A Hong Kong mother of two who punched her maids, beat them with mops and threatened to kill their relatives was yesterday jailed for six years in a case that triggered outrage and exposed the plight of millions of domestic helpers across Asia.
Former beautician Law Wan-tung (羅允彤), 44, looked stunned as the sentence was passed after being found guilty of 18 of 20 abuse charges. She was also ordered to pay a fine of HK$15,000 (US$1,935).
The charges included inflicting grievous bodily harm and criminal intimidation against Erwiana Sulistyaningsih and an another maid, also from Indonesia.
Photo: Reuters
Law looked emotionless as she was led out of court. She had pleaded not guilty to the 20 charges, but had admitted one of not buying insurance cover for her maid.
Judge Amanda Woodcock read out her verdict, saying “damning evidence” revealed “how little care and kindness the defendant showed” for Erwiana.
The brutality meted out to Erwiana has sparked calls for Hong Kong to revise its policies on migrant workers. About 30 supporters of Erwiana protested outside the court.
Photo: Reuters
Erwiana had told media she would forgive her former boss, but yesterday she said six years was not enough.
“It seems that while we recognize maltreatment of migrant workers as bad and that slavery exists in Hong Kong, the Hong Kong government seems to tolerate it,” she said outside the court.
“With this sentencing, it is as if the people in government are okay with it,” she said.
Erwiana, who arrived in Hong Kong in 2013, returned to Indonesia in January last year where doctors said burns on her body were caused by boiling water.
Photographs of a battered Erwiana posted online sparked outrage and then-Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono described her treatment as torture.
Hong Kong has about 330,000 foreign domestic helpers, most of them from the Philippines and Indonesia and nearly all women, who can earn more in Hong Kong to send back to their families than they can at home.
They earn a small fraction of the minimum wage and are forced to live with their employers, often in tiny apartments. Human rights groups say they often suffer physical and emotional abuse, including sexual assault.
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