Hiring illegal maid lands UAE Indian expatriate sponsor in a fix
March 24th, 2011 - 1:54 pm ICT by ANIDubai, Mar. 24 (ANI): Hiring maids illegally in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) can land the person or family hiring with a fine of 50,000 Dirhams.
According to a Gulf News report, the UAE has absolutely no laws to protect the sponsor in such a situation.
This is what one Indian expatriate family found when a maid they had hired recently through a recruitment agency in Abu Dhabi, vanished from their home.
Anjum Khan, a sales executive with a private company in Dubai, said she had spent over 15,000 Dirhams, including 7,000 Dirhams as agency fees, to sponsor Baiq Muksin, a maid from Indonesia.
“She came to us on January 18 this year, but went missing on March 3, the same day her visa got stamped. If the maid ran away because she was being mistreated, she would have gone to her embassy/consulate or to the agent as the agency had advised her to do so. However, she is now free to find illegal employment while we’re left to foot a bill of Dh15, 000,” said Khan.
“There’s a Dh 50,000 fine for hiring illegal maids, yet there’s no process or information available to sponsors on what to do in a situation like ours,” she added.
Khan said the maid, who was hired to take care of her four-month-old daughter, disappeared when the family had gone out for some chores.
“When we informed police, we were asked to go to the Dubai General Department for Residency and Foreigners Affairs.
Accordingly, we registered a case with them and submitted her passport,” said Khan, adding that the maid had also left behind her original contract with the agency.
“We were concerned for her. But when we contacted the agency, we were told that they cannot do anything other than check if she had gone to the Indonesian Consulate,” said Khan.
Elham Hamgi from the agency said: “We can do something only if the maid gets in touch with us or the consulate. Our agreement clearly says there is no guarantee or replacement in the case of a runaway maid.”
Khan said since she and her husband are both working, she has no choice now but to enroll her four-month-old baby in a nursery. (ANI)
- Woman drug trafficker jailed in UAE - Jan 29, 2012
- Two jailed in UAE for sex out of wedlock - Mar 12, 2012
- Young Bengaluru bride dumped for dowry, returns home - Mar 17, 2011
- 17 Indian youth on death row in UAE to walk free - Jul 27, 2011
- Indian passport, visa service charges in UAE to be cut - Mar 17, 2011
- UAE to set up training centres in India - Feb 22, 2012
- Bangladeshi man in UAE lashed 100 times for sex with Filipina maid - Nov 25, 2010
- Abducted toddler rescued; maid arrested (Roundup) - Apr 27, 2011
- Hope for Indian men on death row in Sharjah - Jul 20, 2011
- Police yet to trace abducted Delhi toddler (Lead) - Apr 26, 2011
- 'Indian youths on Sharjah death row could return May' - Feb 22, 2012
- Dubai's global trade reaches $78 bn - Aug 21, 2011
- Maid arrested for kidnapping employer's son - May 02, 2011
- Dubai's non-oil trade surges to $156 bn in 2010 - Mar 07, 2011
- Police clueless about abducted Delhi toddler - Apr 26, 2011
Tags: abu dhabi, chores, elham, embassy consulate, foreigners, gulf news, illegal employment, indonesia, indonesian consulate, left behind, maids, news report, passport, private company, recruitment agency, sales executive, united arab emirates, visa