HYDERABAD: Speakers at a consultative meeting have advised the government and industrialists to sit together with representatives of home-based bangle workers, majority of whom are women, to fix their minimum wages.

They were speaking at a ‘Stakeholders’ consultative meeting on issues of glass bangle industry’ organised by the Home-based Women Workers Federation (HBWWF) at a local hotel on Friday.

HBWWF leader Zahra Khan said the meeting was aimed at discussing issues related to minimum wages of glass bangle workers and get input from workers, contractors, industrialists and government on fixing of minimum wages for the workers, majority of whom were home-based women, who were presently highly underpaid.

“Home-based workers use their homes as workplaces, pay for utility bills like electricity, gas and water of the informal workplaces and the entire families including children toil in it but still they do not get proper wages,” she said.

The general secretary of the All Hyderabad Choori Welding Workers Association, Mohammad Asim, said that making glass bangles was a tough and risky job. The bangle workers were exposed to grave health problems because of handling hazardous chemicals in dangerous conditions, he said.

He said the owners of glass bangle industry should resolve the workers’ issues and fix minimum wages for them like the labourers of other formal sectors.

Industry representative Mahtab Ahmed said that they paid contractors handsomely so that they could pay reasonable wages to home-based workers after skimming their commission. If they were not paying adequately to workers it was not the fault of industrialists, he said.

Nasir Mansoor, deputy general secretary of the National Trade Union Federation, said that fixing minimum wages was a tripartite process, in which representatives of employees, employers and government should sit together and fix wages with complete consensus after detailed deliberations and consultation.

He said the home-based workers were contributing to the national economy but in return they were not even provided basic facilities of life. The bangle workers needed to be treated as workers in the eyes of law. A draft in this regard had already been presented to the chief minister, he said.

In Sindh, he said, there were more than six million home-based workers, 80 per cent of whom were women. They were vulnerable and they braved immense exploitation. There was an urgent need to resolve on priority basis their genuine issues, he said.

Joint director of the Sindh labour department, Gulfam Nabi Memon, said the government was taking steps to resolve workers’ problems including home-based workers.

They were there to act as bridge between employers and employees, he said, stressing the need to hold detailed consultation to fix minimum wages for the bangle workers.

Secretary of Minimum Wages Board Shaheen Nisar Mangi presented a list of proposed minimum wages at the meeting for different categories of home-based workers of glass bangle industry of Hyderabad.

The meeting set up a committee comprising representatives of workers, employers and government officials to re-draft the minimum wages after detailed consultation among all stakeholders within two weeks so that the minimum wages could be fixed for the workers of this neglected sector.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

First line of defence

First line of defence

Pakistan’s foreign service has long needed reform to be able to adapt to global changes and leverage opportunities in a more multipolar world.

Editorial

Eid amidst crises
Updated 31 Mar, 2025

Eid amidst crises

Until the Muslim world takes practical steps to end these atrocities, these besieged populations will see no joy.
Women’s rights
Updated 01 Apr, 2025

Women’s rights

Such judgements, and others directly impacting women’s rights should be given more airtime in media.
Not helping
Updated 02 Apr, 2025

Not helping

If it's committed to peace in Balochistan, the state must draw a line between militancy and legitimate protest.
Hard habits
Updated 30 Mar, 2025

Hard habits

Their job is to ensure that social pressures do not build to the point where problems like militancy and terrorism become a national headache.
Dreams of gold
30 Mar, 2025

Dreams of gold

PROSPECTS of the Reko Diq project taking off soon seem to have brightened lately following the completion of the...
No invitation
30 Mar, 2025

No invitation

FOR all of Pakistan’s hockey struggles, including their failure to qualify for the Olympics and World Cup as well...