She escaped domestic slavery, now she helps other survivors

(CNN)It’s been a tortuous journey for Francisca Awah. Last month, the 35-year-old from Cameroon spoke in front of an audience that consisted of Ivanka Trump and the United States Secretary of State, when she was honored for her contribution to the battle versus human trafficking.

In the spring of 2015, Awah responded to an ad for an English-teaching task in Kuwait. The pay readied, much better than anything she might make in her house town of Kumba, in south-west Cameroon, although she had a Masters degree and spoke proficient English. She had a two-year-old child to support, when she was provided the task, she accepted.
      The truth, it ended up, was really various.

      ‘Sick and tired’

      When she got here in Kuwait she states she was right away required to work as a housemaid in a personal house, used through a company. She states she was moved in between houses for a couple of weeks, then ultimately wound up with a Kuwaiti household, who she states took her passport.
      Awah states the household required her to work long hours, in some cases in the blistering Kuwaiti sun, with little sleep.
      She states she got ill and tired and experienced pain in the back from the continuous cleansing.
      When she asked to leave she states the household informed her she would need to pay back the $3,000 they had actually offered the company for her, and she would likewise need to spend for her flight house.
      She states she was paid 75 Kuwaiti dinars (about $250) a month for the 2 months she was with the household.

      Stories of hope

      Awah states she plucked up the guts to switch on the tv while she was working. She discovered herself viewing The CNN Freedom Project , which reports on all types of modern-day slavery.
      “Sometimes they reveal individuals that they have actually conserved,” she later on informed CNN. “I was having hopes.”
      One report, profiling Katie Ford, the previous CEO of a modeling firm, who now runs anti-slavery company Freedom for All in the United States, struck a specific chord.
      Awah states she had a mobile phone and utilized it to discover Ford’s information on the web. She called Ford, who coached her through her ultimate escape to a friendly embassy, and after that spent for her flight to Cameroon.
      The household reject they avoided Awah from leaving or asked her to repay the $3,000. They state she was not overworked, which she worked no greater than 8 hours a day as mentioned in the agreement from the company, however they did confess that she did not sign that agreement.

      Vulnerable to required labor

      There are more than 600,000 migrant domestic employees in Kuwait, in a population of 4 million individuals.
      The 2018 United States State Department Trafficking face to faces (TIP) report states that migrant domestic employees in Kuwait are especially susceptible to required labor inside personal houses.
      It likewise states that “Kuwait’s sponsorship law– which connects a migrant employee’s legal home and legitimate migration status to a company– limits employees’ motions and punishes them for leaving violent offices.” It includes that companies frequently seize passports, although it’s unlawful.
      But the report keeps in mind that the Kuwaiti federal government is making substantial efforts to take on the issue.
      It has actually presented a law guaranteeing domestic employees one day off weekly, an optimum 12-hour workday, a base pay paid month-to-month and paid yearly leave. It has actually likewise established “a government-run main recruitment business meant to decrease recruitment expenses and battle unlawful recruiting charges.”

      Supporting survivors

      In the months after Awah made it back house she began to share her story, to attempt to raise awareness about the danger of trafficking.
      She was acutely mindful that if individuals discovered difficulty when they returned house, they might be re-trafficked. “If you save somebody and the individual is not self-dependent exactly what do you anticipate?” she informed CNN.
      Awah ultimately established a non-profit company called Survivors’ Network. She states it supplies interim work for trafficking survivors on a poultry farm, along with microfinance, so females can establish their own companies.
      She likewise champs ladies’s education and teaches individuals to identify the indications of trafficking, getting the word out through churches, schools, regional radio stations and social networks. Awah states her company has actually recommended more than 500 African ladies caught in domestic yoke in Kuwait and Lebanon on ways to return house.

      Anti-trafficking ‘hero’

      In June, Awah was called by the U.S. State Department as a TIP report “Hero”– a person who has actually made a specific contribution to the battle versus human trafficking.
      “A couple of years back, I might have just imagined such an honor” she informed the audience of State Department authorities at the TIP report launch event, in Washington DC.
      And she shared her message with them, that rescue is inadequate: “To avoid trafficking, individuals require occupation training to construct abilities so that they can work and end up being self-dependent in their house nations.”
      Awah confesses can be difficult to keep informing her story, however doing so has actually turned into one of her most effective tools.
      “We can all discuss this concern in our offices and schools and over supper with our households,” she informed the State Department audience. “The more individuals who care and understand, the more individuals we will conserve.”

      Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2018/07/30/world/francisca-awah-tip-report-hero/index.html

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