well what is confusing is your claim of wink and nod and making assumptions.
This is as plain speak as I can state- In the US,
you have to pay US wages, if the person is working under a US work visa. you may think the indian govt is winking and nodding till the cows come home....
but it does not apply so within our laws. not for India not for anyone...
Secondly, I quoted for you above where it says others indian diplomats in the past + diplomats from other countries were also criminally charged.... you may not like it, but it is a fact
slumdog--- you mention the case of a filipino maid hired by the US diplomat in India. there is one case I know of ....
US diplomat in Mumbai pays his Filipina maid less than $3 per hour - The Times of India
You retarded moron. I quoted case of Top american diplomat in Japan ....
Do you understand difference between Tokyo and Mumbai ...India and japan ?
If not then go back to elementary school . Regression of milestones is not uncommon for mentally challened .
read post no # 97 you blind fool
" so why is then top US diplomat who desisted from paying locallly prevalent wages to his philipino maid in
Tokyo ..and when he was charged for abuse , visa fraud and similar offences by
Japanese officials ..why the great state department of great America shielded its diplomat .
Hypocrisy right ? "
Tokyo embassy U.S. diplomat identified as Thurmond Borden, had domestic troubles. The story is that in 1993, 40 year-old Lucia Martel was working as a domestic in Manila. In March of that same year, Mr. Borden was visiting the Philippines on vacation with his Filipino wife, and the couple was looking for a woman. Mr. and Mrs. Borden offered Lucia a monthly wage of about Y30,000 (USD300). To comply with the Japanese immigration regulations, a written contract was signed that contained very different language. The contract stated her working conditions as six days/week, eight hours/day, a monthly salary of Y150,000 (USD1500), and an overtime pay of 125%. The contract papers were submitted both to the U.S. Embassy and to the Japanese Immigration Bureau.
Lucia started working at Borden’s residence October 16, 1993. Despite her contract, she was forced to work from six in the morning to ten in the evening, and was not allowed to rest even on Christmas and New Years according to
reports.
On May 22, 1994, reports were that Lucia complained to Mrs. Borden and the latter confiscated Lucia’s original contract, return air-ticket and Alien Registration Certificate. This Certificate is very important for expatriates in Japan. It must be carried at all times and if caught without it, one may end up being taken into custody by the police. Lucia went to the Naka-ward municipal office to have a new card issued. The shocked office staff who heard her story contacted the police. A cop officer visited the Borden’s residence to take Lucia’s Registration Certificate back from Mrs. Borden. Mr. Borden, returning from his work, was said to have become enraged. He allegedly shouted, “Go back to the Philippines!” to Lucia. Lucia feared that she might be assaulted. She fled the residence taking none of her belongings except the clothes she was wearing.
Lucia eventually tried to sue the Borden’s, and organized protest marches outside the U.S. embassy. The State Department, however, claimed diplomatic immunity on Borden’s behalf and the Japanese legal system dropped the case. State Department
records list Borden now as the head of the Consular Section in Jakarta where, among other tasks, he has responsibility for issuing maid visas to U.S. diplomats’ domestic help bound for the U.S.
- See more at:
US Diplomat Enslaved Woman; Sadly, Not Uncommon Except in the Extreme | Ghosts of Tom Joad - Peter Van Buren