Santo Domingo, 30 June 2012 (ITUC
OnLine): The 300,000 domestic wokers in the Dominican
Republic are set to gain coverage under labour laws
following an announcement by Labour Minister Francisco
DomÃnguez Brito at a meeting organised in Santo Domingo by
the ITUC and its three affiliates CASC, CNUS and CNTD.
Drafting of the new law will start this week, and it is
expected to be adopted by Parliament within three months,
along with ratification of ILO Convention 189 on domestic
workers.
“The time for domestic workers to have their rights respected and their dignity restored is overdue” said Sharan Burrow the ITUC GS. “The ITUC is eagerly waiting for the Dominican Congress to ratify the ILO Convention and for public authorities to implement it. This will make a huge difference to the lives of both migrant and Dominican women working hard from dawn to dusk without any rights and protection,” she said.
A formal request
presented to Senators by domestic workers is the latest in a
series of moves to ensure the country ratifies the ILO
Convention. It is estimated that a third of the domestic
workers in the Dominican Republic come from neighboring
Haiti. Fear of deportation makes Haitian domestic workers
particularly vulnerable to abuses from their
employers.
“The unions will be able to step up their
push to organize and represent the huge domestic workforce
when the domestic workers are covered by labour legislation,
so that they can negotiate decent wages and working
conditions. We urge other countries to follow the lead of
the Dominican Government, to end the widespread denial of
basic rights to the millions of domestic workers around the
world” said Burrow.
The Dominican unions started
organising domestic workers several years ago together with
other workers from the informal economy lacking rights and
protection. Trade union innovations include
capacity-building activities, the setting-up of a school to
increase technical skills and awareness on workers’
rights, a negotiated agreement with social security bodies
for the registration of informally employed workers, as well
as successful public awareness and advocacy work.
“This
is a big step towards reaching the goal of the ITUC’s
’12 by 12’ campaign to get 12 countries to ratify ILO
Convention 189 by the end of 2012. This momentum will then
help campaigning to get all countries to ratify the
Convention and bring all domestic workers under the scope of
decent labour legislation. The union movement will continue
to do its part to support and empower these workers just as
in any other sector,” said
Burrow.
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