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HRCP calls for criminalising minor domestic workers’ employment

LAHORE:The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) on Sunday demanded that the employment of minor domestic workers be criminalised, following the case of 13-year-old Rizwana Bibi, who was brutally tortured over a sustained period, allegedly at the hands of her employers. That such cases occur with alarming regularity in the country should prompt a call to action by civil society, the HRCP said in a statement. The human rights body said: “It is not only the extent of violence that Rizwana Bibi has borne that is reprehensible. She was employed as a minor in contravention of a Supreme Court judgment prohibiting the employment of domestic workers under 16. The irony that her employers were a civil judge and his wife should be lost on no one.”

The fact that a more robust FIR was not lodged in the first instance and that the accused was granted protective bail in all likelihood on account of her influence, reflect a system that is rigged invariably against the most vulnerable, it added. HRCP said regrettably, society has normalised not only the employment of minors, but also their ill treatment, whether in homes, schools or workplaces. If the statistics are anything to go by, children are seen as easy targets, as punching bags and as prey.

HRCP said at the core of the Convention on the Rights of the Child-to which Pakistan is a signatory-is a commitment to protect children against all forms of violence in the public and private spheres. “The state must prevent and respond to all forms of neglect, abuse, exploitation and violence against children. If it is not to fail children such as Rizwana-as it has failed numerous other children like her before-the state must also adopt and implement a national strategy to prevent and protect children from violence, and apply judicial systems that pursue the best interests of the child,” the HRCP concluded.

The post HRCP calls for criminalising minor domestic workers’ employment appeared first on PPI News Agency.

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