Egypt Independent
Maid in Egypt: Domestic workers organize
October 1, 2012
Jano Charbel
Egypt’s first labor union
for domestic maids was established early this month and already claims a
membership of some 300 such workers in four governorates across the
country.
Domestic workers, overwhelmingly women, are denied rights
under the country’s labor law, and before the rise of the independent
trade union movement last year were not permitted to establish an
official union. The many non-Egyptian domestic workers, even now, are
not able to join the new union.
Abdel Moneim Mansour, lawyer for the Egyptian Association
for Community Participation Enhancement, pointed out that the
state-controlled Egyptian Trade Union Federation does not recognize the
establishment of house maids’ unions.
Moreover, he said, Law 12/2003 (the Unified Labor Law)
“does not provide any legal protection for house maids,
seasonally-employed workers or other forms of precarious labor.
Legislators had actively sought to deprive these categories of legal
protection.”
Indeed, Article 4(b) of the Unified Labor Law clearly
stipulates, “The provisions of the present law shall not apply to
domestic service workers and the like.”
Mansour explained that his organization was involved in
both establishing this independent house maids’ union, and in drafting a
new labor law to replace the restrictive provisions against house maids
and other precarious occupations.
“We’ll present our draft law to Parliament as soon as it is [elected, and then] sworn in,” he said.
Although the founding members of this new union had sought
to name it the “Independent Union of House Maids” or “Independent Union
for Female Domestic Workers,” the Manpower Ministry rejected these
titles. Mansour pointed out that “the ministry insisted that we choose
from among three titles — ‘Female Workers with’ either ‘Daily, Weekly or
Monthly Incomes.’”
He said ministry officials did not provide them with a
reasonable explanation behind the “daily, weekly or monthly” part of the
title.
“Such titles do not specify what kind, or nature, of labor is involved in this union,” Mansour said.
Given their options, organizers settled for the awkward title of Independent Union of Female Workers with Monthly Incomes, which was formally established 3 September.
Hanaa Abdel Hakim, president of the new union, said “across
the country, maids are subjected to numerous health hazards, poor
working conditions, long working hours and very low wages.”
“Maids are also subjected to punitive measures on the part
of employers and tenants,” Abdel Hakim added, saying those include
“non-payment of wages, verbal and physical abuse, being locked up in
subhuman conditions, and sexual harassment or assault.”
The union president explained that Egyptian maids are
typically paid an average of LE15 per day for a full day’s work, or
between only LE100 to LE250 for a whole month of domestic labor.
She said her union seeks “to improve working conditions,
raise incomes, raise awareness regarding domestic workers’ rights,
confront employers’ violations and strive for contracted labor when
possible.”
The union plans to seek to establish nurseries and daycare centers for maids’ infants while they are working, Abdel Hakim added.
Abdel Hakim said her union now includes over 280 maids from four governorates — Cairo, Alexandria, Beheira and Kafr al-Sheikh.
“The numbers of our members are steadily increasing. If we
keep growing at this rate, then we will soon have thousands of maids
join us from every corner of the country,” she said.
There are perhaps hundreds of thousands, of women employed,
either full-time or part-time, as maids and domestic workers
nationwide.
Although there are an untold number of Asian and
sub-Saharan African women employed in this profession in Egypt, Mansour
explained that this union is open only to Egyptian female domestic
workers. No men or foreign maids are allowed membership in this
particular union.
Mansour argued that “many of these [foreign] maids have
contracts with their employers, and/or some kind of protection from
their embassies. Yet this isn’t the case with Egyptian house maids, who
have no legal protection whatsoever, and are often subjected to the most
cruel and inhumane treatment.”
The lawyer said both Egyptian and foreign maids are
subjected to punitive layoffs, abuse and sexual harassment, “but
Egyptian maids are generally treated and paid worse.”
Egypt’s labor and union laws exclude foreign workers from
membership in trade union or professional syndicates. Whether
state-controlled or independent, the overwhelming majority of these
associations do not allow foreigners to join their ranks as members.
Jenny, a Sri Lankan house maid who has worked in Egypt for the past 20 years and asked that her last name not be used for this article, disagreed with Mansour’s claim that foreign maids are better off than their Egyptian counterparts.
“Very few have signed contracts with their employers,” she
said. “Most foreign maids that I know of here do not have any kind of
contract for part-time or full-time work. Contracts are not at all
common, except in some cases where you are working as a full-time
resident. No embassy does anything for maids here.”
Jenny said that other foreign maids — whom she personally
knows — had repeatedly asked their embassies to intervene in cases of
abuse, yet they are “not able or interested to do anything” to help.
Jenny said she has not been mistreated or abused during her two decades as a domestic worker in Egypt, but that other maids have been abused — verbally, physically and/or financially — by employers.
“Others I know of were treated badly,” she said. “They did lots of work and still didn’t get paid any money for all this work.”
Fatma Ramadan, board member of the Egyptian Federation of
Independent Trade Unions, said Egypt should allow foreigners to organize
and unionize, as is allowed for in other countries of the world.
“Yet our laws do not mention anything regarding foreign
workers’ rights. This is a legislative shortcoming that we unionists
should take note of, and also address,” she said.
Ramadan explained that the country has not been hosting or
attracting very many foreign workers, due to the poor condition of the
economy and substandard labor conditions here. But she said the number
has gradually increased over the past decades, along with foreign
laborers and professionals employed in foreign-owned enterprises,
companies and investment zones.
Mansour said the exact or even estimated number of domestic
workers in the country is not known, saying the number is not
registered in government statistics.
“It is nearly impossible to assess, since many of these
maids work in other jobs or professions,” he said. “Also, many of these
maids do not like to mention their profession out of fear of being
stigmatized as ‘lowly foot servants.’”
Talal Shokr of the Egyptian Democratic Labor Congress echoed that sentiment.
“These women are dignified workers who refuse to be
referred to as khadamat (female foot servants) and insist upon being
referred to as amelat (female workers),” Shokr said. Mansour agrees.
Shokr explained that in the male-dominated union movement —
whether in state-controlled or independent unions — there are only a
handful of women-led unions, including al-ra’edat al-rifiyat (female rural health care advisers), who are affiliated to the Health
Ministry.
Like the Egyptian Association for Community Participation
Enhancement, the Egyptian Democratic Labor Congress played a pivotal
role in establishing this maid’s union.
The organization provided legal and administrative assistance for these now-unionized house maids. The Independent Union of Female Workers with Monthly Incomes is temporarily headquartered at the labor group’s main office in Garden City, Cairo.
The organization provided legal and administrative assistance for these now-unionized house maids. The Independent Union of Female Workers with Monthly Incomes is temporarily headquartered at the labor group’s main office in Garden City, Cairo.
Shokr said the Egyptian Democratic Labor Congress provided
legal and administrative assistance for these now-unionized house maids,
but they’re not affiliated with the group.
“They are free to join the congress or the Egyptian
Federation of Independent Trade Unions, or establish their own
federation independent of both,” Shokr said.
*Photo courtesy of ThinkStock
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