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Previous comments: C.1, C.14, C.106 and C. 89
Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention. Partial exceptions from the prohibition of night work. The Committee notes that following the adoption of the Finance Act 2006 which amended section 45 of the Factories Act 1934, women may henceforth work with their consent till 10 p.m. provided that the employer arranges for the transport facilities. The Committee understands that the partial lifting of the ban on women’s night work is the outcome of pressing demands particularly on the part of the IT industry. The Committee notes with interest that the relaxation of the prohibition is consonant with the current trend favouring the review of the protective legislation with a view to gradually eliminating all provisions contrary to the principle of equal treatment between men and women – except those connected with maternity protection – while taking due account of national circumstances. It is bound to observe, however, that, as it currently reads, section 45 of the Factories Act provides for broader exceptions to the prohibition of night work of women than those permitted under the Convention (the duration of the night period being shortened to eight instead of 11 hours). It is for this reason that the Committee has been drawing the Government’s attention to the Protocol of 1990 to Convention No. 89, which expands considerably the exemption possibilities with regard to the prohibition of night work for women based on agreements concluded between the employers’ and workers’ representatives concerned. The Committee therefore once again invites the Government to consider the possibility of ratifying either the 1990 Protocol, which affords greater flexibility in the application of Convention No. 89, while remaining focused on the protection of women workers, or Convention No. 171 which shifts the emphasis from a specific category of workers and sector of economic activity to the safety and health protection of all night workers irrespective of gender. The Committee asks the Government to keep the Office informed of any decision taken in this regard.
In addition, the Committee notes that the Government remains bound by the provisions of the Night Work (Women) Convention, 1919 (No. 4), and therefore action needs also to be taken in this regard. In its General Survey of 2001 on the night work of women in industry, the Committee concluded that Convention No. 4 was a rigid instrument, ill-suited to present-day realities and manifestly of historical importance only (paragraph 193). Similarly, the ILO Governing Body, based on the recommendations of the Working Party on Policy regarding the Revision of Standards, decided to retain Convention No. 4 as a candidate for possible abrogation considering that it no longer corresponded to current needs and had become obsolete (see GB.283/LILS/WP/PRS/1/2, paragraphs 31–32 and 38). The Committee takes this opportunity to recall that contrary to most other Conventions which may be denounced after an initial period of five or ten years but only during an interval of one year, the denunciation of Convention No. 4 is possible at any time provided that the representative organizations of employers and workers are fully consulted in advance. The Committee therefore strongly encourages the Government to take appropriate action in respect of obsolete Convention No. 4.
The Committee notes the Government’s report according to which the Convention continues to be implemented through the enforcement of the Factories Act, 1934, and the Mines Act, 1923.
The Committee takes this opportunity to refer to paragraphs 191 to 202 of its General Survey of 2001 on the night work of women in industry, in which it observed that the present trend is no doubt to move away from a blanket prohibition against women’s night work and to give the social partners the responsibility for determining the extent of the permitted exemptions. It also noted that many countries are in the process of easing or eliminating legal restrictions on women’s employment during the night with the aim of improving women’s opportunities in employment and strengthening non-discrimination. The Committee further recalled that member States are under an obligation to review periodically their protective legislation in light of scientific and technological knowledge with a view to revising all gender-specific provisions and discriminatory constraints. This obligation stems from Article 11(3) of the 1979 UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (to which parenthetically Pakistan acceded in 1996), as later reaffirmed in point 5(b) of the 1985 ILO resolution on equal opportunities and equal treatment for men and women in employment.
More concretely, the Committee considered that the Protocol of 1990 to Convention No. 89 was designed as a tool for smooth transition from outright prohibition to free access to night employment, especially for those States that wished to offer the possibility of night employment to women workers but felt that some institutional protection should remain in place to avoid exploitative practices and a sudden worsening of the social conditions of women workers. It also suggested that greater efforts should be made by the Office to help those constituents who are still bound by the provisions of Convention No. 89, and who are not yet ready to ratify the new Night Work Convention, 1990 (No. 171), to realize the advantages of modernizing their legislation in line with the provisions of the Protocol. Therefore, the Committee invites the Government to give favourable consideration to the ratification of the 1990 Protocol which affords greater flexibility in the application of the Convention while remaining focused on the protection of female workers.
Finally, the Committee would be grateful to the Government for providing, in accordance with Part V of the report form, up-to-date information concerning the practical application of the Convention, especially as regards the application of the exceptions allowed under the provisions of the Convention. The Committee understands that women workers employed in export-oriented industries are often exempted from the general prohibition on night work. It therefore requests the Government to supply more specific information on the grounds on which special authorizations to export-oriented factories are granted, the average number and duration of permits delivered per year, the approximate number of workers concerned and how it is ensured that this practice remains in conformity with the narrowly defined suspension or exemption possibilities provided for in the Convention.