US Convicts and Jails Egyptian
Couple for Human Trafficking
US jails Egypt pair for slavery
BBC Online
Tuesday,
24 October 2006—Two Egyptians have been
jailed by a US court after pleading guilty to enslaving a 10-year-old
Egyptian girl at their south California home.
Abdel Nasser Ibrahim
was given three years in prison while his ex-wife, Amal Motelib,
received a 22-month sentence.
They
were also ordered to pay more than $76,000 (£40,500)
to the girl for two years of forced labour during which she
served the couple's family of seven.
She worked 16-hour days
and was denied access to education, prosecutors said.
Ibrahim
and Motelib will be deported after serving their sentences,
officials said."The
young victim in this case was subject to inhumane conditions
that included both physical and verbal abuse," US Attorney
Debra Wong Yang said.
The girl, who is now
16, has been granted a visa allowing her to stay in the US.
U.S. accuses
Egyptian couple of human trafficking
By Daily Star Egypt
staff
First Published: July 1, 2006
Couple residing in California
pleads guilty to holding a girl in involuntary servitude
CAIRO:
A former husband and wife, Egyptian nationals residing in Southern
California in the U.S., pleaded guilty on Thursday to federal
charges of holding an Egyptian girl as a “slave” in
their home. She arrived in the U.S. in August of 2000 with
the couple.
An indictment charged
Abdel Nasser Eid Youssef Ibrahim, 45, and Amal Ahmed Ewis-Abd
Motelib, 43, with two counts of human trafficking, harboring
an illegal immigrant and conspiracy.
The
pair was accused of bringing the girl (whose name has not been
released due to her status as a minor) into the United States
in August 2000 and forcing her to work under harsh conditions
for no pay. She
was ordered to clean their Irvine home and take care of their
five children.
The American prosecutors
claimed that the girl received no compensation during her 20
months working for the couple. They allege that she was forced
to sleep in a 12-by-8-foot converted area of the family's garage,
had her passport taken away, was forbidden from playing outside
and was subject to verbal and physical abuse.
As part of their agreement,
Ibrahim and Motelib each pleaded guilty to conspiracy, holding
a person in involuntary servitude through force or coercion,
obtaining labor through unlawful force or coercion and harboring
an illegal alien.
"We did a mistake
here in the United States of America because we didn't respect
the law," Motelib said through her translator during a hearing
before U.S. District Judge James V. Selna. "At that time
we were new here,” reported local press.
Both are expected to
receive three years in prison when they are sentenced on Oct.
23, 2006. As a condition of the plea, the pair agreed to pay
$101,516 in restitution to the girl.
The
girl, who is now 16 but was only 12 when authorities found
her in April 2002, will be allowed to stay in the United States,
said U.S. Attorney Debra Wong Yang. She is currently living
with a foster family in Southern California and attending a
public high school where "she
is doing great," according to a statement made by Assistant
U.S. Atty. Robert J. Keenan to the Los Angeles Times. She has
received a green card granting her permanent residency in the
U.S.
As part of the plea deal,
Ibrahim and Motelib must pay the girl about $100,000 in restitution
and back wages. Both will be sentenced on Oct. 23.
Though
hiring young children as live-in domestic help is not uncommon
in Egypt, they are usually paid a salary and are not generally
ill treated.
The U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement office investigated the case after
local officials received an anonymous tip about the girl.