2 face trial in Singapore for abusing Pinay helper
A 43-year-old Singaporean and her mother are facing trial for abusing their Filipina maid in 2012, a report on Strait Times said Tuesday.
The report said Chua Siew Peng is facing trial for “wrongfully confining” Jonna Memeje Muegue at their condominium on October 30, 2012.
On the other hand, Chua's mother, 74-year-old Lum Wai Lui, is accused of pulling Muegue's hair, knocking her head on the wall and pouring bleach on her hands and arms on October 29, 2012.
The district court is set to hand down the verdict on Lui next month, the report said.
It added that the incident started when Muegue ate fish that was not meant for her.
Muegue was able to escape her employers after jumping out of her sixth-floor room and landing on the fifth-floor rooftop of a building at the Bukit Timah Road complex, which resulted in her sustaining a broken leg, the report said.
Muegue, 26, was rushed to the hospital and admitted to a nursing home after being referred to the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics.
She told the district court handling her case that she was treated well when she started work for the family in December 2011, although she was never given the key to the unit's door and gate. —Rie Takumi/KBK, GMA News
The report said Chua Siew Peng is facing trial for “wrongfully confining” Jonna Memeje Muegue at their condominium on October 30, 2012.
On the other hand, Chua's mother, 74-year-old Lum Wai Lui, is accused of pulling Muegue's hair, knocking her head on the wall and pouring bleach on her hands and arms on October 29, 2012.
The district court is set to hand down the verdict on Lui next month, the report said.
It added that the incident started when Muegue ate fish that was not meant for her.
Muegue was able to escape her employers after jumping out of her sixth-floor room and landing on the fifth-floor rooftop of a building at the Bukit Timah Road complex, which resulted in her sustaining a broken leg, the report said.
Muegue, 26, was rushed to the hospital and admitted to a nursing home after being referred to the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics.
She told the district court handling her case that she was treated well when she started work for the family in December 2011, although she was never given the key to the unit's door and gate. —Rie Takumi/KBK, GMA News
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