Pages

Tuesday, 22 March 2016

LETS CHAT ABOUT HOUSE HELPS 1


House helps are a central part of our lives today. A house help, Nanny, Maid, House girl, House boy or Domestic servant… many homes depend on them.
By definition, it means the person employed to perform house hold chores such as cleaning, washing, cooking and caring for the children. This role is a dominant feature in most homes in the urban centers regardless of whether the house wife is working outside the home or not. The house help could be male or female but is often female, and most often a child. I am commencing my blog posts in 2016 with a series of weekly write-ups on this all important subject. I wish to make this a broad based discourse and will gladly welcome comments from men, women and children.

Our starting point is to examine current trends and practices and then move on to the legal status of the house help in Nigeria.

The Need

The need for house helps is a very present one in modern society. Even a full time house wife has need of someone to help do the chores and run errands if she must stay healthy and fully attend to her role as wife and mother. It is in fact a myth that house helps are a function of having working mothers. The major difference is that the working mother is not as present as the full time housewife to supervise the house staff all day.

The Source

House helps can be sourced from the village or from the neighborhood in the city. It is rare to put out adverts for employment with regards to house helps. Often the woman in need puts out the word in the community where she lives, or to friends at work or in church, and those who have a contact make recommendations.

Age

Anyone can be a house help, whether young, adult, old, male or female. In the northern states house helps were traditionally older women who also nursed the babies and gave them suck. These women had fully grown children and were free to move in with the employer or come in early and stay until late to attend to the needs of the employer.

But across the country, house helps are predominantly children, between the ages of 6 to 15. It is more common to engage teenagers who can handle house hold chores and care for babies, but it is not uncommon to find children as little as 5 or 6 years old caring for smaller babies.

Roles

A house help performs some traditional chores in the home including sweeping, washing plates, washing clothes, bathing the children, taking the children to school, cooking, running errands, and fetching water. They are also known to sometimes perform non- traditional functions such as helping with homework, putting the generator on and off, and where a child is involved, they may be further exploited in satisfying the sexual needs and perversions of the oga and his madam, or of the older children in the family. Reports indicate that some house wives turn a blind eye to the continuous rape of the house maid by their husbands in order to preserve their marriage and position in the home. It is also common for the house wife to jointly rape the child. So besides the house hold chores child domestic helps may also be engaged in performing sexual roles in the family.

A live-in house help has no defined work schedule or work hours. House helps have been known to start work at 5am and to work until 11 or 12pm. Sometimes they stay awake until madam goes to bed so they can put off the generator.

Salary

Traditionally the children of relatives are brought from the village to serve as house helps in the urban centers with the promise of an education. Such offer is in lieu of salary or emolument particularly as the employee is a child and is most often a relative and therefore is considered a ward rather than a worker in the home. Payment is therefore gratuitous in form of promise of school enrolment the child in the city, free feeding, board, clothes and general provision and care. But the terms are not usually clearly defined or stated because the agreement with the child’s parent is often informal. Therefore the terms can vary at the whims of the employer.

Where salaries are to be paid at all for the child’s labour, it is often paid directly to the parent or through the intermediary. A common practice in some parts is to keep the pay from January until December so the child can travel home with the total sum for the parents to invest in the family farm or business.

Salaries for house help range from 8000 from 15,000 Naira or a little more depending on the city. It may be less in some small cities where the cost of living is not as high as in Lagos, Abuja or Port Harcourt.