Thursday, 12 November 2009

Domestic work is for adults




Photo by: SOK MAP
An 11-year-old girl, allegedly tortured by a Phnom Penh couple who bought her as a domestic slave, shows one of the scars she received before being rescued by police last month.

(Posted by CAAI news Media)

Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:02 Bill Salter

Children should not be treated as in-house slaves

COMMENT
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Bill Salter

WHICH situation is worse? Is it abusing children for the commercial sexual gratification of adults, or beating and torturing children who have been forced to work as domestic slaves?

It’s a question I had to ask myself when I read The Phnom Penh Post’s recent story about an 11-year-old girl – a domestic servant – who was reportedly trafficked into the home of a Phnom Penh couple and then allegedly tortured with pliers, whips and electrical wires, leaving as many as 200 scars across her body [October 19].

When it comes to child abuse, surely this is about as bad as it gets. Sadly, this is not the first time I’ve seen reports like this. A 17-year-old Burmese girl was nearly killed by her employer in Bangkok, and a Vietnamese girl was beaten regularly by her employers in Hanoi.

It’s been suggested that the Cambodian girl’s torture lasted for at least a year – possibly much longer – until neighbours intervened and contacted the police. The couple has been refused bail, as has the girl’s so-called “guardian”, who is accused of selling her as a domestic servant. All three are now awaiting trial on several charges, including human trafficking.

Unfortunately, child domestic workers are all too common in Phnom Penh. An ILO-supported survey in 2003 conducted by the National Institute of Statistics at the Ministry of Planning concluded that there were nearly 28,000 child domestic workers in Phnom Penh alone – 10 percent of all children aged 7 to 17.

The ILO has been working with the government of Cambodia to raise awareness about child labour and its negative impact on society. Through the International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC), the government and ILO have been able to demonstrate that with the right interventions, child domestic workers can be removed from work and rehabilitated into schools and the entry of fresh children into child domestic work prevented. We are confidently working together towards the goal of a child labour-free country by 2016. Considerable progress has been made, and the situation is improving.

The fact that neighbours came forward to save this girl is an indication that the messages are getting through and Cambodians will not stand for this kind of abuse directed at children.

There is, however, another troubling aspect of this story, namely the systemic abuse of domestic workers in general – occupations that by their very nature involve vulnerability because the work is conducted behind closed doors in the homes of others. While this girl was clearly too young to be working anywhere, domestic workers of all ages are often marginalised by society (and the media), ignored by laws that govern workplaces and denied the social protection and working conditions other workers have come to rightly expect.

There is, however, some cause for optimism among domestic workers. To its credit, the Royal Government of Cambodia has indicated that it is serious about ending the worst forms of child labour. It has ratified the ILO’s Convention 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labour and has developed a 2008-2012 National Plan of Action on the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour, a plan the ILO is supporting. Domestic work has been identified as one of 12 unacceptable and hazardous forms of work from which children must be removed with urgency. Cambodia has also ratified the two ILO conventions on the abolition of forced labour, and last year a new anti-trafficking law entered into force. Furthermore, on November 27, the government will convene a national consultation on decent work for domestic workers – a first step that could lead to an eventual international labour standard on extending social protection to those who work in the homes of others.

Domestic work is hard work. It is work often performed by women and work that frees up members of the employer’s family so they can pursue and improve their own livelihoods, but far too often this hidden workforce and its labourers are underacknowledged and undervalued. Many domestic workers are physically and sexually abused, and denied even basic human rights.

On November 27, when government, worker and employer organisations sit down with civil society organisations, let’s remember that domestic work is real work. It’s work for adults that requires proper compensation, time off, the right to stay in contact with others, and is to be conducted in a safe environment.

And finally, let’s all reaffirm that it’s not work for children.

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Bill Salter works as director of the International Labour Organisation’s sub-regional office for East Asia.

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