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Lebanon: UN expert urges Lebanon to investigate suicide of migrant domestic worker

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by IDWFED published Apr 03, 2012 12:00 AM
Contributors: UN News Centre
An update on the recent suicide case of Alma Dechasa, published on March 28: A United Nations independent expert urged Lebanon on 3 April 2012 to investigate the death of an Ethiopian migrant domestic worker who committed suicide days after being abused in the capital city of Beirut.

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An update on the recent suicide case of Alma Dechasa, published on March 28: A United Nations independent expert urged Lebanon on 3 April 2012 to investigate the death of an Ethiopian migrant domestic worker who committed suicide days after being abused in the capital city of Beirut.

The abuse committed against Alem Dechasa, 33, was caught on video and posted on social media websites, showing the victim shouting and struggling to resist a man dragging and forcing her into a car in front of bystanders. Ms. Dechasa committed suicide on 14 March.

“Like many people around the world I watched the video of the physical abuse of Alem Dechasa on a Beirut street,” said the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery including its causes and consequences, Gulnara Shahinian. “I strongly urge the Lebanese authorities to carry out a full investigation into the circumstances leading to her death. I also express my deepest condolences to Ms. Dechasa’s family and friends.”

Independent experts, or special rapporteurs, are appointed by the Geneva-based Human Rights Council to examine and report back on a country situation or a specific human rights theme. The positions are honorary and the experts are not United Nations staff, nor are they paid for their work.

Ms. Shahinian, who visited Lebanon last year, said Ms. Dechasa’s case is an example of the situation that many migrant women workers face in Lebanon.

“Women who had been victims of domestic servitude told me they had been under the absolute control of their employers through economic exploitation and suffered physical, psychological and sexual abuse,” she said.

At the end of her visit to Lebanon in October, Ms. Shahinian urged the Government to enact legislation to protect some 200,000 domestic workers in the country, stressing that without legal protection some of them would end up living in domestic servitude.

“Migrant domestic workers in Lebanon, the majority of whom are women, are legally invisible. That makes them acutely vulnerable,” the Special Rapporteur said, adding that States have an obligation to ensure the truth about violations is pursued to end impunity, protect human rights and provide redress to victims and their families.

Other UN independent human rights experts joined Ms. Shahinian’s call for a full investigation and the public disclosure of its results, including the Special Rapporteur on migrants, François Crépeau; the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, Rashida Manjoo; and the Special Rapporteur on torture, cruel inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, Juan E. Méndez.

Source: UN News Centre

Story Type: News

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