DutchNews, July 14, 2016
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The Dutch foreign
ministry has received 26 complaints over the past five years about the
exploitation of private domestic staff working for diplomats in The Hague, the
Volkskrant said on Thursday.
The complaints ranged from underpayments to poor
working conditions and ‘inappropriate behaviour’, the paper said. The
Volkskrant bases its claims on documentation obtained using freedom of
information legislation.
The ministry declined to say what nationality the
exploited members of staff had in order to protect a ‘vulnerable group’ and to
preserve diplomatic relations. Nor would it say which embassies were involved.
However, non-profit organisation FairWork, which campaigns on behalf of workers
who are exploited in the Netherlands, says domestic personnel working for
diplomatic staff from the Philippines, Indonesia, South American and African
countries have been affected. Domestic staff for members of the international criminal court and the European
patent office had also experienced problems.
Briefings
In total, around 140
people work privately for diplomats, as nannies, cooks, cleaners and waiters.
For the past two years, private embassy staff now have to pick up their work
permits personally from the foreign ministry, where they are briefed on their
rights, including holidays, a 40-hour working week and a minimum wage.
They are
also given an information pack listing where they can go to report problems
with their employers. Domestic staff are also invited to attend a meeting at
the ministry every six months and civil servants have been trained to recognise
signs that staff are being exploited.
Over the past three years, three people
were given back pay, two were bought tickets home and one case of sexual abuse
was dropped because the diplomat was sent back, the Volkskrant said.

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