Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06KUWAIT1934
2006-05-29 08:34:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Kuwait
Cable title:  

KUWAIT INITIATES AWARENESS CAMPAIGN TARGETING

Tags:  PHUM ELAB KU TIP 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO0260
PP RUEHDE
DE RUEHKU #1934/01 1490834
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 290834Z MAY 06
FM AMEMBASSY KUWAIT
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 4724
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 001934 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

FOR NEA/ARP, INL/HSTC, AND G/TIP

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM ELAB KU TIP
SUBJECT: KUWAIT INITIATES AWARENESS CAMPAIGN TARGETING
EMPLOYERS OF DOMESTIC WORKERS

REF: 05 KUWAIT 263

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 001934

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

FOR NEA/ARP, INL/HSTC, AND G/TIP

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM ELAB KU TIP
SUBJECT: KUWAIT INITIATES AWARENESS CAMPAIGN TARGETING
EMPLOYERS OF DOMESTIC WORKERS

REF: 05 KUWAIT 263


1. (SBU) The Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs (MAIA)
has initiated the National Project for Domestic Workers (in
Arabic it is the National Project for Domestic Worker
Awareness-Raising) a project to raise awareness of the rights
and responsibilities of domestic employees and their
employers. The project is nicknamed "Barirah," the name of
the personal servant of the Prophet Muhammad's wife Aisha.
Saad Ahmad Al-Hajji, the program's director and the director
of the MAIA's Family Development Department, told PolOff in a
May 24th meeting that the program was conceived in 1997 but
has been winding through the bureaucratic process until this
year. The project will start with a three-month period of
information-gathering through questionnaires and town-hall
meetings with sponsors (employers) and domestic laborers
about what their needs are. The first town-hall meeting took
place on May 15 in the Qadsiyya neighborhood of Kuwait City.
It was held in a nursery rather than a mosque, which might
have been the obvious place for an MAIA meeting, to signal
that the program was designed to serve Muslims and
non-Muslims alike.


2. (SBU) Al-Hajji noted that Barirah will take a
two-pronged approach, targeting the sponsors and the workers.
The project will focus its first efforts at educating the
sponsors. Barirah will produce brochures and television
spots to encourage good treatment of domestic workers,
including abiding by Kuwait's new standard employment
contract stipulating a weekly day of rest, a minimum monthly
salary of 40 Dinars (140 USD),and limited daily working
hours. The awareness campaign will have an Islamic bent.
(Comment: This is a smart approach since the program should
be less likely to be seen as an imposition of Western values.
End Comment.) The MAIA exerts significant control over
Friday sermons in Kuwaiti mosques and will use this bully
pulpit to spread its message.


3. (SBU) In its interactions with the press, MAIA
representatives have also emphasized the other side of the
project: to protect sponsors from their domestic employees.
While the sponsor holds most of the power, there have been a
number of high-profile cases of household workers poisoning
or otherwise maltreating their employers' families.
Countless television programs and newspaper articles have
been devoted to an impending crisis because Kuwaiti children
are being raised by non-Kuwaitis, some of whom are
well-qualified and some of whom are not. Al-Hajji told
PolOff that Barirah will try to convince sponsors (the
majority of whom are Kuwaiti, though tens of thousands of
non-Kuwaiti Arabs and others employ household employees as
well) that treating their employees well is the best way to
insure that household workers propagate good values in their
families. Al-Hajji maintains that the current number of
domestic workers in Kuwait, approximately 500,000, could be
significantly reduced if the workers were treated better and
thus were more enthusiastic about their work. Barirah
includes a 24-hour hotline (7722388) for questions. The
hotline is not designed to help domestic workers in crisis
situations, however, since that is the responsibility of the
Ministry of Interior. Poloff called the line, and found it
operational. The Barirah staff member said the hotline had
been receiving calls already, primarily from domestic
employers who had attended the Qadsiyya town-hall meeting.


4. (SBU) The second phase of the program -- educating the
domestic workers -- is less well-defined. Al-Hajji and Eqbal
Othman Mallallah, Supervisor of Women's Activities at
Kuwait's Grand Mosque, said they would produce informational
materials in multiple languages. They suggested staging
recreational events for domestic employees and even providing
transportation to these events. (Comment: This is especially
important since a common explanation that Kuwaitis give for
not permitting domestic workers a day off is to prevent them
from getting into trouble outside the house. Newspapers
frequently report maids being assaulted while outside the
house. End Comment.)


5. (SBU) Al-Hajji and Mallallah expressed enthusiasm about
FALCon, Post's project to disseminate informational brochures
to domestic workers, (reftel),and offered to help in
distribution efforts. PolOff offered to arrange a meeting
between Al-Hajji, Mallallah, and the representatives of the
domestic labor source countries. Al-Hajji and Mallallah
welcomed the idea.

********************************************* *
For more reporting from Embassy Kuwait, visit:
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/nea/kuwait/?cable s

KUWAIT 00001934 002 OF 002



Visit Kuwait's Classified Website:
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/nea/kuwait/
********************************************* *
LEBARON