February 25, 2021
Gaiyathiri Murugayan (left) admitted to starving, torturing and ultimately killing Piang Ngaih Don.
The Straits Times file
SINGAPORE - The abuse and torture suffered by Myanmar domestic helper Piang Ngaih Don is appalling and should never have happened, said Manpower Minister Josephine Teo.
She also urged the community to help look out for and report signs of abuse of foreign workers.
Ms Piang was 24 when she died on July 26, 2016. She weighed just 24kg then, having lost 38 per cent of her body weight since she started working here on May 28, 2015.
In a Facebook post on Wednesday night (Feb 24), the minister extended her condolences to Ms Piang s family and said the Government takes the protection of foreign domestic workers (FDWs) seriously.
Piang s story begins at the 12-minute 26-second mark:
What documentary showed
The boy became the responsibility of Piang s sister.
A Singaporean filmmaker, Lynn Lee, wrote about her experience going to Myanmar to meet the deceased woman s family and to tell their story, which was featured by
Al Jazeera.
Post about Piang results in outpouring of help
In the Facebook post on Feb. 25, Lee recounted the trip to the impoverished region of Dimpi in Chin State, Myanmar, where there wasn t enough food or running water and many of the villagers seemed to have a cough , just to locate Piang s family.
Lee highlighted the circumstances at home that pushed Piang to take up the offer to come to Singapore to work on short notice and without any experience outside her village.
Thursday, 25 Feb 2021 08:45 AM MYT
(Left) An old picture of Piang Ngaih Don. (Right) Prema S Naraynasamy and her daughter Gaiyathiri Murugayan, both in bodily restraints, being escorted separately to their Bishan flat by police investigators in August 2016. Pictures via Facebook and TODAY
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SINGAPORE, Feb 25 The family whose foreign domestic worker was abused to death had hired four others before, but the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) did not receive any complaints or “adverse feedback” from those previous workers.
In a statement yesterday giving more details on the deceased Myanmar worker Piang Ngaih Don, 24, who was starved and abused to death by her employer Gaiyathiri Murugayan over nine months, MOM said that it has safeguards in place to prevent the abuse of maids.
According to the International Labor Organisation, there are 11.5 million migrant domestic workers worldwide. By the Philippine government’s own estimate, about one in four is a Filipina woman. International advocacy organisations believe the number would likely be higher if those who are undocumented were taken into account.
Together, the women form a scattered community, the majority spread across the Middle East and East Asia, followed by Europe and the United States. Recruited by international agencies who favour English-speaking nannies and cleaners, the women are charged exorbitant fees to find work overseas. For the 60% of Filipina women who work in the Middle East, they’re also subject to the “kafala” system, which generally binds a migrant worker to their employer, resulting in the confiscation of their passports until their contracts come to an end.
The New Paper
Acquitted maid Parti Liyani goes home 4 years after her ordeal
The case of Parti Liyani (third from left) attracted public interest and led to a nine-hour parliamentary debate over the criminal justice system. PHOTO: GRACE BAEY
Jan 28, 2021 06:00 am
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Former domestic worker Parti Liyani has flown home to Indonesia after about four years here on a Special Pass while she fought a theft conviction that eventually got overturned.
The 46-year-old flew back home yesterday morning, according to a Facebook post by Ms Stephanie Chok, an independent researcher who was previously a manager at the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics (Home).