Pakistan has around 8.5 million informal domestic workers in the country, the vast majority of them undocumented. Small children, many under 10-year-old and working as ‘maids’ are seen countrywide caring for infants. Untold numbers toil in houses where they are not infrequently the subject of appalling abuses and there is a steady trickle of domestic workers, usually female, that are killed by their employers. The Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (SPARC) says that between April 2010 and December 2013, 16 children had died in this manner. The new bill is thus to be warmly welcomed, but it is going to be in its implementation that its efficacy will be judged. Elements of the bill challenge conventional and traditional norms of the employment of children, particularly that it gives employment rights to many who had none previously. No child under 14 shall be employed; and women will have an entitlement to maternity leave.
To fully implement the bill in letter and in spirit is going to be a mammoth task and will require considerable resources, both human and fiscal. This is a step in the right direction of bringing Pakistan into closer alignment with international standards relative to labour legislation. The challenge now is enforcement; otherwise this will be just another piece of worthless paper.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 22nd, 2014.
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