(January 10, 2012) A Catholic nun in India is urging the government to enact a new
law which would protect domestic workers and guarantee them basic employment rights.
“Domestic workers are the most vulnerable to sexual harassment and there is no legal
protection,” said Sister Rosily Panjikaren at a rally on Monday in Indore, in Madhya
Pradesh state. More than 600 people had joined the rally to mark India’s International
Domestic Workers Day. Sr. Panjikaren, a member of the Servants of the Holy Spirit
congregation and director of the Indore Domestic Workers’ Solidarity, also urged the
federal government to set a minimum daily wage for these workers. Church groups and
other affiliates of the National Domestic Workers’ Movement organized similar events
in other parts of the country. Sr. Panjikaren said it is wrong for people to look
upon domestic workers as mere servants and deny them legal rights and health schemes.
Women domestic workers are mostly illiterate and poor and cannot negotiate better
wages and for other basic employment rights, the nun explained. She called for the
establishment of an independent registered union to speak out against the “injustices
meted out to domestic workers on a regular basis.”