A non-governmental organisation committed to the protection of rights of women and children, CEE-HOPE, has defended the rights of domestic workers in Nigeria to unionise, be treated with dignity and be included in the National Minimum Wage bill recently passed by the Senate.
The public hearing held on July 22, was part of the legislative process in the working of a bill titled: “A Bill for an Act to Provide for the Documentation and Protection of Domestic Workers and the Employers and for Other Matters Connected Therewith, 2024.(SB. 272)” The Bill was sponsored by the Senator representing Jigawa North-West, Babangida Hussaini.
At the opening of the public hearing, Senate President Godswill Akpabio said the Senate under his leadership would give utmost consideration to the proposed bill and work tirelessly to ensure its swift passage.
The Senate President later announced that Domestic Workers are covered by the Minimum Wage Bill passed on July 24 by the Senate.
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Employment, Labour and Productivity, Senator Diket Plang, assured that the Bill would receive priority attention because persons mostly recruited as domestic workers in Nigeria are children and girls under the age of 18. He said despite their invaluable contributions, they are often subjected to exploitation, abuse and discrimination, a menace the Bill seeks to address by providing a legal framework for the documentation and protection of domestic workers and their employers.
Plang said about the Bill: “It will require employers to register their domestic workers with appropriate authorities, provide them with a written contract that outlines their rights and responsibilities. Likewise, the employers are also being protected from some domestic workers that may cause havoc to the families they are employed to take care of.”
Betty Abah, women and children’s rights activist and founder of CEE-HOPE, and who has been a strong advocate for th rights of domestic workers in Nigeria, made a strong case for their unionisation as prescribed by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) ‘Convention 189’ which Nigeria is yet to adopt despite it’s passing since 2011 and despite the country also being a member state.
In her presentation of CEE-HOPE’s memorandum at the one-day hearing,
Abah particularly emphasised the need for the Unionisation of Domestic Workers (enshrined in same Convention 189) as a way of facilitating the full realisation of their rights and benefits including benefitting from the National Minimum Wage and others as currently obtain in several other countries.
“By adopting the ILO’s Convention 189 which prescribes fair working conditions for domestic workers among which Unionisation, a lot of progress would be made as they would be aware of their human and labour rights, get fair wages and be part of the mainstream, organised labour. This is possible because it is already in force in several countries including African countries like South Africa and Kenya,” she added.
Present at the one-day event were several senators and dignitaries including Senator Osita Izunaso (Imo West), Senator Victor Umeh (Anambra Central) amongst others who also made remarks and recommendations.
The meeting also drew several stakeholders including the National Council for Women Society, the National Human Rights Commission, Nannies Academy, journalists and several others, several of whom made presentations.
Also at the hearing was Mrs. Angela Abah Odah, Country Manager of the Rosaluxemburg Foundation West Africa which supports CEE-HOPE’s campaign on the rights of domestic workers in Nigeria and several CEE-HOPE’s Abuja-based volunteers.
More Stories
CEE-HOPE launches anti-GBV initiative in Lagos, Abuja communities
Soludo orders probe of deadly stampede in Okija
Christmas: Sanwo-Olu orders LASTMA to work 24 hours