Hong Kong woman found guilty in maid torture case

Charges included grievous bodily harm and criminal intimidation after photos of injuries circulated among Indonesians.

Erwiana Sulistyaningsih
Images of Sulistyaningsih's injuries circulated around Hong Kong's Indonesian community last year [Reuters]

A Hong Kong woman accused of torturing her Indonesian maid has been convicted on a number charges, including assault, in a case that sparked outrage for the scale of its brutality.

A judge on Tuesday found Law Wan-tung guilty of 18 charges, including grievous bodily harm, criminal intimidation and failure to pay wages or give time off work to Erwiana Sulistyaningsih.

Her case highlighted the vulnerabilities of migrants working as domestic staff across Asia and the Middle East.

It gained widespread attention about a year ago after photos of Sulistyaningsih’s injuries circulated among Indonesians in Hong Kong.

They showed her face, hands and legs covered with scabs and lacerations, and blackened, peeling skin around her feet.

District Court Judge Amanda Woodcock said that based on the testimony by the maid and other witnesses, “I am sure the defendant did assault, wound and threaten [Sulistyaningsih] as charged”.

The court heard that Law punched Sulistyaningsih in the mouth, fracturing some teeth; jammed a metal vacuum cleaner tube in her mouth, cutting her lip; and hit her on the back with a feather duster when she was sleeping.

Law also forced Sulistyaningsih to stand naked in the bathroom during winter while she splashed water on and pointed a fan at her.

Law’s defence accused the former maid and another two domestic helpers involved in the case of being “opportunistic”, and that the injuries could have been caused by accidents, but Woodcock in her ruling dismissed those claims as “desperate and fanciful”.

Outstanding wages

Sulistyaningsih, who worked for Law for about eight months starting in June 2013, also was not allowed any days off and was not paid her salary.

Law was found not guilty of two other charges. She was ordered to pay about $3,700 in outstanding wages to Sulistyaningsih. Law was remanded into custody and is scheduled to be sentenced on February 27.

After the verdict, supporters applauded the diminutive Sulistyaningsih, who was in court. She told reporters outside that she was happy “because I will get the justice from Hong Kong”.

There are about 330,000 foreign domestic helpers working in Hong Kong, almost all female and most from the Philippines or Indonesia, earning a minimum wage of about $500 a month.

Source: News Agencies