Malawian housemaid wins U.S. human
trafficking case after three years 'in
prison'
Photo courtesy Fainess
Lipenga
A Malawian woman trafficked to
the United States by a diplomat, confined to a house for three
years and forced to work long hours for little pay has been awarded
$1 million in damages in a human trafficking lawsuit against her
former employer.
Fainess Lipenga began working
for Jane Kambalame as a housemaid in her Malawi home in 2002,
according to the case memorandum.
When Kambalame accepted a
diplomatic position at the Malawian embassy in Washington in 2004,
she asked Lipenga to move with her.
"I was so excited," Lipenga told
the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview. "She
(Kambalame) told me that I could finish my education in the U.S.
and that she would help me find another job."
She signed a contract written in
English, which she did not fully understand, which stated Lipenga
would be paid $980 per month for working 35 hours per week and
would be paid overtime.
But the reality was quite
different. For the first few months she received nothing, and after
that was paid between $100 and $180 per month.
"She made me work from 5.30 am
to 11 pm on most days, and I had to sleep on the basement floor,"
said Lipenga. "She said I couldn't sleep in a room upstairs like
the family because I would make them sick."
Nearly 21 million people are
victims of forced labour globally, 1.5 million of them in developed
countries like the United States, according to the International
Labour Organization (ILO). Over half are women and
girls.
Forced labour among migrant
domestic workers in particular is widespread, with women exploited
even before they have left their home country and later abused by
their employers abroad.
In 2006 Kambalame installed a
lock on the door of the family home in Washington D.C., confining
her domestic servant to the house, Lipenga said.
"She listened on the phone
whenever I talked to my family, and would disconnect it when she
left the house - I was trapped," she said.
According to the lawsuit,
Kambalame subjected Lipenga to psychological abuse, such as by
humiliating her in front of visitors and threatening to deport
her.
"She told me: 'I'm a diplomat,
you'll never get me in trouble'," Lipenga said. "I just believed
her."
ESCAPE
Lipenga managed to escape the
Kambalame household in 2007. "I thought: I will die if I stay here,
they will take my body and dump it in the trash," she
said.
"I stole my passport and my
contract when the family were out of the house, and left in the
morning when they were sleeping - I could not stop
shaking."
Lipenga was admitted to hospital
and diagnosed with tuberculosis and depression, which had gone
untreated for years.
With the help of a pro bono
human rights lawyer, she obtained a T visa, issued for victims of
human trafficking, in 2009 and permanent U.S. residency in
2011.
Lipenga filed a civil complaint
against Kambalame in the state of Maryland in 2014, with claims
ranging from false imprisonment to intentional infliction of
emotional distress.
A district court handed down a
default judgment and against Kambalame, who failed to respond or
participate in the case. Damages were set at
$1,101,345.
Lipenga now works at the Human
Trafficking Pro Bono Legal Centre in Washington, and hopes to
encourage other victims of trafficking to come forward.
"What happened to me happens to
others over and over," she said. "I want to help them and break the
immunity for diplomats."
Kambalame left the United States
in 2012, according to the lawsuit, and appointed Malawi's High
Commissioner to Zimbabwe and Botswana. Lipenga believes she
currently resides in Malawi.
"We are exploring various
options to enforce the judgment," said Lindsay Reimschussel, one of
Lipenga's lawyers.
The Malawian embassy in Zimbabwe
said in an email that Kambalame no longer worked at the mission,
but is still an employee of Malawi's foreign affairs ministry. The
Malawian embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for
comment.
Houtan Homayounpour, forced
labour specialist at the ILO, said migrant domestic workers were
particularly vulnerable to forced labour.
"Moving away from their host
environment puts them at risk, as they may not be familiar with the
language or the law of their new environment," he said.
Last year, an Ethiopian
housemaid who sued the head of the U.N. World Health Organization
in Thailand and his wife for beating and enslaving her, settled the
case out of court. (Reporting by Zoe Tabary, additional reporting
by Sebastien Malo, editing by Ros Russell.
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