Organizing the Unorganized: Migrant Domestic Workers in Lebanon: Cairo Papers in Social Science Vol. 34, No. 3
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Organizing the Unorganized - Farah Kobaissy
CHAPTER 1
Beyond the Weapons of the Weak: Domestic Workers’ Union in Lebanon
We are here today celebrating equality for all.
Migrants and nationals join together as one.
So, domestic workers, stop dying.
It’s time to rejoice and strive . . .
Heal Beirut,
Make it a better place
For you and me
And the entire workers’ race.
There are migrants dying.
Do you care for their living?
Make it a better place
For you and for me.
(Extract from a song written and sung
by the domestic workers’ unionists during the
launching of their union on January 25, 2015.)
On Sunday, May 4, 2015, the occasion of International Workers’ Day, hundreds of migrant domestic workers and their allies in Lebanon took to the streets, demanding that their union be formally recognized by the Lebanese government. The union has been denounced by the labor minister as illegal,
arguing that it will only generate problems
instead of solving them. The minister suggested that protection
for domestic workers is best guaranteed through new laws,
not through union organizing.¹ In other words, rights are unequivocally the government’s grant, not to be claimed or bargained for. He added: Protection takes place through procedures, not through the introduction of the domestic workers into political and class games.
² The minister’s last statement blatantly expresses the state of fear generated by the thought of workers organizing, migrants in particular, who through their attempt are putting a foot out of their ‘zone of exception’ into the political and the social space of the nation.
Various sources estimate the number of migrant domestic workers in Lebanon between 150,000 and 200,000 in an overall work force of 1.45 million (Tayah 2012:9). In a country where state provisions for childcare and care for the elderly are absent, the burden falls on the nuclear family, and women in particular, to cope with the organization of care and domestic work. Cheap and precarious migrant domestic labor represents a low-cost solution to the Lebanese care deficit. It is estimated that one in every four families in Lebanon employs a migrant domestic worker (Jureidini 2011a).
As the number of migrant domestic workers gradually grew in the 1990s, along with the increase of reported cases of abuse in the 2000s, civil-society groups began to take initiatives to highlight and address these violations. Women’s-rights and human-rights organizations (both local and international) came to supplement church-led charity organizations that had been working since the 1980s on offering safe spaces for migrants, including domestic workers, offering charity, communal ceremonies, prayers, and legal and social assistance (Moors et al. 2009). Tayah (2012) distinguishes two time periods for these interventions: the first is the era dominated by churches and faith-based associations (1980–2005); the second is the period following the 2006 establishment of the National Steering Committee on Migrant Domestic Workers (which includes the International Labour Organization [ILO], human-rights organizations, the Placement Agencies’ Syndicate, and the Ministry of Labor). The actions of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) on behalf of the migrant domestic workers sometimes intersect with the actions of faith-based organizations. However, the period since 2006 has seen a more substantive role for NGOs and brought new dimensions to the struggle for domestic workers’ rights. However, the primary approach remained dominated by humanitarian focus on cases of violence, trafficking, and deaths at the expense of labor rights. As a result, migrant domestic workers are first and foremost portrayed as victims duped by agents and exploited and mistreated by employers
(Moors et al. 2009). This dominant approach, besides emphasizing the plight of domestic workers, failed to address the unequal power relations between workers and employers. Kerbage (2014) argues that throughout the second era, workers remained to a large extent excluded from expressing their demands and addressing the authorities in their own name without intermediaries. Workers were also excluded from negotiations with state authorities, embassies, and recruitment and placement agencies. Despite the fact that the work of these NGOs succeeded in pressuring the Lebanese state to take action on small areas of reform, such as the unified standard contract in 2009³ and the draft law for domestic workers in 2011,⁴ these measures preserved the kafala (sponsorship) system and further institutionalized the exclusion of domestic workers from normal labor interactions (Esim and Kerbage 2011).
Motaparthy (2015) defines the kafala as a system of control
and as a way for governments to delegate responsibility for migrants to private citizens or companies. She argues that the system gives sponsors a set of legal abilities to control workers:
Without the employer’s permission, workers cannot change jobs, quit jobs, or leave the country. If a worker leaves a job without permission, the employer has the power to cancel his or her residence visa, automatically turning the worker into an illegal resident in the country. Workers whose employers cancel their residency visas often have to leave the country through deportation proceedings, and many have to spend time behind bars. (Motaparthy 2015)
Their fragile condition is further exacerbated by the discrimination they face as poor migrant women who work in a profession that lacks social and formal recognition.
The noticeable distinction that has emerged over the last decade is that the needs and interests of migrant domestic workers in Lebanon have overwhelmingly been the concern of NGOs rather than trade unions. Recently, this started to shift when the National Federation of Workers and Employees’ Trade Unions in Lebanon (FENASOL) began to organize domestic workers, who are predominantly migrants with few Lebanese nationals, marking the third era in the struggle for domestic workers’ rights. Yet this new era is far from disentangling itself from the previous one. On the contrary, the trade union for domestic workers was formed based on cooperation among FENASOL, the ILO, Kafa (Enough Violence, a women’s-rights organization), Insan (a human-rights organization), and the Migrant Community Center (MCC, a center run by the Anti-Racism Movement in Beirut).
Contextualizing the Domestic Workers’ Union
The year 2015 marked a shift in the history of organizing migrant workers in Lebanon. It witnessed the birth of the first trade union for domestic workers under the umbrella of FENASOL. The Federation’s initiative to organize domestic workers was supported by the ILO. A report published by the ILO in 2012 recommended that
NGOs are expected to engage workers’ unions in the planning and implementation of relevant programs and activities if only to emphasize the ‘worker’ in domestic workers. When unions become thoroughly informed about the working and living conditions of domestic workers, their commitment to domestic workers’ issues during tripartite dialogues on migrant workers becomes more significant. (Tayah 2012:56)
In fact, the ILO global agenda on domestic workers, following the adoption of the ILO Convention 189 in 2011 on domestic work, emphasized the need for local trade-union federations to act as partners to organize domestic workers and ultimately push toward a tripartite negotiation among the state, workers, and employers/placement agencies. This coincided with local dynamics among trade unions in Lebanon as well as regional uprisings, all of which have played a role to the benefit of domestic workers.
In 2012, FENASOL, which is tied to the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP), made the decision to withdraw its membership from the General Confederation of Lebanese Workers (CGTL), the sole official representative of workers on the state level. The CGTL suffers from an ineffective bureaucracy, as well as extremely poor membership and participation on the part of the workers, as will be discussed in chapter 2. Following this move, FENASOL, which itself was not free from structural problems similar to the CGTL, needed and wanted to assert itself as an alternative model to the latter and compete over the status of workers’ representation in Lebanon. The withdrawal came as a reaction to CGTL’s leadership alliance with the employers, conceding to a minimum wage less than that proposed by the former minister of labor, Charbel Nahas, and refusing to allow the universal health coverage proposed by Nahas to be financed from taxing real-estate profits and financial speculation. The CGTL notoriously made history in demanding a minimum wage scale less than what a labor minister had proposed. FENASOL’s withdrawal was criticized by many labor activists and journalists as too little, too late;⁵ it was felt that its leadership, together with the leadership of the Communist Party, should have made this decision years earlier in order to stop the continuous process of weakening that the trade-union movement in Lebanon had been suffering since the 1990s. The LCP leadership justified this delay based on the belief that they could have a stronger say within the CGTL. Also, both leaderships (LCP and FENASOL) long defended the unity of the trade-union movement even when the trade union lost its representation of workers, and even when this unity meant uniting with the leadership of the CGTL, which has betrayed workers’ interests on many occasions. However, in 2012, FENASOL finally found it was impossible to continue with this ‘unholy marriage’ with the Confederation.
The decision to withdraw also came within a national context of intensified labor mobilization within the informal, formal, public, and private sectors. Spinneys (a supermarket chain) workers were fighting a unionization battle, while contract workers of the Lebanese Electric Company, Hariri hospitals, Lebanese University, and Casino du Liban were on strike for fixed employment. Teachers in private and public schools, along with public employees, were fighting a long battle for wage increases, with strikes and protests reaching the tens of thousands. The common denominator among these labor struggles, beside the common experience of precarity, was their lack of formal union organization, which made their actions weak and unable to fully obtain their demands. Hence CGTL’s inefficiency and betrayal of workers, as well as the intensification of labor protests, reopened the public discussion on the need for a democratic, independent, and representative labor movement in Lebanon. But this discussion was not only local; it was also taking place at the regional level within the revolutionary context of 2011 in the Arab world. Workers formed independent trade-union federations as alternatives to the state-led federations in Egypt and Yemen, and union organizing played a leading role in the popular uprisings against dictatorships in Tunisia and Bahrain.
In response to these local and regional developments, the CGTL issued a statement on December 20, 2012 accusing anyone who wants to establish an independent trade union of seeking to atomize, dismember, and divide the trade unions and abandon the workers in order to serve the Zionist project
calling for constructive chaos. The ILO had been working to assist the formation of independent trade-union federations or support the ones that already existed. The case of Lebanon was in the middle, in the sense that there was no real independent trade-union federation but the FENASOL leadership was willing to form one, particularly if this meant technical and financial support from the ILO and other international trade-union organizations. In light of their accusation of being at the service of the Zionists, ILO officials became more determined to support and work with FENASOL as an exclusive partner in Lebanon. As a result, FENASOL decided on three main priorities:
1.