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Human Rights in Sindh

SOHRIS

The Plight Of Female Workers

July 11, 2024
plight of women

About 20% of the country’s total labour force consists of females who play a vital role in the development and production process of the country. Unfortunately, due to negligence on the part of the government as well as employers, a large number of female workers are deprived of their basic rights and discriminated against in most industrial, business, commercial, and other sectors.

According to the report on the women’s status in Pakistan 2023, of the women in the labour force, 67% are employed in agriculture (as compared to 27% of men); 16% in the services sector; and 14% in the manufacturing sector. Of all the female workers, 88% are education professionals (e.g. schoolteachers), 7% are healthcare professionals, and 2.5% are employed in areas related to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Of all women employed as skilled agricultural workers, 95% are serving as market-oriented skilled agricultural workers. In craft and related trades, 91% of women are employed in food processing, woodwork, and garment-related trades.

Female workers are also taking the highest burden of unpaid work. The distribution of employed workers by employment status reveals that more than half (55%) of employed women are working as unpaid workers compared to 10% of employed men. Overall, 21% of workers are unpaid or contributing to family or non-family workers. Besides, 19% of female and 40% of male workers are self-employed.

Despite the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948, the various ILO conventions, and the country’s labour laws, a majority of female workers have been deprived of their basic rights: 8-hour daily work with one hour rest; fair wages; overtime for additional work; pick and drop facility; annual and casual leave, maternity leave, profit bonus, compulsory group insurance, healthcare facility for self and family through Social Security Institution; and EOBI pension after retirement.

The workplace environment for female workers is generally found unhealthy and they often fall victim to stress and harassment. Under hazardous work rules, female workers are not supposed to operate any heavy machinery in a factory where rubber, lead, chromium, petrol, etc are processed. Also, under the Mines Act, female workers have special exemptions whereby no female worker shall work in the mine, in any case.

Labour laws also provide special concessions for female workers in the daily working hour schedule: for the security and protection of female workers, they cannot be forced to work except between sunrise and sunset.

According to the Factory Act, it is mandatory for every employer to make necessary arrangements for separate and screened toilets for their female workers whose doors have the writing ‘For women only’ along with a specific sign. Female workers are also required to be provided with a separate room for the care of a child below 6 years of age. They must also be provided safe drinking water as well as a separate wash basin with soap and towels for washing their hands and mouths.

Under the West Pakistan Maternity Benefits Act 1961, every pregnant female worker shall get maternity leave and no pregnant worker can be forced to work in a factory during her maternity period.

Most employers, especially educational institutions, do not register a significant number of female workers with EOBI for the facility of old age, disability, and survivors’ pensions in the future and the Workers Welfare Fund, which is also a federal welfare organisation under which every entitled worker is provided education facility and scholarships for their children, marriage grant at Rs400,000 for unmarried daughters, and death grant of Rs800,000 to be paid to the spouse in case of the sudden death of a worker during service. Unfortunately, a majority of female workers are not aware of all this.

It is also common that the wages of female workers are lower than their male counterparts, in sheer violation of the law.

This alarming situation requires an urgent need for the provincial Labour and Human Resource Departments, the Employers Federation of Pakistan, trade unions, and civil society to raise their voice for equal rights and decent employment conditions for millions of female workers.

**Editorial published in the Express Tribune on July 9, 2024**

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  • Human Rights
    • What are Human Rights?
    • Civil and Political Rights in Sindh
      • Freedom of Expression, Opinion, and Belief
      • Right to Life
      • Access to Justice
      • Right to Privacy
      • Right to Political Participation
      • Right to a Nationality
      • Freedom from Torture and Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment
      • Right to Equality and Non-Discrimination
      • Other Civil and Political Rights
    • Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Sindh
      • Right to Work
      • Right to Education
      • Right to Health & Healthy Environment
      • Right to Housing
      • Right to Food & Water
      • Right to Social Security
      • Right to Culture
      • Right to Information
      • Other Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
    • Rights of Vulnerable Populations in Sindh
      • Rights of Women
      • Rights of Children
      • Rights of Minorities
      • Rights of Labour
      • Rights of Persons with Special Abilities
      • Rights of Refugees and Migrants
      • Rights of Older Persons 
      • Rights of Transgender Persons
      • Rights of Other Vulnerable Populations
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    • Constitution of Pakistan 1973
    • Sindh Laws
    • National Laws
    • Sindh Policies
    • National Policies
    • International HR Regimes
      • International HR Law
      • UN Core Treaties
      • Status of Treaty Ratifications by Pakistan
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      • International Labour Standards
      • Status of ILO Conventions Ratifications
      • Compliance of ILO Conventions by Pakistan
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