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Maternity
protection every woman's right
The
Herald (Zimbabwe)
July 19,
2006
http://www1.herald.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=6278&cat=1&livedate=7/19/2006
WOMEN working in the informal sector have the right to maternity
protection just like their counterparts in the formal sector, the
Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) has said.
Also in this group were domestic workers and contract workers who
currently do not enjoy any maternity benefits.
Zimbabwean law provides for the right to maternity protection to
certain categories of women, which includes 14 weeks leave in the
private sector, and 12 weeks leave for those in the public sector,
100 percent job security during maternity leave, and an hour breastfeeding
break per day for six months.
Speaking at a ZCTU workshop on Maternity Protection in Zimbabwe
at African Labour Administration Centre (ARLAC), ZCTU legal advisor
Mrs Tsitsi Mariwo-Mbanje said those measures were not adequate as
they continued to be discriminatory against certain categories of
women, like domestic and contract workers.
"Women with less than one year in employment are also discriminated
against for they are not entitled to unpaid maternity leave.
"The only option they have is to resign and their job may not be
guaranteed after childbirth," she said.
Mrs Mbanje said all these discriminatory provisions were in contravention
of Convention 183 which provides that "all employed women have a
right to maternity protection including those in a typical forms
of employment".
They were also against the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women, which Zimbabwe ratified.
According to the convention, Mrs Mbanje told participants, women
who find it difficult to get hospital fees, pre-natal and post-natal
costs in light of the ever-increasing medical costs have a right
to adequate maternity benefits from social assistance funds.
"Those funds are not available, however, and that is why we have
incidents of mothers who are detained in hospitals with their babies
for failure to pay hospital fees."
She said there was also need to increase the feeding time allowed
for mothers — from one to two hours — adding this would give the
women time to travel to and from the workplace.
Mrs Mbanje noted that the current maternity protection measures
did not provide for pregnancy and maternity related leave. The ZCTU
called on Government to consider tax-free maternity cash benefits
to cushion working women as pre-natal, childbirth and post-natal
costs were eroding their incomes.
The workshop sought to sensitise membership on the international
and regional instruments on maternity protection, to discuss national
labour law provisions on maternity protection and to assess the
adequacy and inadequacy of national law vis-a-vis international
and regional instruments.
It also sought to develop a lobbying and advocacy strategy for the
ratification of Convention 183 by Zimbabwe.
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