To Anti-Slavery International, Director Mary Cunneen. Your respected
institution has served as a bastion for freedom loving people, thank you for your unwavering support.
It is a great honour for me to receive the 2005 Anti-Slavery
Award. The very evils that we all struggle to fight are no stranger
to me. I was born in a small isolated province in the Philippines.
I came from a very poor family in the island of Negros. I was
the second of 12 children and was the eldest among the girls.
At the tender age of five, I had to help my parents toil for my
family's survival. I had to peddle fish in the local market just
to help my family survive. Until now, I still remember the feeling
of walking dirt-ridden paths under the smouldering heat of the
sun or struggling against relentless typhoons, carrying a huge
basket full of fish on top of my head while the warm fish juices
trickled down my face. All these I had to endure because
I never had a choice. The nostalgia of hardship, desperation,
and helplessness has fuelled me in my everyday struggle. I had
realised early on that this is not the life that I want to have
nor is this the life that I would like to bestow on my children.
Early in life, I was a prisoner of poverty. Yet the love of freedom
was deeply ingrained in my soul. I believe that we are all created
equal, in the image and likeness of our Creator. This belief led
me to my next prison. During the Marcos regime, I fought against
the dictatorship. I became a mother while I was a rebel leader
hiding in the mountains, endlessly pursued by the military. I
had to give my eldest son to my relatives and we were separated
for 12 years.
I had to start my family in prison. After almost half a decade
of waging battle against the dictatorship, my husband and I were
captured. Because I was pregnant, I was spared from the usual
torture and murder. My four comrades were not as lucky -- they
were ruthlessly gunned down before my very eyes. Thus, my second
son, who is here tonight, was born inside a prison. We named him
Kip from the Filipino word, "dakip" which means
to capture and imprison. Kip spent four years with his parents
in prison. A daughter was born two years after. We named her "Malaya",
a Filipino word for the one thing that we had been dreaming of
and were fighting for
Freedom. After the People Power Revolution
of 1986, we were, at last, released from detention.
Sad and compelling my story may be, but it is nothing compared
to the story of millions of young domestic workers in the Philippines
and throughout the whole world.
The stories we encountered everyday over the last few decades
mostly share the same pattern of being children from very poor
families. They enter domestic work and take on such heavy responsibility
in their noble desire to help their families. Domestic work is
an old occupation. From one generation to the next our societies
have only changed the names we call them. As time moves on and
society gets more advanced and complicated, the roots of slavery
grounded in centuries' worth of abuse still haunt the globalised
world.
In the Philippines, as in many developing countries, the employment
of child domestic workers is a socially accepted practice, with
slavery as its historical root. Their work is still a necessity
to many families for it is accessible and affordable. Thus, their
numbers increase everyday. They remain unrecognised and discriminated
against even though they are the massive invisible engine of the
demanding world of work. In the Philippines alone, the International
Labour Organization estimated that there were around 2.5 million
domestic workers in 2004. Worldwide, nobody knows how many there
are as they remain statistically invisible.
These child domestics are condemned and stigmatised because of
their work. They endure slave-like conditions. Many of them are
trafficked, sold into abusive domestic work. They have to pay
off the debts of their parents; they pay for the unreasonable
placement and finders' fee for recruiters and the inflated cost
of their transportation. They are held in debt bondage and are
forced to work perpetually as they can never hope to gain enough
to repay what they never fairly owed in the first place.
Let me share with you the story of Rose. At the age of 14, in
addition to her household duties, she cared for her employers'
14 breeding dogs. "The dogs were too big and I was afraid
to go near them," she said. On the day we rescued her, she
said that everyday she had to prepare kilos of dog food but, where
her food was concerned, it was not enough. Even so, her employers
would not allow her to eat any of the family's leftovers. One
day, driven by hunger and desperation, she went to the dogs and
ate what was left on their plates.
Domestic workers endure abuse. Many of them are starved, taken
advantage of, exploited, and insulted daily. It is almost as if
it is part of their job.
One of Visayan Forum's government partner agencies in the Philippines,
the Department of Regional Social Welfare and Development on the
Island of Cebu, claims that 80 per cent of their reported rape
and other sexually related abuse cases are child domestic workers.
Many have endured tremendous physical abuse. One unforgettable
story is about a girl who died in our centre. She was forced by
her employer to drink a type of acid used to unclog drains and
pipes. Another child was forced to drink bleaching liquid each
time she failed to finish the laundry she had to wash. In our
work, we have met young girls who were burned with cigarettes
and flat irons by their employers. Many of them experience torture
and brutality in the name of discipline. They endure what is considered
one of the worst forms of child labour situations.
Although many consider domestic work as a safe work, the question
remains: is it really safe for children? Some of these children
are as young as eight years old. They work away from home without
any protection and support. They work in isolation and behind
the closed doors of their employer's home. They work excessive
hours as they are on call 24 hours a day. Above all, they are
all missing out an education and other means of self-improvement
and empowerment.
As a response to this problem our organisation, the Visayan Forum
Foundation, a non-profit, non-governmental organisation based in
Manila, has been lobbying and pushing for the passage of the Domestic
Workers Bill, or the Batas Kasambahay, for the past 10
years.
Our work on the issue of domestic workers, especially children,
involved providing specialised crisis intervention services such
as temporary shelter, hotline counselling, legal and psycho-social,
and medical services to reach out to abused domestic workers.
As of now, around 2,000 of them have been successfully assisted
to go back to school. The uniqueness of the programme lies also
in the active involvement of domestic workers themselves in its
implementation. With our multi-sectoral partners we believe that
domestic workers are strong stake holders of their own rights
and have the capability to help end the grave societal ill that
abused them in the past.
To curb local trafficking in the country, we set up strategic
halfway houses in various seaports across the archipelago in co-operation
with the Philippine Ports Authority. Our port halfway houses provide
a centre-based package of protective care services. Through this
strategy, we documented cases of trafficking both within the country
and of people being taken abroad. We also mobilised and built
the capacity of the port community through the Anti-Trafficking
Taskforce at the ports. To prevent trafficking, we advocate in
communities from which people are taken and in areas they are
trafficked through by using the media. In this way, we have reached
out to 8,000 victims and potential victims of trafficking.
Yet, we realised that we have only touched the proverbial tip
of the iceberg. I would like to say that running these programmes
is not easy at all. We need to be systematic and to provide safety
through a safe house that hopes to isolate the victims from perpetuators
and abusers; to help victims by providing long-term healing and
education opportunities while pursuing legal cases against their
abusers. We need also to be strong to face all the hardships in
maintaining these programmes. Every day, we encounter harassment
and pressure from traffickers, employers and even from influential
people who protect these unscrupulous individuals, especially
now that we are already dealing with the prosecution of trafficking
cases.
When I left the prison cell, I said that I would never go back
to that place for the sake of my children. A few months back,
a case was filed against me because the Visayan Forum refused
to return six trafficked children to a recruiter. I had to re-asses
my life once more. After a long and hard reflection, I told them
that they may file the case if they want to, but I would not give
them the children. For what is the value of freedom? What is the
real worth of life other than to give hope to those who have none?
There are worse things than prison bars. The real incarceration
is a life without principles. The worst prison is apathy.
Today I humbly accept this prestigious Anti-Slavery Award. Yet,
also I would like to share and offer this honour to my faceless
freedom fighters who have fought alongside me for the last decade's
freedom of domestic workers and other enslaved workers, not only
from the Philippines and the rest of Asia, but also from other
regions all over the world. We draw our greatest inspiration from
the strength of the women and children who have decided to pursue
justice against their abusers.
With this award, I promise to stand firm and continue to take
part in the struggle for Domestic Workers' freedom. Like my children
born in prison, I will not stop working for freedom and to see
more domestic workers enjoy the life that has been denied them.
Let us continue to work with them to help them find courage and
strength.
I sincerely hope that this award will serve as a strong voice
and an impetus for greater international attention to the issue
and for the generation of concrete programmes for millions of child
domestic workers. We hope to see the day when the UN bodies, especially
the International Labour Organization and other members of the
international community will institutionalise their commitment
by adopting and seriously implementing a global standard for the
protection and development of domestic work, and recognise that
domestic work is indeed decent work.
The road ahead is long and dark. Journeys like this are never
easy. Yet right now, when the world is finally starting to look
back at abuses which for centuries were social norms, then we
must take our generation's role seriously. We stand at the threshold
of history, my friends. Let it be said by the future generations
that we dreamed big dreams in our days, fought evil while we could
and made the most out of the little time we have in this world
to make a difference that will echo throughout the centuries.
Once again, with great admiration, I accept this award on behalf
of so many other people who are walking the same path and I share
this with all of you. Lastly, I share this award with the millions
of domestic workers worldwide and with it is my belief that someday,
slavery will be abolished and every man, woman and child will
be free. Thank you and Mabuhay!