Eastern Eye (UK)

Girl’s death sparks call for labour reform

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THE brutal death of an eight-year-old worker has caused outrage in Pakistan, prompting the government to propose changes to legislatio­n governing child labour.

Zohra Shah was taken to a hospital in Rawalpindi, in Punjab province, on May 31 with serious injuries, and she died soon afterwards. Police have arrested the girl’s employers, a couple, over her killing.

Hassan Siddiqui and his wife employed Zohra Bibi at their home in a middle-class suburb of Rawalpindi, near the capital Islamabad, to care for their son of a similar same age.

“The poor girl was subjected to torture by Siddiqui and his wife who accused her of freeing one of the four pet Macao parrots,” investigat­ing officer Mukhtar Ahmad said last Thursday (4).

“Siddiqui kicked her in the lower abdomen which proved fatal,” he added.

Following an outpouring of anger on social media about Shah’s death, the country’s human rights ministry said it would work to ensure her killers were brought to justice.

“We will have a better picture once the (police) investigat­ion is complete,” Fauzia Chaudhry, a lawyer at the ministry, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Once we know for sure, we will take action,” she said.

The minister for human rights, Shireen Mazari, tweeted on June 3 that the ministry had proposed amending a child labour law to classify domestic work as a “hazardous occupation.”

That would mean children could not legally be employed as maids or other household staff.

It is illegal for children to work in factories and other industries in Pakistan, but there are still about 12 million child workers in the country, said Sajjad Cheema, who is the executive director of Pakistani NGO Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (SPARC).

Many work as domestic staff in private homes, making it more difficult for authoritie­s to detect.

Extreme poverty pushes many families to send their children to work, Chaudhry said.

“In Shah’s case, the parents were so poor they were reluctant to take their child’s body back to the village as they did not have money for the ambulance or funeral rites,” she said, adding the government had arranged to cover the costs.

Rabiya Javeri Agha, federal secretary at the rights ministry, said contradict­ions within the country’s constituti­on about the legal age must be addressed to protect children from violence at the hand of employers.

“There needs to be legal and constituti­onal clarity on the age of the child,” she said, highlighti­ng several sections of the country’s constituti­on and penal code that needed revisiting.

She highlighte­d the ministry’s role in amending a law to make “cruelty to a child” a penal offence, but said more remained to be done:

“Beyond legislatio­n, however, there is an urgent need to change our culture of discipline through corporal punishment­s – both at home and in schools.” (Agencies)

 ??  ?? OUTRAGE: Activists protest against child labour and violence in Karachi on Monday (8)
OUTRAGE: Activists protest against child labour and violence in Karachi on Monday (8)

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