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    Civil rights in Chile: Maid refuses to get on bus

    CHICUREO, Chile (AP) — Felicita Pinto arrived early at the gates of the luxurious community where she labors as a maid, but the minibus to her employer's home was late. So she decided to walk six blocks to work, on streets lined with broad lawns and imposing homes.

    Security guards quickly chased her down and forced the 57-year-old widow back to the gate. Pinto's employer protested, as he had before, against the community bylaws that forbid servants to move at will.

    Pinto's simple stroll helped set off national soul-searching over discrimination and mistreatment of domestic workers across Chile, where leaders ache to be accepted as representing an enlightened, developed nation. Local news media heard of the case and outrage followed when another homeowner in the El Algarrobal II development sought to justify the restrictions.

    "Can you imagine what it would be like here if all the maids were walking outside, all the workers walking in the street and their children on bicycles?" neighbor Ines Perez told a local television channel.

    Her comments prompted such a wave of insults and threats that Perez was forced to close her Facebook page.

    Discrimination toward domestic workers is among the more entrenched social ills in Latin America and beyond. In luxury complexes just south of Peru's capital, maids can't swim in the ocean until their employers have left the water. In Mexico City, some luxury restaurants prohibit maids from sitting down to eat and some high-rises force workers to take the service elevators.

    In today's Chile, however, human rights activists are challenging low pay, long hours and discrimination that afflict domestic workers. And so Pinto's decision to skip the bus has lit debate on social networks and has filled newspaper pages and radio and TV broadcasts with commentary. Thousands signed on to an Internet campaign against the subdivision's protocols, and about 20 people demonstrated in front of the gates on Saturday, some dressed as zombies in maid uniforms.

    Pinto said the rules are humiliating.

    "I feel just as if was a prisoner, a delinquent, a thief," Pinto told the Associated Press, describing several encounters with the guards.

    Other workers are complaining as well.

    Shortly before Pinto's rebellion became public, a nanny who works nearby in the Brisas de Chicureo Golf Club wasn't allowed to enter a pool with the 3-year-old girl she watches because she wasn't wearing the traditional maid's apron that all domestic workers are required to wear on the property. Chile's domestic workers union sued, and an appellate court on Jan. 5 granted an injunction suspending the uniform rule.

    Edith Alonso, a maid in a nearby gated community, was among those protesting Saturday. She said she has got a good position now, but with a previous employer, "I suffered hunger, they counted every piece of fruit and bread, they made special food for themselves and forgot about the maid."

    The administration of El Algarrobal II did not respond to requests from the AP for comment, but in an email to Pinto's employer, British shipping executive Bruce Taylor, it argued that maids, nannies, waiters, gardeners, construction workers and pool cleaners must ride the minibus to keep them from "committing robberies or providing information relevant to the privacy of other neighbors on their way to the house where they say they work."

    There are more than 250 luxury homes in the complex, one of many gated communities in Chicureo, which 15 years ago was a bucolic rural town just north of the capital. Now, Chicureo has expensive private schools, a private health clinic and a walled-off toll highway that links it to other wealthy suburbs without exits to surrounding poor- and middle-class neighborhoods.

    It's not easy to reach the town using public transportation, so the gated communities provide a refuge of sorts from the turmoil, traffic and crime that Chileans in other parts of the sprawling capital suffer. Still, as many as 700 workers a day enter El Algarrobal II. And until this month, each paid the equivalent of 60 cents each way for the minibus ride.

    News about Pinto's complaints prompted the administration to suspend the fees.

    Pinto's latest act of civil disobedience in December wasn't her first. Taylor said that several months earlier, she and his gardener, Claudio Marquez, refused to wait for the minibus and began to walk, "but the guards shoved her into a security vehicle, and kicked Claudio, who decided to quit" rather than submit, Taylor told the AP. Before that, still another gardener had been beaten by the guards and forced into a vehicle, he said in court papers.

    Taylor has sued to overturn the bylaw against letting servants walk in the community, but judges have turned him down, saying the administrators have not acted illegally or arbitrarily, and that the rules were supported by a majority of the residents.

    "The justice system didn't want to rule on the heart of the matter, the discrimination, and so other home owners here feel like they can do whatever they want," Taylor said.

    And so Taylor has committed his own act of civil disobedience: He went to a notary and ceded part of his property to his maid — it's a lovely corner surrounded with fruit trees where he's building a lake for swans — to support his argument that Pinto should be allowed to walk freely in the streets.

    While Taylor has lost in court, guards in recent weeks have allowed Pinto to walk to work, though others remain forbidden and she fears her exception will disappear once attention dies down.

    The Chilean labor rights group Justa Causa — "Just Cause" — has now joined Pinto's cause. The group's lawyer, Nicolas Pavez, said Saturday that its last appeal has been turned down in the courts. Now it plans to accuse Chile before the InterAmerican Court of Human Rights of violating anti-discrimination treaties.

    Meanwhile, other maids are coming forward, and Justa Causa is preparing lawsuits for them as well, Pavez said.

    Marta Lagos, who directs the international Latinobarometro survey, said "Chile is an extremely tolerant country in terms of diversity. But having solidarity with your equals is one thing, and another is tolerance toward people who are different. This country is segmented, segregated: there are workers, the poor, and the rich, and each one of these segments is seen as bad by the other."

    ___

    Follow Eva Vergara on Twitter at http://twitter.com/evergaraap

     
    • Edward T D  •  Orlando, Florida  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      I moved from the U.S. to Colombia Siixteen years ago. I marriied a woman who worked as a domestic. Why? Because I never forgot where I came from. We were dirt poor. It was a great decision. We have been married fifteen years. She is a wonderful women, a great wife, mother and sister to her brothers and sisters. I couldn't ask for better. The rich people here accept me, however they still think that my wife is below them. Actually, I do not hang out with rich people. I am well off financially. They just turn me off. We help the poor here with food & clothing. It is the right and moral thing to do.
    • Hueraso  •  Sacramento, California  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Felicita Pinto: the Chilena Rosa Parks.
    • Big Red 1  •  Herndon, Virginia  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      God bless her and Bruce Taylor trying to the right thing by letting all those people have some dignity!
    • Bob  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Let the poor people of the world be heard.
    • Hello Again  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      "Perez was forced to close her Facebook page."

      Oh no!!! Not close her Facebook page...how ever will she survive?
    • Christy L. Wright  •  Barnstable, Massachusetts  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Just what do they think the workers talk about at their Sunday barbeques? I'm betting it isn't about how much respect they get while doing all the housework, yardwork and chilcare!
    • maximus  •  Waterbury, Connecticut  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Why all the outrage? When I worked as an elevator operator in a 5th ave. cop building, maids had to use filthy service elevators!
    • Idahome  •  Coeur D'Alene, Idaho  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Bruce Taylor is the bad guy here - the era of British colonization is over. Good for Felicita Pinto for standing up to prejudices against her -IN HER OWN COUNTRY. Chile - what about you as a government that you would surrender your sovereignty this way?
    • wow  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      it seems that we are moving toward that direction!?
    • diggit  •  San Diego, California  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Don't believe it happens in the us? Drive a junk or low cost car through wealthy neighborhoods in the US. See if you don't get illegally stopped and or seached by local law enforcement.
    • just sayin'  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      Should she come here and be part of a waitress sandwich? There is no part of the world where outrages don't exist. The human race has made a good deal of progress but it still has a long way to go.
    • Mild Bill  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      They should all not show up for work for a week!! No Food,No Cleaning,No Take Care Of Your Kids,let them do it for themselves for a while!!! Lets see if they like it? Are maybe they should treat there maid better!! I dislike people who think they are better than you because they have more wealth! Take their wealth away,they are just like everybody else,no better,no worse!! Have A Nice Day!!
    • Spaz  •  Hampton, Virginia  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I'm sure the employers do a back ground check on their employees. So what are they afraid of? All she wanted to do was get to work after missing the minibus. I like how her employer Taylor ceded some of his property to her. Good luck in there fight.
    • Albion  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      No one should think that this is just a "capitalist" sin. I have seen in the Nicaraguan city of Granada a well known Sandinista leader having a full lunch with his family, with ample servings of food and drink in a not too shoddy restaurant, while their uniformed maid was made to wait at the door standing in the sun.
    • ThePeeper  •  Pleasanton, California  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      "Can you imagine what it would be like here if all the maids were walking outside, all the workers walking in the street and their children on bicycles?" neighbor Ines Perez told a
      local television channel.

      Yes, I can! It would be like the real world. Not the phony boloney world you live in. Heaven forbid that the folks who make your world possible are seen AND heard at the same time...and with their kids...what IS this world coming to???
    • mhm  •  1 mth 2 days ago
      I have mixed feelings on this. It is a gated community. I think that ID should have been enough to let her walk to her place of employment and she should never have been forced into a vehicle. I also have no trouble with employees taking the Sevice Elevator as long as they are free to take the regular elevator when they are out of uniform.
    • Tennerson  •  Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago  •  29 days ago
      1% of the American Christian population has more money than the rest of 99%?
      1% of the American Christian population has more money than the rest of 99% !
      Something wrong in this Christian country. The poor give their money to their revered pastors and priests.
      In Islam, people have to give the tithe directly in the hands of the poor without even the presence of any Mosque leader or official.
      In Christian-lands, people give the tithe to their rich pastors and priests !
      thank you Jesus for spreading such greed among your followers.
    • Dana  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      This is like an HOA gone wild in latin America set up by the community. Obviously a well to do community. It is a sad time in our world when our rights can be thrown away so easily by the subdivisions that have preformed HOAs that require you to sign a contract or you cannot buy a home in that subdivision. Then they rule the home owners like the Nazi SS. Bank owned home can fall into dis repair and nothing is said. Some home owners are required to the strictist sometimes ridiculous standards and others get away with minimum standards.
      HOAs are an insult to our constitutional rights but they are almost unavoidable now days.
    • jeffrn  •  Hyde Park, Massachusetts  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Sounds like the future of America too me
    • K  •  Wilmington, North Carolina  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Heavens forbid they let maids, nannies, gardners and other hired help walk freely around their compound. They may conspire to rob these people of their riches or maybe take a peice of steak or hamburger home with them. It also just doesn't look good that the hired help is allowed to walk freely in public without a leash. Who do these people think they are? Next thing you know, they will be trying to get people to accept them as full humans. They must make these people ride the minibus because they must keep them from "committing robberies. You know "Those people will steal anything that's not nailed down". It's not that they want to discriminate against those people but they must keep them segmented from the rich and from the children of the rich that they were hired to care for. Lots of sense that makes.
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