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Two years prior, a 7.8-greatness quake pulverized Sita Kumal's home in Nepal's Gorkha region — 65 miles from the capital Kathmandu and the territory hardest hit by the catastrophe. Kumal, 27, was at that point attempting to pay her two children's educational cost expenses, and a $7,000 credit for her impaired spouse's therapeutic care, so there was no cash to modify. She had gotten notification from different villagers that she could earn substantial sums of money working in the United Arab Emirates or Malaysia, where her sibling worked. So last April, she acknowledged the offer of a neighborhood operator to discover her a vocation as a housemaid in Dubai, where she'd procure around $290 a month. 


Yet, Kumal's adventure took her rather to Saudi Arabia — by method for India, Sri Lanka and Kuwait. She says she persisted months of physical mishandle on account of her managers, who regularly denied her sustenance and withheld her pay. "They would not enable me to return," she reads a clock. "They had gotten me from a specialist." 


Kumal, who describes her story from the workplaces of the General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions, a work association that additionally helps transient specialists escape injurious business, says she was advised to mislead movement officers before getting onto a flight from Delhi to Sri Lanka. "At the point when police at the air terminal ask you, disclose to them we're voyagers going to the sanctuaries," she was told. Kumal says she remained with 30 other Nepali ladies in two swarmed spaces for 10 days until the specialist advised her there was an issue with the visa for the UAE, so she would go to Kuwait. Following 20 days of cleaning toilets at a private home, Kumal was driven during that time to another house in Sakakah, a city in northwestern Saudi Arabia.

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