A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, January 12, 2014
The Plight of the Globe’s Domestic Workers
Written by Susan Froetschel-FRI,10 JANUARY 2014

The arrest of an Indian
diplomat in New York for lying on a visa form and underpaying a
household nanny at a time when the United States examines its own
growing inequality. And India’s vehement defense has put a spotlight on
cultural differences for treatment of domestic workers.
The Indian consulate officer,
Devyani Khobragade, was removed from New York Thursday without
prosecution despite a criminal indictment by the US attorney’s office.
Khobragade is to be transferred to the Ministry of External Affiars
Office in New Delhi. The US State Department acknowledged that the woman
has full diplomatic immunity .
On one side, families in many
undeveloped countries rely heavily on live-in household staff to cook,
clean, watch children and tend the elderly. Families in the United
States and much of the developed world typically do without live-in
domestic servants, relying on dishwashers and other modern conveniences
as well as government-regulated institutions for the care of children or
the elderly.
New York is especially sensitive to rights of domestic workers, enacting a bill of rights for
this class of workers in 2010, the first law of its kind in the nation.
The law requires overtime for live-in employees, one day of rest per
week and three paid days of rest per year, as well as written policies
agreed to by both parties.
Lifting standards of domestic workers to those of other workers is the aim of the Domestic Workers Convention,
a global treaty in force since September that covers minimum wage,
access to courts, regular payments, annual leaves and rest periods. The
convention also aims to abolish child labor, harassment and abuse, and
unsafe working conditions. “Without legal protection, domestic workers are at the mercy of their employers,” notes Human Rights Watch.
As of the first week of January, 11 countries have
ratified the treaty. Many more, including the United States and India,
have enacted legislation that partially satisfies treaty terms.
Reports suggest that at least
50 million domestic workers toil in every country of the globe, though
the true number could be double that.
The domestic-help sector has
grown steadily over the past decade, yet developed nations generally
rely less on such workers, according to a 2013 report by the
International Labour Office, “Domestic Workers Across the World: Global and Regional Statistics and the Extent of Legal Protection.” Less
developed nations of Asia and the Pacific region account for about 40
percent of all domestic workers while developed nations – including
Japan, South Korea and Singapore – account for 7 percent. About 80
percent of the globe’s domestic workers are women.
Among the regions, less
developed nations of Asia stand out for a lack of legislation on
treatment of domestic workers: As of 2010, more than 75 percent of
developed countries had minimum wage coverage and limits on work hours
for domestic help. In Asia – excluding Japan, South Korea and Singapore,
which were included with the developed nations – less than 3 percent of
the countries had legislation on such protections. In Latin America and
Africa, more than 70 percent of the nations have legislation on work
limits and more than 80 percent have statutory minimum wages for
domestic workers that are the same or better than for other workers.
The ILO report singled out
Nordic countries for the minuscule rates of private domestic help. “This
is partly due to the public provision of childcare and elderly care,
tasks that are often undertaken by domestic workers in other countries.”
India was singled out in the report for sketchy data, with estimates on
total domestic workers ranging from 2.5 million to 90 million domestic
workers.
Hidden and informal
arrangements, room and board deductions, lack of employment contracts,
cross-border migration, and inability to file complaints or seek redress
in courts are cited in the report for encouraging abuse.
Travel abroad and awareness of
cultural differences can prompt new understanding and behaviors. “An
invitation to an American home will give you a chance to see American
family life,” suggests the International Services Office of the
University of Rochester. “Most American households do not have domestic
help, so it is courteous to offer your help to your hosts.”
Before heading abroad,
diplomats should be schooled on such basic cultural differences. Many in
India have argued that low wages for Indian diplomats justify low wages
for domestic help and the United States could have handled the matter
with more sensitivity. Critics in the developed world counter that the
diplomat who cannot afford basic fair wages for a live-in domestic help
should do without.
The United States and the
diplomat’s attorney may settle this case. But in a highly interconnected
world through travel and communications, a single high-profile arrest
unleashed globalization’s force to expose troubling cultural
differences, ensuring that cross-border work arrangements and visas will
receive more scrutiny – at least for a while.
(Susan Froetschel, author of the novel Fear of Beauty, writes and edits for YaleGlobal Online.)
