In this Naga village, equal pay for equal work is not a dream

CHIZAMI (NAGALAND): Earlier this month, thousands of women hit the streets across Switzerland to demand equal pay, but one of the wealthiest countries of the world would be amazed to know that women in a village in Nagaland have secured what it has been striving to achieve for the last 30 years. The gutsy women of Chizami in Nagaland’s

Equal pay for equal work has been made possible as women of Chizami fought and won parity in 2015, with courage and a little help from like-minded men

CHIZAMI (NAGALAND): Earlier this month, thousands of women hit the streets across Switzerland to demand equal pay, but one of the wealthiest countries of the world would be amazed to know that women in a village in Nagaland have secured what it has been striving to achieve for the last 30 years. The gutsy women of Chizami in Nagaland’s Phek district succeeded in winning pay parity with their male counterparts in 2015 after a eight-year battle, and with the help of sensitive men by their side. But while that’s unlike anything heard of in India, their fight is far from over.

Read Caption
Farmers Tasetshulou Kapfo (centre) and Adile (right) joined hands with other villagers to get pay parity in Chizami, Nagaland

“We never had disparity in pay in the days when we used to practise barter,” says 74-year-old farmer Tasetshulou Kapfo, talking of a time before the advent of cash
changed everything.

“Both boys and girls got three zahe (a measuring basket) of grain for a day’s work. But as cash came into the system, the value of labour changed and we started seeing disparity in wages,” adds Kapfo, who still works in her terraced paddy fields in the village that is about four hours’ drive from capital Kohima.

What the Swiss protest is all about

Women across Switzerland went on strike on June 14, 2019, to protest for equal pay and equal rights. On an average women in Switzerland earn 20% less then men

The protest comes 28 years after a similar action in 1991 when half a million took to the streets demanding equal pay

Post World War I, along with millions of other women in Europe, Swiss women too demanded right to vote, but only got it in 1971

The women farmers of Chizami say men got paid more by projecting that they performed the more laborious tasks in the cultivation process, like ploughing the field. “We argued what women do, men can’t. That it is equally strenuous to sit hunchbacked the whole day and clear the fields of undergrowth,” says Kenzunyipe-uTsuhah,
chairperson of the village women’s society. In the terraced fields of Chizami, it is the women who put in most of the farm work without any mechanical assistance. “We pursued the idea of equal wages with the village council and its welfare forum for seven years, starting 2007, but it was pushed back every time,” she says. “One year men
said it was a taboo for women to demand equal wages. Another year they said we should respect men as the head of the household and not look to be paid as much as them,” said 56-year-old Adile, who took to farming when she was barely six years old.

After an eight-year battle women in the village succeeded in winning pay parity

But seeing their strategy hitting the wall year after year, the women changed tack in the eighth year. “We approached men who were sensitive to our cause. Dr Wethselo T Mero, a paediatrician who works at the district hospital in Phek, became our spokesperson and convinced the village council that Chizami should be a model for the
world,” says Tsuhah.

“The equal wages apply for all kinds of non-specialised agricultural and manual work and is fixed at Rs 450 a day during peak paddy transplanting time (from June 1 to mid-July) and Rs 400 for the rest of the year,” says Wekoweu Tsuhah, the programme director of NEN in Nagaland. Chizami, a village of 600 households and approximately 5,000 residents, is surrounded by hills carpeted with alder and oak trees. “About 20-30% of Chizami’s households depend on farm labour in addition to working in their family fields,” says Wekoweu.


Wage parity in India

Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 promises equal payment to men and women for the same work done. However, it is rarely implemented on the ground


Agricultural labour

Women are paid 22.24% less than men


Non-agricultural labour

Women are paid 24.06% less than men
Source: NSSO Survey 2017


Statistics show what the women of Chizami have achieved is no mean feat. The International Labour Organisation (ILO) in its ‘India Wage Report’ released in 2018 says the gender wage gap in the country remains very high by international standards, despite declining from 48% in 1993–94 to 34% in 2011–12. Of all worker groups, the average daily wages of casual rural female workers is the lowest, it adds.

“What this village in Nagaland has achieved is unheard of in the entire country,” says Ramendra Kumar, national secretary of Trade Union Coordination Centre, which works in 20 states across India. Despite the Equal Remuneration Act of 1976, enforcement on the ground is missing and discrimination is widespread, Kumar added. “The difference in wages can be anywhere between Rs 50 and Rs 100. The discrimination has been internalised and women don’t ever question the pay gap,” he says.

Women of Chizami, the village inhabited by the Chakhesang tribe, talk about newfound respect and confidence since the epochal decision of 2015. “Women from other villages have been inspired by Chizami’s achievement and are demanding equal wages. What is most important for us is that we feel happy and proud that our work is
given equal value,” says Adile. “We can say to our children and grandchildren that in our generation we addressed the issue and achieved pay parity,” she adds.

The women of Chizami argue that farming is as strenuous for women as it is for men. They have to sit hunchback the whole day and clear fields of undergrowth

But for Chizami’s women, the fight still continues as many men in the village find it difficult to swallow the idea of equal pay and are challenging the move, says women’s society chief Tsuhah. “Even last year, some men wanted the equal-pay decision revoked but the chairperson of the village council — the apex decision-making body of a village — put his foot down. Our struggle hasn’t ended, but we are going to hold on to this achievement with our lives,” she adds.

For now the women of Chizami have a friend in Welhite Naro, the village council chairperson, who is sensitive to gender rights. A master’s in sociology from Jamia Milia Islamia in Delhi, Naro has two women members in the council and plans to increase women’s representation in the body. Asked about the challenge to the equal pay decision, Naro said: “There is no question of going back on the wage-parity issue now.”

Photo Credit: Jasdeep Kaur

News Source The Time of India

Author: DELHI SHRAMIK SANGATHAN

Delhi Shramik Sangathan (DSS) is a federation of unorganized sector workers unions based in Delhi.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.