Quantcast
Latest Stories
FILIPINA’S TALE

Gadhafi nephew had ‘house of gold’ but didn’t pay maids

By

Moammar Gadhafi’s nephew had “a house full of gold” but refused to pay the wages of his Filipino domestic helpers.

Two housemaids managed to escape from Libya with the help of a Filipino labor attaché last week, but two other Filipino househelp have chosen to remain, hoping they would still be paid.

Diana Jill Rivera, 30, and Mary Ann Ducos, 29, arrived in Tripoli within a week of each other in September 2010 to work as housemaids for Sharif Sahal, said to be a nephew and righthand man of the fallen Libyan dictator.

“Tripoli is a big place. It may be a city but we lived in a farmhouse,” recalled Rivera.

Sprawling mansion

Sahal’s property was a sprawling mansion with a garage that housed 13 luxury vehicles.

“They did not have horses or carabaos, but camels,” Rivera said.

Ducos said the furniture was “made of gold, even the sofa.” Asked whether she meant gold-plated, she replied: “All the objects I saw, I was told came from abroad.”

Both women said Sahal was nice in the beginning. They were paid on time, but for the first two months, all their wages went to the recruitment agency.

“In November and December (2010), we were given the entire $200, although the contract said we were supposed to get $400,” Rivera said.

The trouble began early this year when democracy activists started massing in the streets to protest the way Gadhafi was running the country.

Hot-tempered

“Salan became hot-tempered and became easily angry, even over small things,” Ducos said.

Rivera recalled that the dictator’s nephew would become hostile “whenever we asked for our wages, saying the banks were closed and he could not get money.”

The tensions and hostilities in the country became unbearable and the two maids decided they must find some way to leave.

“One other Filipino maid beat us to it. She ran away and we never heard from her again,” Rivera said.

Their pleas to be released from employment fell on deaf ears until last August when Sahal  allowed them to leave at their own risk, they said.

“The city was so chaotic we did not know where to start,” Rivera said.

Phone calls were made to relatives back in the Philippines. The relatives in turn went to the Manila-based Blas F. Ople Policy Center for overseas Filipino workers.

The center’s director, Susan Ople, alerted Labor Attaché Nasser Mustafa of the Philippine embassy in Libya about the women’s situation.

Rescued

According to Ople, Sahal initially refused to release the women, insisting they were safe.

On September 17, a battalion of armed rebels ransacked Sahal’s farmhouse. Mustafa took this as his cue to rescue the Filipino workers with the help of a driver and a Libyan friend and take them to the border into Tunisia.

“There were still two Filipino maids in the household when we left. It was their choice not to leave because they are still hoping that Sahal would take pity on them and they would be paid,” said Rivera.

Rivera and Ducos went to the Senate on Wednesday to witness Mustafa receive a commendation.

In a resolution, Senate President Pro Tempore Jose “Jinggoy” Estrada, the labor committee chairman, hailed Mustafa and his rescue team’s “courage and devotion” during the rescue of the two women.

Ambassador to Libya Al Vicente was also cited “for the rescue and repatriation of thousands of other distressed OFWs from Libya.”

Recent Stories:

Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines.

Tags: Conflict , labor issues , Libya , Moammar Gadhafi , OFW , Overseas employment

Disclaimer: The comments uploaded on this site do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of management and owner of INQUIRER.net. We reserve the right to exclude comments that we deem to be inconsistent with our editorial standards.
  • Anonymous

    The Gadhafis and the Arroyos are all birds of the same feathers. Puro mga mandarambong at halang ang mga kaluluwa.

  • Anonymous

    so why don’t the POEA representative deal legally with the recruitment agency whom she said got their wages from their employers, ha? is that difficult for them to do, except they are lazy and doing nothing to help? replace them if they are inutile!

  • Anonymous

    Mas mayaman, mas swapang!

    • Anonymous

      HINDI LANG SWAPANG  MAS BUAYA PA    MERON DIN GANYAN DITO SA  PINAS  DI MO BA ALAM   MGA  NAGAALILA  DIN SA MGA KASAMBAHAY NILA  DAPAT SA MGA GANYANG TAO  I BAR B Q  BWAAAAHAHHAHAHAHA

      • Anonymous

        MATAGAL ko ng alam yan, kabayan.  At yang “katangiang” yan ay napulot natin sa mga TNL na mga kastilaloy…..at tulad din ng ibang bagay pa, naging mas masahol pa ang tinuruan sa nagturo.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_SFY4Q6R2K5YUZEXXIJO3TLG2UM Aspo resurrection

    choses to stay hoping to get paid?tsk!tsk…their assets are frozen my god!!!Should our government offer something to convince them at para naman sa kanilang safety…sus maria-e-joseph!



Copyright 2011 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:
c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94
Advertisement
  1. China on high alert over Faeldon trip
  2. Discarded draft of Corona’s opening statement found?
  3. Philippines to receive 10 new patrol ships from Japan
  4. Photos of kissing between Filipina, Panamanian don’t disprove rape, says Sotto
  5. Japan, SoKor, Australia to help PH improve defense capability – DFA
  6. OFW loses job because baby can’t finish bottle of milk
  7. China holding over 500 container vans of fruit, not 150, say exporters
  8. Radyo Inquirer 990AM: ‘Payao’ deployment near shoal in full swing – BFAR chief
  9. Int’l body allows Philippines access to protected Pacific fishing grounds
  10. Japan eyes maritime aid for Philippine defense
  1. Anastasia long dead, say experts
  2. Nuclear-powered ‘fast-attack’ US submarine docks in Subic
  3. Japan eyes maritime aid for Philippine defense
  4. Philippines to receive 10 new patrol ships from Japan
  5. Loida Lewis to China: ‘You’re shameless’
  6. Philippines may buy fighters other than US
  7. Panamanian national in Filipina rape case claims ‘consensual sex’
  8. DFA execs grilled on immunity of Panamanian rape suspect
  9. Discarded draft of Corona’s opening statement found?
  10. China’s propaganda war
  1. Scarborough belongs to PH, old maps show
  2. China warned against deploying more ships
  3. China won’t be allowed to conquer Scarborough, says military official
  4. China daily warns of ‘small-scale war’ with Philippines
  5. China TV ‘claims’ Philippines as Chinese territory
  6. Aquino: These are our waters
  7. Sison chides China for ‘absurd’ Panatag claim
  8. Why China will not bring the Spratlys issue to the United Nations
  9. US Seventh Fleet flagship arrives in Manila
  10. Loida Lewis to China: ‘You’re shameless’

News

  • Pakistan blocks Twitter over contentious tweets
  • Obama pushes for post-2014 vision for Afghanistan
  • Strong quake kills 4 in Italy cheese region
  • ‘Corona leaving fate to God’
  • No politics, just bloc vote, says INC member
  • Sports

  • Djokovic-Nadal Rome final postponed to Monday
  • Sharapova beats Li to win Rome title
  • Shakey’s V-League: Ateneo shakes off poor start to down UST
  • Shakey’s V-League: San Sebastian nips FEU in 5 sets; Bualee scores 37
  • Rain or Shine repels Alaska, new mentor
  • Lifestyle

  • Leeds winner Sofya Gulyak electrifies Manila anew
  • US pianist Raffi Kasparian to perform in Laoag
  • Edgar Allan Poe comes alive, darkly, in “Raven”
  • Cool everyday objects bridge old, new in the Cordillera
  • Asean forum sets sights on regional weaving traditions and industries
  • Entertainment

  • Feminist group protest at Cannes premiere
  • Gerard Butler messing about on boats in Cannes
  • Organizer: Nothing vulgar in Lady Gaga concert
  • A boat ride, whether in Johannesburg or Mandaluyong…
  • PDI columnist a star on GMA Pinoy TV
  • Business

  • Facebook stock limps into Monday
  • New investors to beef up Wendy’s capital
  • Philippine stocks expected to remain vulnerable this week
  • Economy seen to have grown 4.8% in Q1
  • Biz Buzz: The sore thumb
  • Technology

  • Digital life disappoints
  • App scans faces of bar-goers to guess age, gender
  • Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg marries sweetheart
  • Google gets China OK for Motorola deal
  • Globe launches Samsung Galaxy S III; online pre-orders start May 23
  • Opinion

  • The last witness: Prelude to mistrial?
  • Editorial cartoon, May 21, 2012
  • Study at home
  • How CJ can explain his immense wealth
  • KO
  • Global Nation

  • Retired US military man found dead in Ermita hotel
  • Iranian envoy robbed of cash, valuables inside Forbes Park home
  • Japan, SoKor, Australia to help PH improve defense capability – DFA
  • Radyo Inquirer 990AM: ‘Payao’ deployment near shoal in full swing – BFAR chief
  • UN cites Filipino peacekeepers
  • Marketplace
    Advertisement
    © Copyright 1997-2011 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved