Coronavirus: Women arrested for begging after losing jobs in pandemic repatriated

Police have waived fines and covered the travel costs of the trio

Three women who resorted to begging after falling on hard times during the coronavirus pandemic are to be released and flown home.

The women, two from Bangladesh and one from Ethiopia, were part-time house cleaners until the onset of the outbreak led to work drying up.

Unable to pay for their living expenses, they decided to beg on the streets of Sharjah.

All three were arrested by police. The law against begging, which includes fines and jail terms for those who break it, partly aims to tackle professional gangs recruiting people from outside the country to come and work as beggars. For those individuals who are caught begging because they have fallen on hard times, the authorities can at their own discretion, treat them more leniently than the law proscribes.

Quote

Sharjah Police settled their fines, purchased their tickets and they underwent Covid-19 tests as part of their travel procedures

Brig Ahmad Shuhail

After spending months in prison awaiting trial, police made the decision to free the trio without charges and pay for their flights home.

The women, who will be flown to their home countries next week, told The National how grateful they were to be given a fresh start.

The women could not be fully named in line with official guidance.

Tameesh, from Ethiopia, had absconded from the agency that brought her to the UAE three years ago.

“The first sponsor I worked for as a maid, sent me back to the recruitment agency because they believed I was too old for the job,” she said.

“Then for a whole year, I was sent to several other sponsors who all didn’t want me for the same reason,”

This browser does not support the video element.

Then the 40-year-old mother of three earned a living by cleaning homes, and stayed in an apartment she shared with a number of other women.

But when the coronavirus hit, no families were asking for her services and she was left struggling for cash.

“I couldn’t pay rent, and one Friday I thought I beg. I was caught by police that same day,” she said.

She spent four months in detention before being informed she would face no charges.

She was then told police would her they would cover her overstay fines and travel costs.

She is now looking forward to being reunited with family back home.

“I will finally see my daughters who must think I was dead because I haven’t been able to call them for the past four months,” she said.

Koremon, 60, came to the country four years ago and she too absconded from her sponsor and worked in part time cleaning.

“Because of coronavirus, I couldn’t work and make money so I couldn’t cover my living costs,” said the Bangladeshi citizen.

Koremon said she was diabetic and could not afford her medication, so went out begging but was arrested.

After two and a half months in prison, she was told she would be released.

“When police said they bought me a flight ticket, I was filled with joy because like my fellow inmates, I didn’t have cash to buy one,” she said.

Rasheeda, who is also from Bangladesh, is looking forward to returning home.

“I don’t know my real age, my parents died when I was very young and I had no one to tell me when I was born,” she said.

She was also arrested for begging after people stopped calling her to come clean their homes due to the pandemic.

The decision to release the women and arrange for their return back home was made by Sharjah Police in celebration of the International Day of Older Persons.

Being the only three inmates detained for begging was another reason the force decided to act.

“Sharjah Police settled their fines, purchased their tickets and they underwent Covid-19 tests as part of their travel procedures next week,” said Brig Ahmad Shuhail, director general of Sharjah's prisons.

Life in a Dubai prison during a pandemic:

Updated: October 06, 2020, 3:30 PM