* Jharkhand.News *











 Are these Adivasi women under house arrest?



 Domestic workers have no security of tenure, little bargaining power over
wages, no regulation of working hours or entitlement to paid leave, laments
Anuja Agrawal



There is no prize for guessing what two middle class women talk about
whenever they meet. Invariably maids and 'servants' saturate their
conversation. It will be no exaggeration to say that the middle class can
barely imagine life without domestic workers.



But is this educated and self-righteous middle class prepared to give them
their due? The home may be a symbol of nurturing and security, but it can be
an extremely exploitative site of work. With no checks and controls in
place, the domestic workers have no security of tenure, little bargaining
power over wages, no regulation of working hours or entitlement to paid
leave. In addressing these and many more issues, the Domestic Workers
(Regulation of Employment, Conditions of Work, Social Security and Welfare)
Bill, 2008, is like a ray of hope for domestic workers.



The processes of extremely uneven development have rendered migration for
work in the urban informal economy the only survival option for the vast
populace of rural and tribal hinterlands of India. Domestic work in urban
households is a major avenue for employment for these migrants. Nirmala
Niketan, an NGO working for migrant workers from the tribal regions of
Jharkhand, Orissa and West Bengal, has approximated that 1,00,000 tribal
girls from these regions are engaged in domestic work in Delhi alone.

The only reason that these women get over their fears of living in a big
city is because here they feel that they at least have some means of earning
an income. Back home there are absolutely no livelihood options, even in
urban centres like Ranchi.



Nowhere to go



Shantikala, who is around 18, has come to Delhi from Ranchi with her young
child, as there are no employment opportunities back home. Tara, who is
around 38 years and a mother of five, refused to return to Bihar even when
her husband abandoned her. "What will I do in the village and how will I
feed my children there?" she asks. Nilima, who works with Nirmala Niketan,
adds, "Most of our families are big. No one has less than five children.
That is why we have to come here."



However, the women express their resentment at being referred to as
'servants' by their employers. They are quite aware that it is they who make
it possible for a large number of middle class women to step out of their
homes to take part in the more lucrative formal economy. "When their work is
treated as a valuable service, why should domestic work not be treated with
dignity," says an indignant Bibyani, an Oraon woman, who is around 25 years
old. (The Oraon tribal people inhabit various states across central and
eastern India and traditionally depend on the forest for their livelihood.)



Unscrupulous agents



But there are other far more serious issues at stake. Many tribal women can
recount incidents in which unscrupulous placement agents separated young
children from their parents and engaged them in domestic work in urban homes
in slave-like conditions. Edna (name changed), 11, had come to Delhi from
Jharkhand with her siblings and mother to work at the site of the Akshardham
temple before being separated from them. When rescued by Nirmala Niketan
from a house in NOIDA, she had completely lost touch with her family. In
such cases, the employers are often complicit in perpetuating and abetting
the act of trafficking.



Birna, who also hails from Jharkhand, says, "The placement agency I worked
with took away my two daughters and sent me to work in Ludhiana (Punjab). I
was not even allowed to talk to them. Finally, they were rescued with the
help of the Domestic Workers' Forum."



Many placement agencies are no more than a mobile phone number and are thus
extremely difficult to track down. Even under the best of conditions, the
agents end up depriving migrant women of a substantial portion of their
income. Currently, such agencies are subject to no regulation.

Ill-treatment at the hands of employers is another major concern. Bibyani
recalls, "I blindly trusted my employers and asked to hold on to all my
wages for safe keeping. Instead, they kept all my wages and even accused me
of being a thief."



These issues are yet to capture the public imagination. On the contrary,
whenever a domestic worker is found to have committed a crime, the whole
class ends up being branded as criminals. Few people pay attention to the
root of such cases. In fact, the Haryana police have even launched a
questionable drive this April to fingerprint all domestic workers,
effectively clubbing them with criminals.

But do the isolated instances of crime committed by some individuals match
the routine exploitation to which domestic workers are subjected? Proposing
a comprehensive legislation, the Domestic Worker's Bill is a major attempt
to address problems of domestic workers. The Bill is being drafted by the
National Campaign Committee for the Unorganised Sector Workers (NCCUSW) and
Nirmala Niketan, with the support of the National Commission for Women.



Major proposal



The major proposal of this bill is to set up tripartite boards that include
representatives of domestic workers, their employers and the government. All
domestic workers, their employers and placement agencies will have to
register with the board and contribute a designated amount, annually, which
will be used as a corpus fund to take care of the many social security needs
of workers.



The legislation could also check child labour in domestic work. The 2006
prohibition of child labour in domestic work under the Child Labour Act has
been unable to achieve this.



The Domestic Worker's Bill, if passed, will be an important step toward
securing the rights of the domestic workers who constitute a large chunk of
the unorganised sector workers.



Women's Feature Service





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