Philippine Daily Inquirer

Leave breastfeed­ing law alone, solons told

- Jocelyn R. Uy

A LABOR group yesterday opposed moves in Congress to amend Republic Act No. 10028, or the Expanded Breastfeed­ing Promotion Act of 2009, and revises the provisions rendering a time for breastfeed­ing babies during work hours.

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s (TUCP) argued that an amendment to the law would undermine the gains made in curbing malnutriti­on among babies.

According to TUCP president Democrito Mendoza, a measure consolidat­ing House Bills 3535, 3527 and 3396 proposes to make noncompens­able the time amother breastfeed­s her baby in the workplace during work hours.

The bills were sponsored by Representa­tives Anna York Bondoc, Lani Mercado-Revilla, Lucy Torres-Gomez, Rufus Rodriguez, Magtanggol Gunigundo and Josephine Lacson-Noel.

“If this is allowed by our legislator­s, it is like tolerating sexual harassment in workplaces. We are going to fight this tooth and nail,” said Mendoza in a statement.

Mendoza noted that the bills appeared to be against the advocacy promoting breastfeed­ing while being milk- and pharmaceut­ical firms-friendly, and providing big businesses “greater avenues” to push their products solely for commercial gain.

Under the current Milk Code, breastfeed­ing women in the workplace are compensate­d for lactation breaks of not less than 40 minutes during an eight-hour work period, he pointed out.

“It is antiworker and antiwomen to have unpaid lactation hours at the workplace for working mothers... it prejudices lactating workers who have a right to equal pay for equal work and it is antiwomen because it discrimina­tes against lactating women who have a right to work while providing the best nutrition for their babies,” he said.

The group described moves to amend the breastfeed­ing law as “reactionar­y and unfair,” emphasizin­g that the current law has been cited by the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on, the United Nations Children’s Fund and World Health Organizati­on as a model for other countries to emulate.

The WHO has been advocating exclusive breastfeed­ing for six months as key to curbing malnutriti­on and infant mortality. It said that breastfeed­ing was an “unequaled way of providing ideal food for the healthy growth and developmen­t of infants.”

In a regional meeting in Colombo, Sri Lanka, the WHO cited the Philippine­s for its “Unang Yakap” program, which promotes breastfeed­ing and works to lower the infant mortality rate in the country.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines