Former counsellor at Changi Prison sentenced to 7 months' jail for maid abuse
SINGAPORE – A woman who slapped her maid so hard that the domestic worker suffered a temporary loss of hearing was sentenced to seven months’ jail on Wednesday (April 14).
Gayathri Iyer, 51, was convicted in February following a trial of two counts of abusing her maid – Myanmar national Thang Khaw Lam.
The 30-year-old victim suffered hearing loss in her left ear for at least a month. She later recovered from her injuries and was found to have normal hearing.
Ms Thang Khaw Lam started working for Gayathri’s family in June 2017 at the Pebble Bay condominium in Tanjong Rhu Road.
On Oct 27 that year, the housewife hit the maid’s shoulder after the domestic worker used the word “mah” when talking to her.
Using a mobile phone, Ms Thang Khaw Lam took photographs of the bruises, which were at the top of her shoulder and extended slightly to her back.
The second incident happened on Dec 7 that year, when Gayathri slapped Ms Thang Khaw Lam for failing to wake up her son who was then in national service.
The incident happened at around 5.40am when the domestic worker was doing the laundry.
Gayathri slapped the maid twice on her left ear and once on her right.
As a result, the maid said she could not hear anything in her left ear for the whole day.
About five days after the incident, she ran from Gayathri’s home and told the police about her ordeal. She recovered from her injuries by Sept 5, 2018.
District Judge Tan Jen Tse acquitted Gayathri of two other assault charges involving the maid, finding the domestic worker’s evidence in these instances not “unusually convincing”.
On Wednesday, Deputy Public Prosecutor Tan Ee Kuan urged the court to jail the ex-counsellor at Changi Prison for nine months, saying there was an oppressive relationship between the maid and employer.
Gayathri’s lawyer Kalidass Murugaiyan asked the court for a sentence of nine weeks, saying his client used to be a counsellor at Changi Prison, and had pledged to donate all of her organs despite being a Hindu.
District Judge Tan Jen Tse, in sentencing Gayathri to seven months’ jail, said the prosecution had not proven beyond reasonable doubt that there was a sustained pattern of abuse, and he was not able to find that the victim had suffered psychological harm.
He also ordered Gayathri to make compensation of about $5,330 to the maid.
The accused is appealing against the sentence, and is on bail for $15,000.
For each count of assaulting a maid, she could have been jailed for up to three years and fined up to $7,500.
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