A Hong
Kong couple were jailed on Wednesday for torturing, beating and abusing
their Indonesian maid, who said they once dressed her in a diaper and
tied her to a chair for five days while they went on holiday.
Tai
Chi-wai, 42, an electric appliance salesman, was jailed for three years
and three months and his wife, Catherine Au Yuk-shan, 41, a public
hospital assistant, got five-and-a-half years after being found guilty
of a total of eight charges, including assault and wounding with intent.
The
couple repeatedly assaulted and tortured Kartika Puspitasari, 30, over a
two-year period until she escaped last October, beating her with a
bicycle chain and scalding her on the face and arms with a hot iron, the
District Court had heard.
Kartika
also said that she was left in a diaper and tied to a chair without
food or water for five days while her employers went on holiday with
their children to Thailand, although the judge said he believed some of
this testimony had been exaggerated.
The
case had done harm to Hong Kong’s reputation as a safe place to work
and the court’s decision was to “send a clear message that every worker
is protected by the laws”, said Deputy District Judge So Wai-tak.
The
Mission for Migrant Workers said last month that a survey of more than
3,000 women conducted in Hong Kong last year found that 58 per cent had
faced verbal abuse, 18 per cent physical abuse and six per cent s*xual
abuse.
“We
call on to the Hong Kong authorities and policymakers to make the
needed and urgent reforms that will mitigate the possibility of another
Kartika in our midst,” the Coalition of Service Providers for Ethnic
Minorities in Hong Kong said in a statement.
Hong
Kong has roughly 300,000 domestic helpers, largely from the Philippines
and Indonesia, but also from Nepal, India and Pakistan. They are
excluded from a minimum wage and other basic rights and services.
A
union representing domestic helpers held a protest in March, calling
for an end to a law that requires maids to live with their employers,
saying the rule exposes them to abuse.
Also
in March, Hong Kong’s highest court ruled against granting residency to
two Filipino maids, dashing the hopes of several hundred thousand other
domestic helpers from ever gaining residency in the city.
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