday, about the possibility of resuming the Constitutional Committee meetings,” reported Syria’s Al-Watan newspaper.

Earlier this month, Russian presidential envoy for Syria Alexander Lavrentyev told TASS: “As you know, only one venue - Geneva - is still unacceptable for the Russian side. As for all others, we are ready to work there.”

He added: “Probably, there is an open option with Baghdad, which, regrettably, was rejected by the Syrian opposition. It refused from this venue because Baghdad is supporting Damascus. They don’t think that Iraq is a neutral venue.”

The Russian diplomat stressed that the committee’s work should be resumed as soon as possible, but, in his words, it takes a lot of effort to find a venue that would be acceptable for both Damascus and the Syrian opposition.

Israel has been conducting airstrikes in Syria against government forces, Iranian troops and Hezbollah targets since the eruption of the crisis there in 2011. Strikes have increased following the Israeli war on Hezbollah in neighboring Lebanon.

On Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the death toll of the Israeli airstrikes on Palmyra city on November 20 continues to increase with many people suffering from severe injuries.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights documented the death of three Syrians and two non-Syrian members of Iranian-backed militias, bringing the number of fatalities to 105.