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A domestic
helper from Mindoro island gathers hanging clothes in Manila on
September 6,
2012 (AFP/File, Jay Directo)
|
Montevideo
— Unions representing domestic workers met here Saturday to urge countries to
ratify a year-old international convention that sets minimal labor standards
for domestic workers.
So far only
10 countries have ratified the International Convention on Domestic Workers,
which went into effect a year ago in September.
But Myrtle
Witbooi, president of the International Domestic Workers Network, said,
"We are entering a new era for domestic workers."
Witbooi's
organization, which represents 300,000 domestic workers worldwide, is promoting
the convention, which gives domestics the right to a minimum wage, daily and
weekly rest hours and freedom to choose where they live and how they spend
their leave.
"The
International Labor Organization convention is for everyone, but if people
don't know about it, it can't be invoked," she told AFP.
"We
need to educate (workers) and we need to find those countries that don't even
have national laws, so they can pass laws and ratify the convention," she
said.
Uruguay,
which was the first country to ratify the convention in 2012, is hosting the
first international conference on domestic work.
"It's
already in force here, and has been approved by more than 10 countries, and
there are four or five countries in the process of approving it," said
Uruguay's Labor Minister Eduardo Brenta.
He said
salaries of domestic workers in Uruguay have risen 400 percent over the past
eight years, and about 66 percent have a formal status now.
The ILO
estimates that domestic workers -- housekeepers, cooks, gardeners, and
babysitters -- account for between four and 10 percent of the workforce in
developing countries, and 2.5 percent in industrialized countries, or about
52.6 million people overall.
But the ILO
believes the numbers employed as domestics could be as high as 100 million
people, because of undercounting by some countries.
Reports
presented at the conference said 60 percent of under age domestic workers were
found in Asia, including an estimated 1.5 million in Indonesia, one million in
the Philippines, 420,000 in Bangladesh and 100,000 in Sri Lanka.
Legal
protections for domestic workers are minimal in Asia, according to the ILO,
which said 797 cases of torture have been reported by media over the past 10
years in Bangladesh.
In
Indonesia, 472 cases of violence against domestics have been reported and in
Malaysia 13 domestics were killed in 2011 alone.
Moreover,
in 97 percent of Asian countries, domestic workers have no legal right to weekly
rest or annual vacations.
In Latin
America, ILO estimates that there are more than 14 million domestic workers,
and that it is the principal occupation of women in the region.
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