Berliner Boersenzeitung - Virus wave deepens grim conditions for Hong Kong domestic workers

EUR -
AED 4.316515
AFN 74.63132
ALL 95.340551
AMD 434.884189
ANG 2.103761
AOA 1078.981832
ARS 1629.065029
AUD 1.623627
AWG 2.115651
AZN 2.001714
BAM 1.9505
BBD 2.367956
BDT 144.526701
BGN 1.960623
BHD 0.444291
BIF 3502.468771
BMD 1.175362
BND 1.488449
BOB 8.123893
BRL 5.809337
BSD 1.175701
BTN 111.239286
BWP 15.732188
BYN 3.320165
BYR 23037.085439
BZD 2.364565
CAD 1.601013
CDF 2720.962103
CHF 0.915794
CLF 0.026759
CLP 1053.017944
CNY 8.02813
CNH 8.006568
COP 4351.540889
CRC 536.440191
CUC 1.175362
CUP 31.14708
CVE 109.966218
CZK 24.332745
DJF 209.36027
DKK 7.473066
DOP 70.038084
DZD 155.368674
EGP 61.882552
ERN 17.630423
ETB 183.576136
FJD 2.565823
FKP 0.865797
GBP 0.864214
GEL 3.162383
GGP 0.865797
GHS 13.227005
GIP 0.865797
GMD 85.801212
GNF 10318.919241
GTQ 8.974578
GYD 245.930751
HKD 9.209422
HNL 31.256076
HRK 7.533123
HTG 153.84647
HUF 358.824958
IDR 20362.315269
ILS 3.412786
IMP 0.865797
INR 110.906874
IQD 1539.960385
IRR 1546775.736488
ISK 143.606075
JEP 0.865797
JMD 185.24825
JOD 0.833307
JPY 183.761302
KES 151.860782
KGS 102.750687
KHR 4712.176806
KMF 494.238283
KPW 1057.82946
KRW 1700.965573
KWD 0.36187
KYD 0.979734
KZT 544.428453
LAK 25826.718043
LBP 105283.991858
LKR 376.375773
LRD 215.742901
LSL 19.164747
LTL 3.470537
LVL 0.710964
LYD 7.441844
MAD 10.79497
MDL 20.210003
MGA 4898.669306
MKD 61.591323
MMK 2467.729355
MNT 4207.382242
MOP 9.488878
MRU 46.924305
MUR 54.983004
MVR 18.16523
MWK 2038.652239
MXN 20.260893
MYR 4.613297
MZN 75.106713
NAD 19.164828
NGN 1600.924649
NIO 43.262271
NOK 10.896918
NPR 177.982658
NZD 1.971998
OMR 0.451934
PAB 1.175701
PEN 4.101439
PGK 5.11211
PHP 71.390314
PKR 327.579561
PLN 4.233068
PYG 7195.449713
QAR 4.286055
RON 5.268438
RSD 117.386859
RUB 88.153238
RWF 1719.221502
SAR 4.409748
SBD 9.440807
SCR 16.142244
SDG 705.802097
SEK 10.8373
SGD 1.49074
SHP 0.877526
SLE 28.943299
SLL 24646.738509
SOS 671.871643
SRD 43.971436
STD 24327.610045
STN 24.433509
SVC 10.287006
SYP 130.704545
SZL 19.158863
THB 37.901293
TJS 10.986901
TMT 4.119642
TND 3.416019
TOP 2.829989
TRY 53.151377
TTD 7.967319
TWD 36.880562
TZS 3046.752042
UAH 51.548119
UGX 4420.969266
USD 1.175362
UYU 47.241643
UZS 14196.367585
VES 580.033802
VND 30941.391539
VUV 138.986999
WST 3.200022
XAF 654.176796
XAG 0.015178
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.176473
XCG 2.118934
XDR 0.818555
XOF 654.179571
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.431257
ZAR 19.253655
ZMK 10579.665595
ZMW 22.25045
ZWL 378.465924
  • JRI

    0.1350

    13.175

    +1.02%

  • CMSC

    0.0950

    22.975

    +0.41%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    23.37

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    4.4500

    104.95

    +4.24%

  • GSK

    0.4450

    50.825

    +0.88%

  • RYCEF

    1.0500

    17.5

    +6%

  • RBGPF

    0.0800

    63.18

    +0.13%

  • NGG

    0.7500

    88.39

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    24.21

    +0.45%

  • BCC

    2.2500

    74.38

    +3.03%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    59.86

    +0.77%

  • VOD

    0.3250

    16.065

    +2.02%

  • AZN

    3.1900

    184.43

    +1.73%

  • RELX

    -0.4400

    35.72

    -1.23%

  • BP

    -1.3700

    45.13

    -3.04%

Virus wave deepens grim conditions for Hong Kong domestic workers
Virus wave deepens grim conditions for Hong Kong domestic workers

Virus wave deepens grim conditions for Hong Kong domestic workers

Janice Obiang stifled sobs as she packed goods to send to the Philippines, gifts for loved ones she hasn't seen in years as life for domestic workers in virus-hit Hong Kong goes from bad to worse.

Text size:

Few have suffered more during Hong Kong's pandemic restrictions than the hundreds of thousands of women from the Philippines and Indonesia who work as domestic helpers.

And as the city reels under its most severe coronavirus wave to date, many are now at breaking point.

"I really want to move, I really want to have vacation," Obiang said, as a police officer with a megaphone gave regular reminders for people not to gather in groups.

"But I don't have a choice, we need to stay," the 36-year-old told AFP, adding it had been four years since she went home. "We really miss our family."

There are about 340,000 foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong, down from 400,000 when the pandemic began.

Paid a minimum of HK$4,630 ($590) a month, they work six days a week and must live with their employers, in a city that offers some of the world's smallest apartments.

While the work is tough, it pays more than the women can earn in the Philippines, allowing them to support families as key breadwinners.

But the pandemic has made a hard job even harder.

For two years Hong Kong kept the coronavirus at bay with a strict zero-Covid policy and long quarantines, meaning most foreigners have not seen family for long periods.

The highly transmissible Omicron variant broke through at the start of the year but authorities have been ordered by China to return to zero-Covid despite the exponential caseload.

As a result, the government has taken to advising Hong Kongers to keep domestic workers inside during their one day off.

Police have also stepped up fines –- the equivalent of one to two months' salary for a domestic worker –- for breaching the current ban on any more than two people gathering in public.

- Sacked for falling sick -

Avril Rodrigues said her phone has not stopped ringing with stories of intensifying suffering and dismay.

"Imagine thinking 'I am not allowed to fall sick' out of fear of losing your job," Rodrigues, who works at the charity Help for Domestic Workers, told AFP.

But that is exactly what is happening to some.

She recalled one woman calling from outside one of Hong Kong's hospitals as they buckle under thousands of new infections each day.

"(Her employer) made her do a rapid test because she had a slight cold and when she went to the hospital, the employer told the agency to inform her 'Don't come back,'" Rodrigues said.

Multiple stories like this have emerged in local media or through press conferences arranged by increasingly infuriated charities and unions in the last fortnight.

Some had to sleep rough during an unusually cold winter snap, including one domestic helper with a young baby.

Last week Hong Kong's government issued a statement reminding employers they could not sack a domestic helper purely because they were sick, and could face fines.

- 'We need to feel like we are free' -

Lita, 34, who asked to use a pseudonym, said staying at her employer's home during her day off just meant working seven days a week given the coffin-like size of her room, which is not uncommon in Hong Kong apartments.

"You go in like a dead person, only to sleep," she said.

Jec Sernande, from the Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions, said many domestic helpers do not even have their own rooms.

"Sitting for the whole day in the kitchen or in the living room -- that is not a rest," she said.

Unionists like Sernande have long campaigned for better working conditions and are angered by the lack of compassion shown by authorities and some employers during the pandemic.

"They need to get more recognition, because they contribute a lot to the society and the economy," she added.

Charity services have been overwhelmed by requests for help partly because few plans were in place to deal with soaring cases when the disease eventually broke through.

Last week Philippine consul-general Raly Tejada said staff had helped dozens of nationals and that they were exploring possible legal options against those who fired helpers.

Domestic helper Bebeth, 54, described living in Hong Kong right now as "difficult and traumatic".

But she was adamant about one thing –- she will take her one day off outside.

"We need to go out, we need to feel like we are free outside, we want to inhale and exhale fresh air," she said.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)