Maid doesn’t regret killing sponsor
JEDDAH: Investigators are questioning an African maidservant for killing her
Saudi sponsor in Jeddah on Tuesday by stabbing him several times while he was
sleeping in his home.
Lt. Nawaf Al-Bouk, spokesman of Jeddah police,
said security officers had taken all necessary evidence including thumb
impressions from the site.
“We have handed over the pieces of evidence to
the Bureau of Investigation and Public Prosecution,” Al-Bouk said, adding that
the maid had admitted to killing her sponsor.
According to Al-Madinah Arabic daily, the woman
had told the Human Rights Commission that she had no regrets in killing her
Saudi sponsor. “I am also not afraid, because you cannot do anything to me
except deporting me to my country,” the maid was quoted as saying by the
newspaper.
The body of the sponsor was buried at Faisaliya
Graveyard, Jeddah, on Wednesday in the presence of a large number of relatives
and friends. He was about 50 years old.
The maid told investigators that she had stabbed
the man 20 times. Two of the man’s sons ran away when they heard the woman
shouting and saw her destroying things in the house.
She admitted she had plans to kill the two
children along with their father. One of them is receiving treatment at hospital
after the woman hit him on his head with an iron. Security agents have found
broken pictures of an African man in the maid’s room.
Al-Bouk said doctors confirmed that the woman
was not mentally ill while committing the crime, adding that investigators are
questioning her to find out the reasons that prompted her to kill the man.
Informed sources told Al-Watan Arabic daily that
the public prosecutor would try to defeat any attempt from the part of the maid
to prove she was having mental problems.
“Police have attached a medical report showing
that the woman had no mental problems,” the paper said, quoting the sources.
The victim’s family said the woman had come to
Jeddah on a maid visa about seven months ago, and that the family had not
observed any strange behavior from her.
The murder took place a few days after the Saudi
had undergone a surgical operation. After killing the man, the maid had turned
to his 12-year-old child, who was able to run away.
The second child locked himself inside a room to
save himself from the attacker. There was nobody else inside the house at the
time of the incident.
The child, who ran away from home, informed his
uncle living in the neighborhood about the incident. The uncle then called
police, who cordoned off the house and arrested the woman who was hiding in a
room.
A women's delegation from the Human Rights
Commission visited the woman in Briman prison. Jawaher Al-Nahari, a member of
the delegation, emphasized the need to issue a quick verdict on such cases.
The incident has shocked people all over the
Kingdom. There are about 1.5 million maids working in Saudi Arabia. They come
from the Philippines, Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Ethiopia and Eritrea.
“We have to be very careful in selecting maids,”
said Abdullah Al-Shahri, owner of a recruitment office. “We don’t recruit any
maidservant except after studying their social and criminal backgrounds through
agencies in their countries.”
Abdullah Ali, another Saudi engaged in
recruitment of workers, said: “The maid should have informed Saudi authorities
or her country’s mission in the Kingdom if there was any abuse or mistreatment,
nonpayment of salary, or abuse of other rights.”
Marwan Barri Al-Sharief, consul general of
Ethiopia, expressed his grief over the incident involving a maid who belongs to
his country. He attributed such violence to mistreatment of maids. “We have
taken a number of steps to prevent a repetition of such incidents. We have fixed
the minimum age of a maid at 21, so that they will have enough awareness. We
also provide them with necessary training.”
Speaking to Al-Madinah, he emphasized the need
to treat maids humanely. “It’s essential for the benefit of both sides.”
Sponsors should provide medical treatment to maids suffering from mental
problems, Al-Sharief added.
The Eritrean Consulate in Jeddah received 44
maids suffering from mental problems.