This website stores cookies on your computer. These cookies are used to improve your website experience and provide more personalized services to you, both on this website and through other media. To find out more about the cookies we use, see our Privacy Policy. We won't track your information when you visit our site. But in order to comply with your preferences, we'll have to use just one tiny cookie so that you're not asked to make this choice again.

Filipina expat forced to work as prostitute in Arab country

Cecile Tubadan, a 32-year-old mother from Leon Postigo town, was elated when an opportunity to work in Lebanon presented itself. 

The recruiter, a sister of her live-in partner, seemed trustworthy that she did not hesitate to fly to Lebanon to work as a housemaid on a tourist visa.

It was too late when she learned she was deceived.

Tubadan narrated her ordeal to the Philippine News Agency on Monday, four days after she returned to the country following her escape from an employer - who physically abused her when she refused to work as a prostitute.

"I agreed because I'm jobless, I have four children, and I cannot rely on the money sent by my partner," Tubadan said.

She said it was her live-in partner's sister, Myrene Salvador Abuan,  who enticed her to work in Lebanon for $400 a month. 

Abuan is married to Syrian Hashim Ali, who endorsed her to SREIH Services, a housemaid agency in Lebanon, which paid the couple $800 for bringing in the unsuspecting Tubadan.

Tubadan said her focus was on earning money for her family that she did not mind going to Lebanon on July 19, 2018, supposedly as an overseas contract worker.

"I have no contract, no work documents--nothing, but I still went to Lebanon because I trusted Myrene," Tubadan said.

She was told to work at the house of the Alis until they can find her an employer. But then everything changed, Tubadan said, when Ali told her to work as a prostitute disguised as masseuse at a spa.

Tubadan claimed that Ali beat her and barred her from going out of their apartment building when she refused.

After several weeks, Tubadan recalled she posted on Facebook an appeal for her rescue, which was seen by her relatives and a neighbor in Leon Postigo, William Anadeo, a school teacher in their town.

Anadeo sought the help of first district Rep. Seth Frederick Jalosjos, who immediately sent a letter to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), which promptly ordered its embassy in Lebanon to find Tubadan.

Meanwhile, Tubadan said she got the chance to escape on September 11 when Hashim Ali was not at home.

...[ Continue to next page ]

Source: khaleejtimes

Share This Post

related posts

On Top