Women workers squat for hours on end as they complete jurrai work. This task requires absolute concentration and needs workers to stare at the flame continuously - Photo by the writer
Although most women find themselves in the same boat, contractors ensure that they cannot unionise to press for better terms and conditions.
“Home-based workers are scattered, unorganised and work independently. Very often they do not have linkages with each other,” explains Zehra Khan, general secretary of the Home-Based Women Workers Federation (HBWWF). “In the past, they had no platform to unite and to think about their collective issues either.”
Women workers are often barred by contractors from joining any union or movement. In case they do, they are abandoned and work is taken away from them.
“A large majority of women workers are unskilled and only a small number is equipped with some training in bangle-making that they learn from their elders during bangle making at their homes,” explains Yasmeen Siddiqi, general secretary of the Welding Workers Union, Hyderabad.
“Women are traditionally not allowed to step out of their homes and go work at a factory. They are restricted to the four walls of their homes. But this industry allows them to earn a living while staying at home.”
Yasmeen has been engaged in the bangle industry for the past 25 years. Being a widow, she is the sole breadwinner of the family. Her daughter, seven years old, assists her in the work of sadai and katai. But even she is wary of the contractors. “They have an impolite attitude with workers,” she asserts.
Meanwhile, Nasreen, Rehmat, Shakeela and a few other female workers also complain of theharsh attitude of factory workers. They are harassed if they demand any increase in their remuneration. If they ask for a loan, the contractor lends them money but binds them to work at a place until they can pay off their debt. Social benefits such as old-age pension, funds, death, disability and accident insurance are not provided to women workers either.
“There is absolutely no facility available to workers in factories,” claims Rehan Yousafzai, president of the All Hyderabad Churi Welding Contractors Workers Union. “Workers especially women and child workers are vulnerable to diseases such as rheumatic pain, respiratory problems, tuberculosis and eye infections.”
For Zehra Khan, the issue comes back to recognising more than five million homed-based women workers in the country as “workers” and handing them their due rights as per the constitution and the labour laws of the land. The women working in the bangles industry are not the only ones who work from home; many others are similarly employed in manufacturing shoes, garments, hosiery items, carpets, etc. Although their lines of work might differ, the problems faced by women are rooted in the same legal lacunae.
Currently, workers in the informal economy as well as those in the home-based sector are not covered by any labour laws. Nor does any definition of “home-based worker” exist as part of any statute. Therefore, the terms of their working conditions are not regulated by any law or regulation. Rates for work carried out cannot be renegotiated either; workers either accept the paltry sums being offered to them by a contractor or look for another job.
Similarly, labour protection, social security coverage and provision of safety and health services and benefits are not extended to the informal sector, including the home-based sector. Therefore, they are unable to access the services, facilities, rights and benefits that they ought to as part of the labour force.
“As soon as the policy of home-based workers gets practically implemented in the country, it will open new vistas of progress and prosperity for these women,” argues Advocate Rubina Brohi, member of the Sindh Human Rights Commission and regional coordinator of the Aurat Foundation. “The identification and recognition of home-based workers and mainstreaming of home-based workers into national economies would increase their productivity and help bolster trade and industry.”
“The immediate demand of home-based workers is to be recognised as workers, covered under EOBI and social security schemes and be provided modern vocational training to add value to their work,” says Khalid Mahmood, executive director of the Labour Education Foundation.
But such demands can only come to fruition if women workers can come together in organised forms and press for their demands.
“Home-based workers, including the women working in the bangle industry, should have the right to make their labour unions and elect their collective bargaining agents,” asserts Zehra Khan.
The writer works as a research coordinator at REACH. She can be contacted at sadiawali@hotmail.com
A silver lining for home-based workers