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男爵府

積分: 7070


1#
發表於 16-10-29 12:22 |只看該作者


男爵府

積分: 7070


2#
發表於 16-10-29 12:23 |只看該作者
http://m.scmp.com/news/hong-kong ... ia?campaign_id=A100


男爵府

積分: 7070


3#
發表於 16-10-29 12:26 |只看該作者
Hong Kong, a city commonly associated with finance and wealth, has one of the highest proportions of people enslaved across Asia, a new report has found.

At least 29,500 people out of a population of more than seven million are trapped in modern slavery in one of the 10 richest cities in the world based on its gross domestic product, according to the Global Slavery Index 2016, which assessed the problem in 167 countries and regions.

The sobering figures which specifically concern Hong Kong may come as a surprise, but the hard-hitting report stated that the city has become one of the worst places in Asia for its poor response to the problem, performing worse than mainland China.

The city urgently needs tougher laws and a “transparent plan of action” to combat the problem, human rights group Justice Centre Hong Kong said.

Hong Kong employer walks free after magistrate dismisses domestic helper assault charge

Jade Anderson, anti-human trafficking coordinator for the campaign group, said the Global Slavery Index, produced by charitable organisation Walk Free Foundation, came as a “shock” to some Hongkongers.

But her organisation’s research had found there were major human rights abuses that went unpunished in the city, and the number of slaves could be much higher than researchers have estimated, she said. The Justice Centre’s investigation involving 1,000 migrant domestic workers found 17 per cent were carrying out “forced labour”, which she said equated to about 55,000 of the city’s 320,000 helpers.

“We believe that Hong Kong needs a transparent plan of action to combat human trafficking, forced labour, or slavery-like practices, and protect victims,” she said. “And ultimately there needs to be legislative reform. Hong Kong must develop more comprehensive policies and laws to protect victims.”

Hong Kong’s proportion of people classified as slaves (0.404 per cent) is the ninth-highest in Asia and 32nd in the world, the same rank as 19 countries including South Korea, in the slavery index. Mainland China, meanwhile, was ranked lower on its proportion of slaves, due to its much larger population, taking the 14th spot in Asia. But it was among the top five countries in the world for estimated numbers of people in modern slavery (3.39 million).

Hong Kong must develop more comprehensive policies and laws to protect victims.
JADE ANDERSON
Hong Kong also has a higher proportion of slaves than Mongolia, the Philippines and Indonesia, despite ranking higher than all three Asian counterparts on the World Happiness Index 2016.

The report’s authors defined slavery as “situations of exploitation that a person cannot refuse or leave because of threats, violence, coercion, abuse of power or deception, with treatment akin to a farm animal”. They identified Hong Kong as one of 10 countries or regions whose governments are “taking the least action” to combat the problem.

They said the city’s domestic helpers, most of whom come from the Philippines and Indonesia, were the primary group being enslaved, as they faced high agency fees, 17-hour work days as well as physical and verbal abuse.

Holly Allan, director of Helpers for Domestic Helpers, a non-profit body that offers assistance to such workers in Hong Kong, said her organisation was currently working on a campaign to change the public’s perceptions of them.

“Migrant domestic workers are generally treated as a homogenous group defined by their job,” she said. “

“They are put in a box as they are labelled, commoditised and regarded as expendable. I want to campaign to take them “out of the box” by challenging perceptions and attitudes towards them so they are recognised as individuals with equal rights and worthy of respect and dignity.”

She hopes the integrated social campaign “Out of the Box” will spark conversation around these workers in a positive way.

The slavery report estimated that 45.8 million people are enslaved globally. North Korea was found to have the highest percentage of modern slaves, with more than 4.3 per cent – equating to 1.1 million people in a population of about 25 million.

Meanwhile, India had the highest number of slaves in the world at 18,354,700 people.

In Hong Kong, a law, Ordinance No 1, was enacted in 1844 to outlaw slavery, but it was subsequently voided by the British monarchy because the empire’s anti-slavery laws already applied to its colonies.

Despite this, in 1921, it was estimated that half of all Chinese families in Hong Kong had a mui tsai, domestic female servants who were sold into slavery at a young age and could be freed only through marriage, according to the book Concise History of Hong Kongby John Mark Carroll.

This year, the Walk Free Foundation identified Hong Kong’s slavery victims as originating from “the Philippines, Thailand, mainland China, Nepal, Colombia, Chad, Uganda and other Southeast Asian countries”.

Is it time for China to open its doors to Filipino domestic helpers?

Besides domestic helpers, other groups being exploited were said to include sex trafficking victims, young people engaging in compensated dating, and Southeast Asian fishermen, who are subjected to forced labour on fishing ships bound for Fiji and other ports in the Pacific.

The Justice Centre said those working in construction, the hospitality sector, and elderly care institutions were also subjected to slavery-like conditions.

Anderson said a much greater effort was needed from the government in terms of investigation and transparencyon how many slavery victims it encounters.

“At the moment, there is little information from the government about human trafficking, forced labour, or slavery-like practices in Hong Kong,” she said.

“We don’t know how many victims have been identified, how they were identified, or what services were offered to them. We don’t know how many people were prosecuted for human trafficking in the past years or how many times the prosecution code paragraph on human exploitation cases, introduced in 2013, has been applied. Nor do we know how many frontline officers have been trained or what that training contained.

“As a first step, we would like to see a consultative and public review of the policies and laws in Hong Kong.”

Hong Kong and Philippine officials stop short of ‘total ban’ on domestic workers cleaning exterior of windows

Meanwhile, Scott Stiles, founder of the Fair Employment Agency, a not-for-profit recruitment organisation for domestic helpers, said he thought enforcement of existing laws was more crucial than creating new ones in the fight against slavery.

He said Hong Kong was still better than many Asian countries in its legal protection for domestic helpers. “I think there is room for improvement but it is more of an enforcement issue,” he said. “If people are scared of the repercussions if they quit their job, and feel like they can’t, then that is a bad situation.”

The Hong Kong government has dismissed the Global Slavery Index’s findings, saying it paints an incomplete picture as it relies on information supplied by partnering NGOs, and lacks verification from the government.

Speaking to the Post this week on affording protection to foreign domestic helpers, a government spokesman said the Labour Department will continue to promote awareness on their rights and channels on which to seek redress.

He also stated that current “legislation already provides a solid and proven framework” to combat human trafficking.


男爵府

積分: 7070


4#
發表於 16-10-29 12:27 |只看該作者
Hong Kong, a city commonly associated with finance and wealth, has one of the highest proportions of people enslaved across Asia, a new report has found.

At least 29,500 people out of a population of more than seven million are trapped in modern slavery in one of the 10 richest cities in the world based on its gross domestic product, according to the Global Slavery Index 2016, which assessed the problem in 167 countries and regions.

The sobering figures which specifically concern Hong Kong may come as a surprise, but the hard-hitting report stated that the city has become one of the worst places in Asia for its poor response to the problem, performing worse than mainland China.

The city urgently needs tougher laws and a “transparent plan of action” to combat the problem, human rights group Justice Centre Hong Kong said.

Hong Kong employer walks free after magistrate dismisses domestic helper assault charge

Jade Anderson, anti-human trafficking coordinator for the campaign group, said the Global Slavery Index, produced by charitable organisation Walk Free Foundation, came as a “shock” to some Hongkongers.

But her organisation’s research had found there were major human rights abuses that went unpunished in the city, and the number of slaves could be much higher than researchers have estimated, she said. The Justice Centre’s investigation involving 1,000 migrant domestic workers found 17 per cent were carrying out “forced labour”, which she said equated to about 55,000 of the city’s 320,000 helpers.

“We believe that Hong Kong needs a transparent plan of action to combat human trafficking, forced labour, or slavery-like practices, and protect victims,” she said. “And ultimately there needs to be legislative reform. Hong Kong must develop more comprehensive policies and laws to protect victims.”

Hong Kong’s proportion of people classified as slaves (0.404 per cent) is the ninth-highest in Asia and 32nd in the world, the same rank as 19 countries including South Korea, in the slavery index. Mainland China, meanwhile, was ranked lower on its proportion of slaves, due to its much larger population, taking the 14th spot in Asia. But it was among the top five countries in the world for estimated numbers of people in modern slavery (3.39 million).

Hong Kong must develop more comprehensive policies and laws to protect victims.
JADE ANDERSON
Hong Kong also has a higher proportion of slaves than Mongolia, the Philippines and Indonesia, despite ranking higher than all three Asian counterparts on the World Happiness Index 2016.

The report’s authors defined slavery as “situations of exploitation that a person cannot refuse or leave because of threats, violence, coercion, abuse of power or deception, with treatment akin to a farm animal”. They identified Hong Kong as one of 10 countries or regions whose governments are “taking the least action” to combat the problem.

They said the city’s domestic helpers, most of whom come from the Philippines and Indonesia, were the primary group being enslaved, as they faced high agency fees, 17-hour work days as well as physical and verbal abuse.

Holly Allan, director of Helpers for Domestic Helpers, a non-profit body that offers assistance to such workers in Hong Kong, said her organisation was currently working on a campaign to change the public’s perceptions of them.

“Migrant domestic workers are generally treated as a homogenous group defined by their job,” she said. “

“They are put in a box as they are labelled, commoditised and regarded as expendable. I want to campaign to take them “out of the box” by challenging perceptions and attitudes towards them so they are recognised as individuals with equal rights and worthy of respect and dignity.”

She hopes the integrated social campaign “Out of the Box” will spark conversation around these workers in a positive way.

The slavery report estimated that 45.8 million people are enslaved globally. North Korea was found to have the highest percentage of modern slaves, with more than 4.3 per cent – equating to 1.1 million people in a population of about 25 million.

Meanwhile, India had the highest number of slaves in the world at 18,354,700 people.

In Hong Kong, a law, Ordinance No 1, was enacted in 1844 to outlaw slavery, but it was subsequently voided by the British monarchy because the empire’s anti-slavery laws already applied to its colonies.

Despite this, in 1921, it was estimated that half of all Chinese families in Hong Kong had a mui tsai, domestic female servants who were sold into slavery at a young age and could be freed only through marriage, according to the book Concise History of Hong Kongby John Mark Carroll.

This year, the Walk Free Foundation identified Hong Kong’s slavery victims as originating from “the Philippines, Thailand, mainland China, Nepal, Colombia, Chad, Uganda and other Southeast Asian countries”.

Is it time for China to open its doors to Filipino domestic helpers?

Besides domestic helpers, other groups being exploited were said to include sex trafficking victims, young people engaging in compensated dating, and Southeast Asian fishermen, who are subjected to forced labour on fishing ships bound for Fiji and other ports in the Pacific.

The Justice Centre said those working in construction, the hospitality sector, and elderly care institutions were also subjected to slavery-like conditions.

Anderson said a much greater effort was needed from the government in terms of investigation and transparencyon how many slavery victims it encounters.

“At the moment, there is little information from the government about human trafficking, forced labour, or slavery-like practices in Hong Kong,” she said.

“We don’t know how many victims have been identified, how they were identified, or what services were offered to them. We don’t know how many people were prosecuted for human trafficking in the past years or how many times the prosecution code paragraph on human exploitation cases, introduced in 2013, has been applied. Nor do we know how many frontline officers have been trained or what that training contained.

“As a first step, we would like to see a consultative and public review of the policies and laws in Hong Kong.”

Hong Kong and Philippine officials stop short of ‘total ban’ on domestic workers cleaning exterior of windows

Meanwhile, Scott Stiles, founder of the Fair Employment Agency, a not-for-profit recruitment organisation for domestic helpers, said he thought enforcement of existing laws was more crucial than creating new ones in the fight against slavery.

He said Hong Kong was still better than many Asian countries in its legal protection for domestic helpers. “I think there is room for improvement but it is more of an enforcement issue,” he said. “If people are scared of the repercussions if they quit their job, and feel like they can’t, then that is a bad situation.”

The Hong Kong government has dismissed the Global Slavery Index’s findings, saying it paints an incomplete picture as it relies on information supplied by partnering NGOs, and lacks verification from the government.

Speaking to the Post this week on affording protection to foreign domestic helpers, a government spokesman said the Labour Department will continue to promote awareness on their rights and channels on which to seek redress.

He also stated that current “legislation already provides a solid and proven framework” to combat human trafficking.

Major culprits behind slavery in Hong Kong

Employers – The Fair Employment Agency, a not-for-profit domestic helpers recruitment agency, says most Hong Kong employers are good to their helpers. But some may force them to work extremely long hours for no extra pay, or fail to ensure good living conditions for them, such as giving them a private room. More extreme cases have seen employers verbally or even physically abusing their helpers, sometimes resulting in court action.

Extended families – Sometimes, employers will make their helpers carry out extra tasks for family members who do not live in the same home. This is prohibited in the helper’s contract, and subsequently constitutes exploitation.

Employment agencies – Some of Hong Kong’s 1,300 domestic helper employment agencies will often illegally charge workers anything from HK$5,000 to $21,000 to sign up, compared with the standard rate of 10 per cent of their first salary, or about HK$431, according to campaign group Helpers for Domestic Helpers. The helpers are thus usually in debt even before their arrival.

Finance companies and loan sharks – Domestic helpers who end up in debt will sometimes take out loans from suspect individuals and companies. The credit agencies collude with many local employment agencies to offer loan schemes with interest rates of up to 60 per cent. Domestic helpers report being threatened with violence, even rape, if they do not pay back. About 90 per cent of domestic helpers struggle with debt, according to a survey conducted by NGO Enrich.

Friends – Some domestic helpers, who offer to be guarantors for their friends,land in the loan trap when these friends disappear.

How to be a good boss: Tips for domestic helper employers

DON’T

... ask your helper to bring your mobile phone to your workplace if you left it at home

... ask him or her to clean the apartment of your in-laws or extended family, even with pay or during the working week

... ask him or her to do the dishes after they return from a weekend break

... ask him or her to tidy up your office

... wake him or her up to do housework before normal working hours

... pay him or her less than the minimum wage (HK$4,310 per month with a minimum food allowance of HK$1,037)

DO

... provide a good standard of private living space for your helper

... ensure a full 24-hour rest period on a day off (traditionally Sundays)

... provide clear instructions for tasks, using a polite and friendly tone

... allow holidays according to mutually agreed terms in the employment contract

... treat him or her as your equal


禁止訪問

積分: 4672


5#
發表於 16-10-29 12:28 |只看該作者
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽


男爵府

積分: 7070


6#
發表於 16-10-29 12:29 |只看該作者
好痛心,SCMP寫到香港僱主今...


禁止訪問

積分: 4672


7#
發表於 16-10-29 12:29 |只看該作者
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽


王國長老

積分: 225493

畀面勳章 好媽媽勳章 醒目開學勳章 2011精緻種植勳章 環保接龍勳章 大廚勳章 王國長老 BK猜猜猜慶中秋 BK Milk勳章


8#
發表於 16-10-29 12:31 |只看該作者

回覆樓主:

本帖最後由 Charlotte_mom 於 16-10-29 12:31 編輯

The report’s authors defined slavery as “situations of exploitation that a person cannot refuse or leave because of threats, violence, coercion, abuse of power or deception, with treatment akin to a farm animal”.
咪住先!要收agency fee無得辭工又入香港人數?
菲傭待遇如禽畜?
長工時我會認。好多工人好早起身照積到家返工返學。又要等僱主ot食完飯清潔埋至收工,呢樣真嘅。

如果做得咁辛苦,點解佢地仲成日介紹同鄉親戚黎做?咁都叫slavery?

呢篇野太過分


男爵府

積分: 7070


9#
發表於 16-10-29 12:31 |只看該作者
用Slavery 這個詞,真係嚇親我


公爵府

積分: 28042


10#
發表於 16-10-29 12:38 |只看該作者
"ensure a full 24-hour rest period on a day off (traditionally Sundays)". -->一定夠廿四,星期日即使佢未出去,我者唔會叫佢做野。

set政策去保護受害者,不如政府set政策去資助多啲托兒中心,如果托兒服務足夠,就請少好多工人。


男爵府

積分: 7070


11#
發表於 16-10-29 12:39 |只看該作者
其實佢意思係咪,聘請家庭傭工等於贊成奴隸制度
還有他提到最少工資with food allowance (with 這個用詞都有問題,這是Optional 的)
我工人4110時代㔾付4500,每年go Manila By CX 再加內陸機返屋工一Xmas .今次還要15/11放到9/1/2017 再加一個月bonus as Xmas gift
佢湊小朋友工絕對辛苦,但佢可以隨時break contract
隨時分手
我好唔開心俾人今樣形容香港僱主


禁止訪問

積分: 4672


12#
發表於 16-10-29 12:41 |只看該作者
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽


珍珠宮

積分: 35688


13#
發表於 16-10-29 12:41 |只看該作者
Loreal 發表於 16-10-29 12:29
好痛心,SCMP寫到香港僱主今...
香港僱主早己左右不是人.. 駛乜心痛.仲有南早都仲睇, 大賊報, 佢都希望你淘國傭了.


伯爵府

積分: 19030


14#
發表於 16-10-29 12:42 |只看該作者

回覆樓主:

嗰陣返學,有鬼佬問邊個請工人,佢認為比幾千做哂家務係虐待


珍珠宮

積分: 35688


15#
發表於 16-10-29 12:42 |只看該作者
kkc886 發表於 16-10-29 12:41
政府應該取消無條件綜援 咁就可以釋放好多勞動力 去代替呢D外傭
無錯.. 在家印印腳拎萬幾二萬.. 你地傻先去打工者, 無哂家庭生活仲要捱貴租.


侯爵府

積分: 24038


16#
發表於 16-10-29 12:44 |只看該作者
吾該香港學下歐美比多D家庭支援,起多D托兒所暫託服務之類,吾駛迫住請工人


珍珠宮

積分: 35688


17#
發表於 16-10-29 12:45 |只看該作者
本帖最後由 tkkmama 於 16-10-29 12:45 編輯
kkc886 發表於 16-10-29 12:29
利申: 我從來無請過外傭 個人立場不代表外傭雇主立場

我都無請過, 當年睇到外傭點帶小朋友, 我寧願窮都要帶大三個女.


大宅

積分: 3836


18#
發表於 16-10-29 13:16 |只看該作者

回覆樓主:

多啲育嬰同託兒服務,而唔係話咩[全日制係非必要],已經可以少啲外傭。。。


侯爵府

積分: 23493

育兒性格勳章 畀面勳章


19#
發表於 16-10-29 15:12 |只看該作者
Agency fee 又入香港數,唔通佢地去新加坡,台灣,中東就唔使俾,去美加仲要俾幾萬添,俾僱主炒後冇人請唔入得藉添,亦有美加僱主俾唔足人工或超長工時,為咗以後入藉乜都肯際,咁更無得反抗做slave , 香港東家唔打打西家,轉工中介仲會俾返$1000個工人,咁樣嘅slave真係第一次聽


男爵府

積分: 7070


20#
發表於 16-10-29 16:53 |只看該作者
好無奈....最可憐係...連寫稿嗰個人都認為香港人係今

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