Lankan maid gives a pleasant shock to relatives
A Sri Lankan maid who was helped by Riyadh Gov. Prince Salman to
return home after she claimed that she did not receive her salary for 13
years arrived in her village. Her relatives who presumed that she had
died more than 11 years ago, were shocked and happy to see her in
sudden.
When Girlie Malika Fernando, 53, reached home in Weragama Watte near
Wadduwa, her family could not believe she was alive. They had presumed
that she died after arriving in the Kingdom to work as a housemaid two
years ago.
Anton Nishantha Mendis, Fernando's eldest son, who was only 11 years
old when his mother left for work in the Kingdom, said that his family
would even conduct religious rituals in memory of his mother.
"It's a pleasant surprise to everyone of us and we can't still
believe our mother is with us with so much money donated by a
kind-hearted Saudi prince," Mendis said.
After her employer died, Fernando ran away from his home and sought
shelter at the Sri Lankan Embassy in Riyadh.
She told authorities that she had not been paid for 13 years.
Subsequently, she was transferred to the government-run Welfare Center
for Stranded Housemaids to be repatriated home.
In a gesture of goodwill, Prince Salman gave Fernando SR58,000 toward
her salary dues since the maid was unable to claim the money from her
deceased employer's family.
Fernando said she was 37 when she left the country to work as a
housemaid in Saudi Arabia.
"I had to undergo many difficulties and could not correspond with my
family as all my documents, including my passport, were destroyed by one
of my sponsor's children," she said.
"I was virtually on house arrest. I escaped from that house having
worked there for several years without payment and complained to the
embassy," she added.
She thanked Prince Salman for his magnanimity in paying her salary
dues. She also expressed gratitude to diplomats and officials at the Sri
Lankan mission in Riyadh for facilitating her return home.
Courtesy: Arab News |