Yimer traveled from her native Ethiopia to Yemen in search of work, and took a job as a domestic servant in Lebanon. She was promised a fair wage and the right to make decisions about her life, but soon found herself trapped inside the house with no money or even her passport.
Human rights advocates say the migrants have little to no recourse, and that the situation is bound to deteriorate further as more people in the country cannot afford to pay domestic workers. The coronavirus restrictions also complicate matters.
For several weeks, dozens domestic workers in Lebanon, who are predominantly from Ethiopia, have been abandoned by their employers in front of the Ethiopian consulate, a result of a financial crisis and, according to activists, the controversial “kafala” employment system some liken to modern-day slavery.
Nine Nigerian women are currently sleeping on the streets of Beirut, Lebanon, after they were laid off as domestic workers during the height of the coronavirus pandemic.
BEIRUT: After preparing dozens of rice packages for out-of-work domestic staff, 30-year-old Tirsit breaks down in tears recounting life as a foreign housekeeper in crisis-hit Lebanon.
For years rights groups have been appealing for better conditions for domestic workers trapped in what is known as the Kafala system - the import of unskilled migrant workers into the Gulf and surrounding countries - which leaves them vulnerable to poor, often abusive conditions, minimal pay and limited means of returning home.