Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

National Assembly urged to speed up passage of domestic workers right bill

NASS

From Okwe Obi, Abuja

The National Assembly has been charged to speed up the passage of the domestic workers right bill, to curb maltreatment and the recruitment of underaged house helps.

The call was made by the Centre for Children’s Health Education (CEE-HOPE) and the National Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ), during a consultative meeting in Abuja.

CEE-HOPE Executive Director Betty Abbah, complained about the lack of unionism which has contributed to violence and sexual exploitation of domestic workers.

Abbah added that the clamour was anchored on the recent passage of the Informal Sector Employment (Regulation) Bill, 2025, by the Senate, which seeks to formalise domestic work and regulate employment in the informal sector.

According to her, domestic workers are one of the most violated people in Nigeria, lamenting that many suffer abuse without justice.

She recalled the case of Joy, a domestic worker from Benue State, who was allegedly killed by her employers during the COVID-19 lockdown after being locked up, starved and beaten, noting that investigations later confirmed her death was a homicide.

Abbah said many of such incidents could have been prevented if domestic workers had unions to protect their rights, adding that Nigeria, despite having one of the highest numbers of domestic workers in Africa, lacks a functional domestic workers’ union.

She cited countries such as Ghana, Kenya and South Africa where domestic workers enjoy protection through unionisation and referenced the International Labour Organisation Convention 189, which guarantees decent work conditions and the right to form unions.

She said: “In Nigeria, many domestic workers work round the clock, including children as young as seven. Unionisation will significantly reduce abuse and exploitation.”

On her part, NAWOJ Vice President, Zone D, Chizoba Ogbeche, posited that most maltreatment of domestic workers are carried out by women.

Ogbeche stressed that beyond legislation, mindset change and sustained media follow-up were critical, noting that many abuse cases collapse due to lack of investigation and interference.

She also condemned the practice of hiring domestic workers through agencies and paying the agencies directly, describing it as exploitation and modern-day slavery.

Ogbeche said NAWOJ had embraced the campaign and commenced advocacy across its chapters in the North, North Central states and the Federal Capital Territory, pledging continued media engagement to ensure domestic workers are treated with dignity.

She said: “Women and girls are the victims and women are ones perpetrating the act. Sometimes, they are family members that we do not treat as family members.

“The issue of underage is another painful experiences. You will see a girl of 10 years doing what an adult should do.

“If you imbibe the ideology that you do.not treat your house help as a nobody the cycle will continue because our children will grow and get married.

“The church and schools should help. The celebrated case of Ochanya it was her aunty who enabled her molestation.

“The forthcoming training is to bring us up to speed the implications of mistreating domestic workers. A domestic workers are not slaves.

“It is a form of child trafficking when you get a house help through an agency. It is against the law. In that direction, NAPTIP is trying.”