In the quiet military reservations of Saudi Arabia, a tragedy unfolded that brought two Filipina sisters, Gina Loriente (25) and Manilyn Loriente (28), to the brink of despair.
Separated by different cities but linked by shared nightmares, the sisters, who left their impoverished lives in Samar seeking a future, became victims of severe abuse and indecent assault by their employers and their sons.
The Beginning of the Nightmare
Gina and Manilyn, both dreaming of helping their farmer parents, secured contracts as domestic helpers in the Middle East in 2015, only to be deployed to different cities in Saudi Arabia—Gina to Riyadh and Manilyn to Jeddah.
The hardship began immediately for Gina in Riyadh. Within her first month, her male employer began making unwelcome advances. In the quiet of the night, after she finished cleaning, she would hear a soft knock on her door, only to open it and find her employer standing there with lewd intent.
Gina’s female employer was aware of her husband’s actions but chose to turn a blind eye. Gina was held captive, her cellphone confiscated, and she was only allowed access to it when sending remittances—always under surveillance.
She was terrorized with threats that if she reported the incidents, she would never return to the Philippines alive.
The terrifying situation continued for eight months until, one night, Gina found a moment’s opportunity. While the Arab couple slept, she escaped through the backyard, carrying only her broken cellphone and passport.
With the help of an Indonesian domestic worker she met briefly, Gina managed to reach the OWWA shelter in Jeddah, where she recounted her ordeal to the social workers.
The Coerced Captivity
Unbeknownst to Gina, her sister, Manilyn, was enduring an equally horrifying ordeal in Jeddah.
Manilyn’s employment began respectfully, but the situation deteriorated when the employer’s 26-year-old son, Yuseph, returned home.
Yuseph began his campaign of intimidation with intense staring and eventually advanced to silently entering her room at night, attempting an indecent assault.
When Manilyn bravely reported Yuseph to the female employer, she was met not with compassion but with threats. The employer accused Manilyn of lying and warned her that she would be imprisoned if she continued with her accusations.
Manilyn’s passport and cellphone were confiscated, and her every move was closely monitored.
Knowing she couldn’t rely on her employers, Manilyn secretly began collecting evidence, stashing indecent drawings and notes in Arabic under her bed, hoping the evidence would someday secure her freedom.
Her chance came when she overheard other domestic helpers talking about a Filipina who had successfully escaped from Riyadh. This news provided Manilyn with the strength and hope needed to plan her own escape.
However, her attempt was thwarted. As she slipped out the gate, the male employer caught her, physically assaulted her, and increased the confinement and abuse. The indecent assault by Yuseph continued multiple times.
The Sisters’ Reunion and the Systemic Pattern
Following Gina’s escape and testimony, the Philippine Embassy was alerted. Embassy officials initiated a search for Manilyn, quietly visiting the employer’s address.
The male employer vehemently denied Manilyn’s presence, claiming the helper had left months ago. However, officials noticed signs of deception.
Alerted by a faint sound, they discovered Manilyn hidden in a back room—pale, thin, and bearing fresh wounds and scars. Manilyn was rescued with the help of Saudi police and immediately taken to the same shelter where her sister, Gina, was recovering.
The reunion of the Loriente sisters after nearly a year was silent, tearful, and profound. They immediately provided separate affidavits.
The embassy staff noticed a disturbing similarity in their abusers’ surnames. Investigation confirmed that Gina’s male employer and Manilyn’s employer’s son, Yuseph, were cousins. Both families shared a systemic pattern of abuse toward Filipina domestic helpers and had a history of prior complaints.
The Embassy’s legal team launched a coordinated, aggressive criminal complaint against both Arab families, including charges of indecent assault, unlawful detention, and physical assault. The lawsuit also included the recruitment agency, which had been negligent in its background checks.
Manilyn’s secreted evidence—the notes and drawings—provided critical reinforcement to the sisters’ testimonies.
The Groundbreaking Verdict
The trial in the Saudi Arabian court in Jeddah progressed with unprecedented speed and rigor.
In 2018, the court delivered a groundbreaking verdict: the male perpetrators—Gina’s employer and Manilyn’s employer’s son, Yuseph—were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for their crimes.
The female employers and other knowing family members were also convicted and sentenced to no less than 10 years imprisonment for unlawful detention and complicity in the abuse. Both families were permanently blacklisted from hiring foreign domestic helpers.
The Loriente sisters were repatriated to the Philippines. Supported by government assistance, they started a new business, finally freed from the cycle of exploitation.
The verdict stands as a monumental victory, proving that even the most powerful families are not immune to justice and that the abuse of domestic helpers will be met with the full force of the law.
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