Discrimination Behind Closed Doors: The Case and Responses to Child Domestic Workers in the Phil.
Presented By Ma. Cecilia Flores-Oebanda, Visayan Forum Foundation, Philippines
(Submitted to the UN Working Group, Geneva 2002 June, ILO Office)
When we talk of discrimination what generally comes to our mind is a formal
workplace relationship that affects adults workers. We seldom see how
discrimination everyday endured by child laborers because they are very young.
Our organization the Visayan Forum Foundation, an NGO working with the child
domestic workers, would like to share with you today their everyday experiences
to contribute clarity into the theory and practice of discrimination.
Society in general often overlooks the sector of domestic workers. But what
helps keep Asian family survive despite the increasing pressure of economic
globalization? It is the everyday army to young maids, cooks, baby sitters who
remain out of sight and out of mind while mothers and care for children in
exchange for low salaries that they remitted back to their poor families in the
rural areas. In the Philippines for example, we estimate that if at least one
million workers in this sector were to remit at least half of their average
salary of US$16 a month, they would be silently infusing more or less $96
million a year to their poor families in the provinces. In short we fail to
recognize these hidden workforce multipliers' economic contribution to our daily
life and to our countries' development, they still remain invisible and
neglected and for me this is discrimination.
The practice of employing young girl domestic some is still deeply rooted and
common not in the Philippines but also in other countries specially in Asia,
Africa and Latin America. Some started to work as young as 9 years old. They are
not even covered by laws. Many call them "a difficult sector to work with," but
the bottom line is, even in our work for social justice, we have discriminated
our domestic helpers.
Child domestic workers work an average of 15 hours daily, and are on call 24
hours a day. Days off are limited to one day each month; many have no day-off at
all. Confined to repetitive, menial work, most of these children have no
opportunity to acquire life skills that would help them grow into productive
adults.
Working away from her home, the child is separated from her family for
extended periods of time. She and many others like her are prohibited from
communicating with their families. The child is thus under the complete control
of her employer, who does not necessarily serve the child's best interests. The
child's freedom of movement is also limited. Isolated from family and peers,
they rarely leave even when they suffer abuse. These children are among the
lowest paid workers, receiving an average of PhP 800 (US $16) a month - if paid
at all.
Many begin there working life in debt bondage to recruiters who paid their
transportation and lodging on the way to the employing household (two to three
months' worth of the child's wages). The child is then trapped into debt, and
thus into bondage.
CDWs often endure inhumane treatment. They suffer insults on a daily basis
Many are beaten, some even to the point of death. There are cases where the
tormenting employer's creativity exempts his or her acts from being called
beatings: one child domestic died from being forced to drink a liquid used to
unplug drains. Another child was forced to drink bleaching liquid each time she
failed to wash all the laundry, ostensibly as a form of discipline. One was made
to kneel on a stool for hours, while balancing a fire extinguisher on her
outstretched arms.
Girls are sexually molested, usually when their duties include giving their
employer a massage. Some are raped, after an escalating series of molestations.
Invisible and isolated, overworked and underpaid, deprived of the opportunity
to study and to play, verbally abused day in and day out - this is how many
child domestic workers live. In the worst situations, they are abused to the
point of death and hopelessness. If all of these are not called acts of
discrimination against their personal essence and humanity, what then are they?
For us, this is discrimination. The relevant question is now therefore: how do
we deal with discrimination?
Visayan Forum Foundation is a national NGO that has been working with
ILO-IPEC Philippines for the past five years to provide a comprehensive set of
direct services and social protection for child domestic workers. It also works
for their empowerment and promotion of self-help organizations, and to advocate
for employment policy and programmes. In this regard, VF has been creatively
engaging with tri-partite partners in many ways.
In the Philippines, the government is now helping us to address the
statistical invisibility of the sector. The labor department with the leadership
of our Secretary Patricia Santo Tomas is setting up national programs and action
to target child domestic workers as priority group for the national time-bound
program to implement ILO Convention 182. Legislative bodies are now also working
on to enable a magna carta for household helpers seeking to institutionalize and
uplift the minimum working parameters and standards for the industry. Other
government agencies such as the Philippine Ports Authorities have also set up
two shelter houses in strategic ports to combat traffickers of children.
Employers group headed by Philippines Confederation of the Philippines helps us
reach out with some enterprises specially the shipping industry opened
opportunities to educate frontline crews and ground staff to directly deal with
the problem of trafficking in ports. VF works also with department of education
to encouraged the accreditation of non-formal alternative schemes such as
week-end and night schools that we are now working with to reach out and assist
working children, a majority composed by domestic workers.
The Social Security System campaigns and works in the field to register
domestic workers. Media institutions have actively exposed abuses balanced with
positive information on how employers can humanely treat their domestic workers.
We have started to seek the help of trade unions to formalize the sector.
They are very supportive in lobbying to the government for greater attention to
the informal sector and women's participation. At the ground level, trade unions
help monitor the trafficking of women and children into domestic work and
prostitution as they pass through entry and exit points such as ports. Together,
we are also now beginning to explore concrete ideas to make freedom of
association a reality by unionizing domestic workers in the long-term. This
ensures that the work is a legitimate and dignified occupation, not just a
peripheral job.
In conclusion and thank you very much, let me say that if we talk about
discrimination let us transcend the boundaries of formal labor and adult work.
Let us try to examine more closely the world in which our millions of child
laborer are trapped at this very moment. Amid the worsening effects of economic
instability and boiling labor problems, let us deal with the issue of
discrimination in a manner encompassing. In the end, everybody is responsible,
not just the State. Of course, the State must demonstrate its moral force to
make actions against discrimination a social priority. But we need each other's
help. That way, NGOs can help enrich the battery of experiences of the
tripartite partners. To enrich and sustain our efforts to eliminate all forms of
discrimination in this generation, this is the only way.
Thank you and mabuhay!
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