Honorary Consulate of the Gambia in Beirut
Address | Behind Embassy of Iran, opposite to Yemen Embassy Bir Hassan Beirut Lebanon |
---|---|
Phone | local: international: |
Address | Behind Embassy of Iran, opposite to Yemen Embassy Bir Hassan Beirut Lebanon |
---|---|
Phone | local: international: |
Comments on this Honorary Consulate
Take that responsibility.
The history will remember what you did or did not do.
They are being used as slaves and forced in to prostitution. They are refucesed healthcare.
It is time you help the Gambian women come home. It is your responsibility as the Gambian embassy.
Hello,
In every devastating accident that cost people’s life’s, there is always a group of people that suffers the most and also gets forgotten by society. The blast in Beirut is an awful incident and I pray for you. But the ones that suffers the most right know is the Gambian girls who is sold as slaves in Beirut. They have no home, no food, no shelter. I need you to take action and help the women and girls to get home to Gambia. Don’t forget to fight for everyone. Black lives matter, please take action.
Help the black domestic workers home. You’ve neglect their cry for help and they are suffering.
There are numerous of stories telling us about black people being refused medical help, abuse, trafficking and not getting help to go back home.
I am reading about black girls sold as slaves and the stories never stops coming! It’s horrifying!
Stories about your government telling them to prostitute themselves for money, putting themselves in lethal danger.
Please help them go home immediately, they have been begging you for help and without your response.
They are greatly missed back home. We want to read new about them being safe hom. All of them!!
Support Gambian women in Lebanon!
It has come to my attention that
Gambian women who are seeking your help are refused any support by your consulate. It is absolutely unacceptable of an embassy or honorary consulate to deny help & support to those people it is set up to help.
These awful circumstances that are surrounding not only Gambian women but women from other African countries in Lebanon should be of your highest priorities to solve.
As the Gambian consulate you have a responsibility to help these women and it is your duty to make sure that they get back home safe. I can’t believe that you’re telling the girls to prostitute themselves to buy a ticket. This is so inhumane. These women are in need of your help!!! Please do something!
There are a lot of Gambian women who were promised work in Lebanon, but instead were met with slavery. They want to go home, but the Lebanese who took them to Lebanon took their money and passports, so they can’t. As they are Gambian citizens, and HUMAN BEINGS, your duty is to bring them home.
I, as many others, demand you to take your responsibility, use your power and serve justice to ALL of the many HUMAN migrant workers who’ve come to Lebanon to financially support their families. Not only have they been abused and enslaved under their employers, they are now being denied their right to return home to their families.
They are being left on the streets of Lebanon, without basic necessities and security.
The duty of the Gambian embassy, is to support these human beings and help them return to their home countries. Don’t let the Kafala system control your human morals.
Abolish the system - human rights must be the law.
I am writing to urge you to help the Gambian women in Lebanon. They and other african women were suffering long before the recent tragic events that took place in Beirut. Help these women return to their homes. Enough is enough.
Post a comment on this page
We invite you to share your experiences with the Gambian Honorary Consulate — obtaining visas and other services, locating the building, and so on. Your comments may be seen by the public, so please do not include private information.
This web site is not operated by the Honorary Consulate and your comments and questions will not necessarily be seen by its staff. Please note that this is not a forum for broad debate about the foreign policy of the Gambia, and such topics will be deleted.