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Child Domestic Labour in Pakistan

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Title: Child Domestic Labour in Pakistan


1
Child Domestic Labour in Pakistan
Conference By SPAARC Islamabad December 4th,
2006 Presentation by Baela Raza Jamil
2
Presentation
  • Definition and Scale of CDL
  • Field Experience in prevention and withdrawal-
    service delivery..
  • Best Practices
  • Images of Violence Against Children
  • CDL and Violence Against Children ..Framework of
    Research and Conceptualization
  • Legislation
  • Media /Communication Campaign
  • Recommendations
  • Recent Case Studies on CDL

3
Definition
  • Child Domestic Labour refers to the situation
    where children (upto 18 years) perform domestic
    tasks, not in their own homes but in the home of
    a third party or employer under exploitative
    circumstances.
  • Rights of children engaged in this particular
    kind of labour have never received their due
    recognition neither by the government nor by the
    civil society. This negligence is due to the
    hidden nature of this form of labour. Due to the
    invisible nature of CDL, children are vulnerable
    to many violations of their rights including
    health, education and other facilities necessary
    for full development of their personality .
  • There is a gender dimension to CDL adversely
    affecting girls and boys depending upon the
    local context where girls or boys may be
    preferred for CDL.

4
Child Domestic Labour in Pakistan
  • 1993 Islamabad Survey one in every sixth
    household employed at least one CDL. In 2004
    every fourth household engaged children in
    personal social service
  • Almost 26 urban households are engaging CDLs
    not restricted to elite homes but also non-elite
    lower middle class households
  • With some 50 population now living at
    poverty/vulnerable levels, the number of children
    in CDL may be increasing

(Source SPARC(2004), Rapid Assessment on CDL in
selected locations of Pakistan
5
CDL Project 2005-2006 ITA
  • Total numbers enrolled 1006 Girls 75
  • Total regular students 70
  • Mainstreamed after 5 months 25
  • Mainstreamed after 18 months 57
  • Drop Out 14
  • Pre-Vocational Training 344
  • (253 students 91 mothers) 34
  • Number of Classes covered Nil to Gr. 7
    literacy
  • Government Schools for CDL 6 Rented 4

6
SDPI SURVEY 2005/06 IMPACT OF CDL Project
  • Salient Features of the Survey Childrens
    Responses
  • The desire of all working children to be enrolled
    in full time schooling is high.
  • The desire for education is high but expectations
    of achieving that level is considerably lower
    than the desire.
  • 60 children said they dont learn enough by only
    attending school and complained that there is no
    quiet space at home to concentrate on studies and
    homework.
  • 80 children do domestic work to earn a living
    of these, 70 are girls.
  • 44 were unwilling workers 40 were willing
    whereas 12 were convinced by their parents to
    begin waged work.
  • 50 said they work due to poverty 38 said it
    adds to their family income others said that
    illness or death of a family member compelled
    them to work or to pay off loans.
  • A majority felt that the work they do will not
    be any use to them in the future and 48 felt
    that they learn nothing from the work they do.

7
Contd SDPI Results
  • Gendered and age context of helping with
    homework sisters, mothers followed by brother
    and father.
  • 45 said they feel tired in school
  • Of 35 respondents who normally feel tired, a
    majority of them was those children who study,
    work and do domestic work, followed by those that
    study and work
  • Slightly less than a half of the total
    respondents that is 47 said that they have
    health problems. A majority of them was those
    children that study, work and do domestic work,
    followed by those who study and work. Stomach
    pain was the most commonly reported illness.
  • When asked why they have health problems a
    majority replied they do not know while some
    reported that it is due to over work, beyond
    their capacity. And others said that the economic
    activity that they started earlier on in life had
    this impact.
  • A majority of children said that they like to
    play with their friends and like to watch
    television. Many reported these two activities as
    their favorite activities while some others said
    they like music and singing.
  • Over 80 children said they have friends and like
    to play with their friends.

8
Best Practices in Child Domestic Labor (CDL)
Project
  • Idara-e-Taleem-o-Aagahi (ITA)
  • Pakistan

9
  • A high level of mainstreaming in formal schools
    (govt and non state) 57
  • Use of Govt schools for CDL Aagahi centres and
    also vocational centres
  • Individualized Education Profiles for each child
    to track and mainstream
  • Health program both preventive and referrals
  • Multi-level learning of multi age CDLs
  • Promotion and use of ICTs
  • Pre-Vocational Skills Certifcation and Public
    Private Partnership with City District Govts
    MSWSE
  • CDL Toolkit A Comprehensive document with tools,
    MoUs etc on CDL for replication elsewhere and
    capacity building

10
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12
Definition of Violence Violence takes place when
someone uses their strength or their position of
power to hurt someone else on purpose, not by
accident. Violence includes threats of violence,
and acts which could possibly cause harm, as well
as those that actually do. The harm involved can
be to a persons mind and their general health
and well-being, as well as to their
body. Violence also includes deliberate harm
people do to themselves, including killing
themselves. UN Secretary Generals Global Study
on Violence Against Children 2006
13
Child Domestic Labor or the Continuum Violence..
Re- conceptualizing CDL
14
  • Estimates from studies of WHO, UNICEF and ILO
    reveal the following facts
  • 53,000 Children have been subjected to homicide
    in 2002 alone
  • 20-65 children reported abuse verbal and/or
    physical in past 30 days.
  • 150 million and 73 million boys under 18
    experienced forced sexual intercourse and forms
    of sexual violence
  • 218 million children were involved in child labor
    and of these 126 million were in hazardous work.
    And 5.7 million in forced or bonded labor, 1.8
    million in prostitution and pornography and 1.2
    million in trafficking. Although child labor
    has reduced by 11 and 25 fewer were in
    hazardous conditions.
  • Gender, age level and economic characteristics of
    children and their family play a significant role
    in the types of violence against children as
    found in the global study.
  • UN Secretary Generals Global Study on Violence
    Against Children 2006

15
Legislation for CDL
  • Under an Action Program of IPEC in 2003 a draft
    law was formulated with the MoSW through a
    consultant. This legislation was drafted upon the
    request of the ministry itself. To take this
    process further, in order to formulate and
    provide legal framework for regulating CDL in the
    country, Parliamentarian Commission for Human
    Rights (PCHR), Pakistan and ILO organized
    seminars country wide. During these seminars,
    PCHR and ILO were successful to get consensus of
    opinion that CDL is a real issue in child labour
    and must be regularized by introduction of
    appropriate legislation with comprehensive
    implementation mechanism. However, no law or
    amendment has been introduced in the country as
    yet to address the issue at hand.

16
Legislation for CDL in Other Countries
  • Other countries in the South Asian region,
    realizing the gravity of the situation, have
    taken viable steps towards addressing the issue
    of child domestic labour. Government of India,
    for example, has recently announced a ban on
    children working as domestic servants or in
    roadside food stalls. This order, which applies
    to children under 14, will come into effect on
    October,10,2006 . (news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/
    5235614.stm)

17
Missing Legislation
  • A move earlier for a separate legislation for CDL
  • Subsequently decided to include this as an
    amendment to the Employment of Childrens Act
    1991.
  • This form of labor is not covered currently by
    the Employment of Childrens Act (ECA) of 1991.
    ECA has very weak implementation record.
  • Abolition of Bonded Labour System Act 1992 also
    low on implementation
  • Despite being one of the Worst Form of Child
    Labour as implied by the ILO Convention 182, CDL
    has not yet been recognized as Worst Form of
    Child Labour by the Government of Pakistan.
  • The Protection of Children Act, 2005 is still a
    Draft Bill and it contains a provision (art 31)
    to establish a Commission for the Protection of
    Children and have Child Protection Officers.
  • The Draft National Social Protection Strategy is
    more a focus on social safety nets and poverty
    reduction of the poorest

18
UURRG
  • A Communication Strategy for CDL is an
  • URGENT NEED
  • This has been developed with support from UNICEF
    and ILO which needs to be disseminated to the
    public
  • policy makers and citizens for legislation,
    changing, attitudes and practices

19
Communication Strategy Campaign Against Child
Domestic Labour
20
LOGO
21
Posters
22
Stickers
23
  • Recommendations

24
  • Protection
  • CDL or Violence Against Children
  • Government is a signatory to C138,C 132,CRC
  • Government should initiate legislative reforms to
    set minimum standards of practice for domestic
    workers of all ages widening scope of existing
    labour legislation to include domestic work, and
    /or enactment of specific legislation to protect
    domestic workers to get same rights as other
    workers, including minimum wage, time off,
    limits on hours of work.
  • In addition to provision of good quality and
    accessible education and health care for all,
    governments should promote the development of
    specialized basic services for child domestic
    workers, such as specialized crisis and trauma
    centers for reintegration. Govt. Initiatives like
    the Punjab Child Protection Welfare Bureau in
    Lahore should also extend to other cities of
    Pakistan for creating a child friendly society.
  • Creating a confidential toll-free hotline for
    violations, including abuses against child
    domestics, coping with trauma referrals.
  • Creating effective mechanisms for inspection,
    enforcement, and monitoring of child labor, and
    promptly investigating any complaints of abuses
    against child domestics.  

25
  • Policy Level
  • CDL must be declared openly as the worst forms
    of child labor and must be included in the list
    of WFCL under Pakistans commitment to ILO
    Convention -182 which must be fully implemented
    to combat this evil.
  • The issue of CDL must be framed in the context of
    Violence Against Children, a matter of National
    Public Shame the practice of employing children
    as domestics breeds myriad forms of violence
    against children including rape and murder. The
    framework for VAC and CDL must be conceived in
    terms of prevention punishment and recovery and
    reintegration (VAC2006).
  • Poor and vulnerable families must be targeted
    for provision of easily accessible safety nets
    through Pakistan Bait ul Maal/Zakaat, access to
    quality free education, health, nutrition and
    livelihoods addressing poverty first/
  • Every government functionary, elected/nominated
    public representative, political party leaders
    and NGO representatives must be required to sign
    a declaration that his/her family is not
    employing a child domestic laborer.
  • Rigorous Research to be undertaken using the gird
    on CDL/VAC to inform policy so that CDL is
    declared as WFCL
  • Children s best interests and participation
    must be the cornerstone of all actions for CDL

26
  • Awareness and Communication
  • A communication strategy must target National,
    Provincial and District governments for
    awareness and monitoring. Every MNA, Senator,
    MPA, councilor and civil servant is duty bound to
    report cases of child abuse.
  • The significant number of female councilors can
    play a greater role and need to be sensitized
    about the violation of child rights and possible
    remedial measures.
  • Powerful stickers/images and messages must be
    placed on consumer items on CDL and child labor.
    (Many consumer industries consented to this in
    2005).
  • Make all political parties add in their mandates
    a commitment to ending CDL.
  • Launching public information campaigns on the
    rights of domestic workers and responsibilities
    of employers, with special emphasis on the
    potential hazards of working as abused child
    domestic laborers.
  • Child to Child approach to be encouraged,
    mobilizing educated school children/youth who
    can be guided to educate their parents about the
    rights of children working in their homes and to
    end domestic child labour.
  • Building strategic partnerships across media,
    theatre, civil society organizations and
    universities towards ending CDL as inclusively
    as possible.

27
Education and Learning Opportunities for CDL The
government must expand non-formal, basic
education and literacy programs through
Education, Social Welfare, Women Development and
Labor Ministries to specifically cover
CDLpervasive amongst rich middle classes
alike, urban and rural areas. CDLs are often
multi age and multi-level learners requiring
teachers with different competencies compared to
the straight forward NFE program from Grade
0-8/10 at times, drop out, missouts and catch up
children. The costing of these programs is
different to NFE and literacy due to its
multi-sectoral nature including health, skills,
livelihoods etc. Govt has only one type of NFE
and Literacy approach. Multilateral bodies such
as ILO and UNICEF, Bilateral organizations as
well as INGOs such as SC UK, SC Sweden, Oxfam,
Action Aid should redouble their efforts to make
child domestic labour a priority focused area for
action
28
How Many More Mustafas ? The recent case of
Mustafa aged 11 (reported in Dawn Nov. 25 p.12
through SPARC), being kept in bondage and forced
custody in an elite home in Clifton, Karachi, for
a mere Rs. 9600 paid over a year illustrates the
case of our society and state, both in
shambles. The employer, an educated resident of
a posh locality in Pakistans mega city is
refusing to let go of the child unless the
parents return Rs. 6000 paid as advance, for
which the term as agreed is over, and also to
provide a substitute for Mustafa. The
perpetrators of the tragedy who sold their child
for one year of domestic labor, are Mustafas
parents themselves. These are the poorest of the
poor and in dire need. This case highlights the
issue of child domestic labor as not an invisible
one anymore. Poverty has many contorted faces. As
mentioned earlier Mustafas parents became the
contractors, giving up their child for a mere US
160 dollars advance for one year. Their assets
were their 9 children, five daughters and four
sons. Mustafa was sacrificed to the altar of
poverty and survival. It must have been a bitter
decision to betray ones own flesh and blood at
age 10. The parents plight was such that this was
the only way in which they could, in turn be
relieved of their own oppression as runaway
bonded laborers from a camp in Sadiqabad (border
of Punjab/Sindh). They escaped but Mustafa now
awaits his relief from bondage.
29
The Chilling accounts of Rape Shame of Child
Domestic Labor .,,,what about Child Rights
..Human Rights.. The father of Shumaila
narrated that Ch Basharat under the influence of
liquor, usually took his daughter to a separate
room adjoining his residence and raped
her.sometimes he came to their place, kicked
them out of the room and started raping his
daughter in front of the entire family members
including my wife We looked on helplessly as
sinners buried under bondage for loan taken and
given in return a salary of Rs. 2500 per month in
violation of the govt minimum wage policy of Rs.
4000 per month. Shumaila was working for a mere
Rs. 700 per month as housemaid. She said, now
Ch. Basharat was forcing her parents to bring
home her younger sister Mafia who works as a
housemaid in the city. Jamil has since run away
with his wife and daughters but his three minor
sons are under the landlords captivity. Who will
rescue them ..who will rescue child rights in
Pakistan? Saadia Gul who along with her
sisters also worked as maidservants in a
landlords home whilst parents worked on the farm
as bonded labor for 18 years. The application has
been filed by a brave mother, Zohra Bibi.She
explained that it is not just one daughter but
others too have been raped mercilessly all minors
and her son was also kidnapped nine years ago to
work in home in Islamabad, which belonged to the
cousin of the landlord. Some family members made
their final escape in Ramzan, but a son and a
daughter in law and son-in-law are still
captive. Source the News and Dawn Nov 10th ,
and 8th , 2006
30
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