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| Seventeen-year-old Fatima, like thousands of young girls employed as housemaids in Morocco, was exploited and abused until she managed to escape (AFP Photo/ FADEL SENNA) |
Rabat (AFP) - A long-awaited law aimed at protecting thousands of young girls working as housemaids in Morocco took effect Tuesday, the country's first such legislation.
The law
sets a minimum age of 18 for household work, in a bid to end the exploitation
and abuse of young girls working for unscrupulous employers.
Passed in
2016 following years of debate, it imposes financial penalties on employers
failing to provide contracts, a minimum wage, a weekly day off and annual
holidays.
The
government at the time hailed the law as major progress.
However,
human rights say it does not go far enough, allowing 16-17 year-olds to work as
domestic helpers for a further five years until October 2023.
Thousands
of young girls in the North African kingdom are employed as maids, often facing
abuse from their employers.
The
Moroccan Collective for Eradicating the Exploitation of "Little
Maids", as the young housemaids are known, said the new law fails to
provide means to reintegrate them into society.
There are
no official figures on the number of minors employed as domestic maids in
Morocco, who often hail from impoverished rural backgrounds.
A 2010
study commissioned by NGOs found that between 66,000 and 80,000 girls under 15
years old were working as maids in Morocco.
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