"They
took our money, they took our belongings and there are people who
have died," Kamer Hajji
"They
took my money, they didn't even give me food to eat." 25 years old Ethiopian woman
These
are some the horrific recounts of thousands of Ethiopian returnees from
Saudi-Arabia who were abused, degraded and traumatized by the country's
sadistic security officers and vigilante young men. They had been
through a lot of an unimaginable circumstances since the oil-rich
middle-eastern country started Saudization, a crackdown against migrant
workers, last month. Here is what
Jenny
Vaughan of AFP (Agence France Presse) who reported 2 days ago from Addis
Ababa that when Ethiopia started repatriating tens of thousands of Ethiopian migrant workers who were rounded up by Saudi officials last month, 30 thousand were expected to
return.
Today,
four times that amount have been repatriated with numbers still
swelling daily straining agencies to support one of the largest
human airlift operations in recent history.
"We
really need support. It's a very big challenge returning over 120,000
people in less than a month... It's an emergency," said Sharon
Dimanche of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), which
is assisting the government-led repatriation program.
"We
have to save people's lives," she added.
IOM
said $13.1 million (9.5 million euros) is currently required to
support returnees.
Ethiopia
expects 150,000 to return, but has been repeatedly forced to scale up
its predictions as the returnees continue to flood back. Thousands -
some pregnant, traumatized or sick - continue to land daily, many
with tales of abuse and mistreatment.
Saudi: Hell on Earth for Ethiopian Migrant Workers
"To
live in Saudi is to cry every day," said Kamer Hajji, 36, who
worked as a carpenter in the oil-rich kingdom for the previous four
years.
"We
are trying to keep ourselves together, but that's not how it really
is, we are broken inside," he said, speaking near a bustling
airport warehouse where thousands were searching for their luggage.
"They
took our money, they took our belongings and there are people who
have died," he said.
Ethiopia
started repatriating its citizens in November after a seven-month
amnesty period for undocumented immigrants expired. Ethiopia said
three of its citizens were killed in clashes with police as migrants
prepared to be sent home.
Large
numbers of Ethiopians move to the Middle East each year seeking work
as domestic servants or menial laborers to earn money to send home.
But
many face harsh working conditions, physical and mental abuse, low
pay and discrimination, according to the International Labor
Organization (ILO).
Ganzeb
Tefera, 30, said she went to Saudi Arabia ten months ago to make some
fast money to send to her child in Ethiopia, but instead said she
waited seven months to be paid.
"I
was expecting a very good life, I thought I would get a decent job
and would get paid well and would come back to Ethiopia with money
and support my family," she said, sitting in a health clinic at
the arrivals center, surrounded by pregnant women and nursing
mothers.
Instead,
Ganzeb said she was thrown on the street when she complained of her
workload, and was soon after picked up by police.
"At
the jail, I saw people who were there for five months or a year, some
committed suicide, some went crazy. The treatment was really harsh,"
she said.
Ganzeb
is among many fleeing harsh economic conditions back home.
Unfinished Debt
It's sounds bizarre but it's true that some of the returnees are intending to go back to this hell-hole country called Saudi-Arabia; the reason is that most of them went there by borrowing fortunes but were deported before finishing their debts. To make matters worse unemployment is 20% in Ethiopian cities and many of these returnees have either they have their own children to support and/or poor families who are dependent on them.
According to the ILO, and most of
the country's 91 million people earn less than two dollars a day.
Lure
of a better life
Overseas
employment agencies - many illegal- are rampant in the Horn of
Africa country.
"There
are challenges with poverty, people are poor, but that is not the
only reason why people are moving, we have traffickers, we have
smugglers, who are taking advantage of these poor people," the
IOM's Dimanche said.
Human trafficking has long plagued the Horn of Africa, with tens of thousands
risking their lives each year to move abroad.
The
lure of earning lavish salaries overseas draws most people abroad,
but the reality on the ground is often different.
Toyeba
Yassin, 25, returned after working as a housemaid in Saudi Arabia for
nearly two years.
Her
employer made her clean several houses and cook, but when she
complained, her salary was docked.
"They
took my money, they didn't even give me food to eat. I didn't get
enough sleep because I used to work at many places," she said,
speaking after leaving the plane. "Thank God I am here now."
Ethiopia
now faces the task of absorbing returnees, many of whom are
empty-handed, having had their savings and belongings confiscated.
"We
anticipate that there will be quite a number that will remain in
Addis Ababa or the major cities in Ethiopia because they can't go
home," said David Murphy, Ethiopia chief of the International
Rescue Committee.
But
despite the harsh treatment many faced, some say they would move
abroad again since employment opportunities at home are still scant.
"I
have not finished paying the money I borrowed," said Ganzeb,
referring to a loan she took to pay her way to Saudi Arabia.
"If
I don?t get a job here I would like to go back... to pay back my loan
and support my child."
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