Posted on 12/19/2001 6:09:43 PM PST by Shermy
We don't care where you're from - you just can't do this sort of thing in this country -Jim Solomons, Orange County police
A Saudi princess studying English at a Florida university has been charged with beating up her maid and stealing electronic equipment worth around $6,000.
The maid of Princess Buniah al-Saud, a 41-year-old niece of Saudi Arabia's King Fahd, said her employer beat her, smashed her head against a wall and pushed her down a flight of stairs in their apartment.
Neighbours called police after the maid, Memet Ismiyati, came crying and injured from the building.
After being arrested and held one night in prison, the princess was released on bail of $5,000 and ordered to surrender her passport.
She is being charged with aggravated battery - which can carry a 15-year prison sentence - as well as theft and dealing in stolen property.
Police said several items, including a large-screen television, were missing from the apartment, which was leased to the princess by her chauffeur, Mohammed El Biyadi. The goods were later found in the homes of neighbours, who told police they had bought them from Princess Buniah.
"Apparently the princess had sold pretty much all the contents of that apartment," said police spokesman Jim Solomons. "She was, in fact, planning to leave the country."
Previous cases
The princess, who denies the charges, spent her night in prison at Orange County Jail. She appeared briefly before a judge in a blue prison outfit as bail was set.
Ms Ismiyati was treated at an Orange County hospital
By surrendering her passport, she has effectively lost the right to leave the country until the case is decided. According to the US immigration services, the princess is not entitled to diplomatic immunity because she was not in the country fulfilling a diplomatic function.
This is not the first time a Saudi princess has been caught in a bind over maid beating in Florida. In 1995, another Saudi princess, Princess Maha al-Sudairi, wife of the heir to the throne, was accused of beating a servant in Orange County whom she suspected of stealing $200,000 from her.
No charges were filed.
Princess Buniah is also the second princess this year to fall foul of foreign authorities. In February, another Saudi royal, Princess Hind al-Fassi, was found guilty in absentia by an Egyptian court of not paying for more than $1m worth of jewellery from a Cairo jewellery shop.
The princess was arrested in a local hotel
Ms Ismiyati was treated at an Orange County hospital
Methinks that the Saudi men send the b!tchie$t of their "princesses" out of their country in order to save their own sanity...
Didn't the Saudis execute some Philippino maids in the last couple of years? Don't remember what crime they'd committed.
Let's see ... 41 years old...married?... alone...ensconced in a university, allegedly to learn something...Does sound like they were trying to dump a problem child. How about the selling off of her chaufeur's things to raise cash?? Running short? Need to fence some items to get dough to buy nose candy?????
MANY WHO KNOW HER SAY SARAH Balabagan is sweetly innocent, a child quite unprepared for the cruel situation she faced in a strange land, more than 7,000 km from home. Only 15, barely able to read or write, and unwise to the ways of the world, says her mother, she felt driven by a single ambition: to rescue her family from the poverty and hunger of their life in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. So 17 months ago, she defied her parents' wishes and, after lying about her age, flew to the United Arab Emirates' sheikdom of Abu Dhabi to work as a domestic servant.
But Balabagan's dream of fortune and adventure was a mirage that dissolved into a bleak reality. Last month she was sentenced to death by firing squad for stabbing her employer after he allegedly raped her.
The case caused an international uproar. Human-rights and women's groups from Berlin to Kuala Lumpur joined Philippine President Fidel Ramos in showering the U.A.E. government with protests and appeals for clemency. Women demanding Sarah's freedom marched daily outside the U.A.E. embassy near Manila.
All the protests, however, had an impact. Sheik Zayed bin Sultan an-Nahyan, the President of the United Arab Emirates, a federation of seven sheikdoms, intervened in the case, and late last week the victim's family agreed to settle for compensation in the form of the payment of an undisclosed amount of "blood money"--an age-old Bedouin method of solving disputes among clans. The Islamic court then revoked the death sentence against the girl.
Despite the settlement, the case cast a spotlight on a dark practice throughout the Arabian peninsula: an almost medieval system of servitude that each year turns thousands of young women from underdeveloped Asian countries into virtual slaves for prosperous Arab families. The women are frequently lured to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the lesser emirates and sultanates by shady "employment agents" who offer them attractive-sounding jobs at relatively high pay. Once there, they learn that much of the money they initially earn--the going rate is $100 to $150 a month--goes to pay for their airfare and the employment agent's fee.
Worse, the maids find themselves in virtual bondage to their employers, who almost without exception confiscate the servants' passports to prevent them from walking out before fulfilling their typical two-year contract. It is common for the maids to be forced to work from dawn to midnight, seven days a week. Often they are fed scraps and leftovers, are beaten and verbally abused and, in the worst cases, raped and murdered. Only in the most egregious instances is an employer ever charged with sexual abuse or assault...[More at link above]
Video of the maid shows she clearly had the sh#@%t beat out of her; bruised and bloody, and barely able to walk, she was crying hysterically right after it happened.
Anyone in the hospitality industry knows this happens far more than it is reported around here. Orlando is a favorite spot for Saudi royals. Their behavior is atrocious. This princess must have been short on cash to have been living where she was, as most of them stay out at Disney hotels because Disney has its own police force (Reedy Creek). Things that happen at Disney are rarely reported in the press as for some very odd kink in the law, Disney crime records are sealed to the public. It was a miracle that the 1998 incident was reported in the press. I guess it had something to do with the off duty Orange County police officers who witnessed the incident. They were later disciplined for their lack of action when that particular Saudi "princess" beat the hell our of her servant in front of them. I hope they throw the book at this one. These people need to learn they can't get away with their illegal barbarous behavior in our country.
I don't think so. According to today's Jakarta post, she's Indonesian. Also, her name sounds Javanese. My wife almost shares the same name, Ismawati.
As for badly treating maids, this certainly doesn't stop with Saudi. I'd say 10-20 percent of all maids (servants) are either physically or mentally abused.
I'm lucky enough to have 2 brilliant maids at the moment, one live in and 1 live out. They are sisters and if you are interested in the average salary in Indonesia. Per month = $20-30.
most wealthy people (i'm not) have drivers too. Average per month= $50-70.
The reason I would never have a driver, is I LOVE driving here. It is a brilliant BUZZ.
Good night:-)
ORLANDO, Florida (AP) -- A Saudi princess was sued by her Indonesian maid on Wednesday who claims she was physically and mentally traumatized by Princess Buniah al-Saud.
An attorney for Ismiyati Suryono filed the lawsuit against the princess, seeking an undisclosed amount of money in punitive damages in Florida Circuit Court.
"She has been the victim of assault and battery and has suffered physically and emotionally," said Russell Troutman, the attorney.
Al-Saud, a niece of King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, was charged Monday with felony battery for allegedly hitting Suryono's head against a wall and pushing her down a staircase. Suryono is currently walking with a cane.
Al-Saud also was charged Tuesday with grand theft and dealing in stolen property for allegedly trying to sell electronics equipment and furniture belonging to a former driver. She is free on a $5,000 bond.
Her attorney, Bud Bennington, didn't return a phone call seeking comment.
In the lawsuit, Suryono accused al-Saud of hitting her several times during her employment. Suryono also said al-Saud had choked her once and verbally abused her.
The princess also purposely withheld wages from Suryono at different periods to keep her from escaping, according to the lawsuit.
Suryono was very vulnerable -- being in a foreign country, not knowing the language and having a "meek disposition," the lawsuit said.
The maid had "nowhere to go but to continue to endure repeated if not daily acts of violence by the defendant," the lawsuit said.
The princess had been living in Orlando while studying English.
During a bond hearing, she was told to surrender her passport and not to have any contact with the maid. Her attorney said she would return to Washington.
Al-Saud, 41, could get up to 15 years in prison if convicted of felony battery. She faces an additional 10 years in prison for the theft and stolen property charges.
Jakarta, sounds like you're in an interesting place in life. Could tell us about the reaction there to 911. Maybe post some info on your profile page about living in Indonesia.
Also, I'm curious as to the local reaction, if any, To Osama's video statement about Indonesia, the one released Nov. 3. Particularly:
"Let us examine the stand of the West and the United Nations in the developments in Indonesia when they moved to divide the largest country in the Islamic world in terms of population.
This criminal, Kofi Annan, was speaking publicly and putting pressure on the Indonesian government, telling it: You have 24 hours to divide and separate East Timor from Indonesia. Otherwise, we will be forced to send in military forces to separate it by force.
The crusader Australian forces were on Indonesian shores, and in fact they landed to separate East Timor, which is part of the Islamic world.
Therefore, we should view events not as separate links, but as links in a long series of conspiracies, a war of annihilation in the true sense of the word.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.