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Mariah Carey stiffed ‘24/7’ aide on overtime: suit

All she wants for Christmas is — payback!

A former staffer for Mariah Carey claims the pop diva acted like a slave-driving sweatshop boss — working her to the bone seven days a week without meal breaks or fair pay, according to a new lawsuit.

Ylser Oliver, 49, pulled 16-hour days for the demanding pop princess starting in March 2007 — on tasks ranging from tidying up the star’s Tribeca living room to packing her suitcases with performance gear and tending to her “personal needs,” according to the suit filed in Manhattan federal court.

But despite her hard work, she claims she never got a dime of overtime from the multimillionaire singer — who has churned out dozens of chart-toppers such as, “All I Want for Christmas,” “Heartbreaker” and “Hero.”

Oliver’s Cinderella-like list of duties also included traveling with the singer, answering phones and shopping for goodies to stock the star’s home, the court papers state.

She was also tasked with “caring for” the singer’s friends and family and arranging for services and repairs to Carey’s home — before quitting in June 2014, the documents state.

“My client put her family’s life on hold while tending to Mariah Carey’s family, and Mariah repaid her by underpaying her,” fumed her employment lawyer, Matthew Blit.

My client put her family’s life on hold while tending to Mariah Carey’s family, and Mariah repaid her by underpaying her.

 - Matthew Blit, employment lawyer

He added, “My client is a very hardworking woman who treated Mariah and her family like her own, working all hours of the day and night. Even celebrities are required to abide by the law.”

Oliver is suing for a “significant amount of money,” but Blit refused to give a dollar amount.

She was entitled to time-and-a-half pay when working more than 40 hours a week, the suit states.

“[Carey] should have been aware that . . . the practices were unlawful,” the lawsuit states.

It’s not the first time Carey has been accused of acting like a brat.

In October, she was accused of pulling her opening act, Australian singer Natalia, simply because Carey couldn’t stand the idea of going on after Natalia.

And in November, a lawsuit filed against her record label, Def Jam, revealed it costs a stunning $85,000 to prep the high-maintenance star for a photo shoot.

“I can’t comment on anything that I’m not aware of and we haven’t heard anything about this lawsuit,” said Carey spokeswoman Cindi Berger.

Oliver could not be reached immediately for comment.

Additional reporting by Natalie O’Neill and C.J. Sullivan