The Borneo Post

Maids’ riot reignites debate over domestic labour in India

- By Annie Gowen & Vidhi Doshi

NEW DELHI: A violent protest by maids at a luxury high-rise in India and its bitter aftermath have rekindled debate about the treatment meted out to the growing ranks of domestic workers in the country.

Dozens of angry maids burst through the gates of the Mahagun Moderne apartment complex just outside the capital, hurling stones and breaking windows, under the belief that a fellow domestic worker had been held by her employer there against her will in a pay dispute, police have said.

Police are still trying to determine the exact circumstan­ces of the dispute - whether the employer was refusing to pay back wages, as the maid alleges, or whether she stole money, as the employers claim. More than a dozen people have been arrested in the incident, and a flurry of police complaints have been lodged.

The incident has sparked an intense backlash on social media, with critics portraying the maids as lawless illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. It has also prompted calls for India to re-examine its attitudes and policies about its more than 4 million domestic workers, many of whom work long hours for low wages with little legal protection.

For now, the gates of the Mahagun Moderne , in the New Delhi suburb of Noida, remain closed to the more than 500 helpers who work normally there, washing dishes, folding clothes and tending the children, after residents enacted a “maid ban” in response to the violence.

The domestic workers said they feared losing their jobs permanentl­y but had been moved to protest because they believed that Johra Bibi, the maid at the center of the dispute, had been taken advantage of and that they might be next.

“We’ve never done anything like this before,” one of the protesters, Haseena Bibi, said.

India’s elite have for centuries employed servants, but economic liberaliza­tion and the rise of the middle class meant that the number of cooks, maids and drivers has grown exponentia­lly in recent decades, journalist Tripti Lahiri wrote in a recent book, “Maid in India.” Hundreds of thousands have migrated from villages to India’s five major urban centers to tend to the needs of the elite.

Some state government­s have tried in recent years to regularise wages for domestic workers - in Rajasthan, for example, they now must be paid at least US$87 (RM374) a month. But many make less than that.

An opinion piece in Saturday’s Hindu newspaper called for the government to enact draft legislatio­n that would protect the rights of domestic workers with required registrati­on and a mandated social security fund.

Class divisions between household staff and their affluent bosses remain deeply entrenched, Lahiri writes: “We eat first, they eat later . . . we live in front, they live in the back, we sit on chairs and they sit on the floor, we drink from glasses and ceramic plates and they from ones made of steel and set aside for them, we call them by their names, they address us by titles.” In Noida, more than 2,000 families live in Mahagun Moderne, a 25-acre complex with swimming pools, a tennis court and landscaped pathways. A short distance away, their household help - mostly migrants from the state of West Bengal - live in tin-roofed huts in a muddy field, bathing from a communal tap.

Lahiri said such migrant shantytown­s often develop next to buildings in Noida, because the residents don’t want to give rooms in their homes to the helpers.

“There are also a lot of daily injustices that people swallow when they’re working as help and then, at some point, the suppressed anger and fear coalesce around one particular incident, which is maybe what we saw,” she said. Johra Bibi, 26, from West Bengal, claimed that when she went to her employers’ home to collect US$125 in back pay, she was assaulted, threatened and ended up hiding out overnight in another part of the complex.

“Madam said to me, if you try to run away, I’ll throw you in the dust bin. I’ll kill you,” she said.

The maid’s husband, Abdul Sattar, a constructi­on worker, said that after his wife did not return home Tuesday evening, he went to the employer’s home with police looking for her and was told she was not there.

“No one does anything for us. No one helps,” Sattar said. Swati Gupta contribute­d to this report. — Washington Post

 ??  ?? (Left) Haseena Bibi stands in front of a crowd of shouting maids opposite the Mahagun Moderne residentia­l complex in New Delhi. • (Right) Johra Bibi lies on a cot outside her home in a slum near the Mahagun Moderne complex in New Delhi. She says she...
(Left) Haseena Bibi stands in front of a crowd of shouting maids opposite the Mahagun Moderne residentia­l complex in New Delhi. • (Right) Johra Bibi lies on a cot outside her home in a slum near the Mahagun Moderne complex in New Delhi. She says she...

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