|
BEIJING, March 20 (Xinhua) -- Zeng Shuqing, a female
farmer from central China's Henan Province, traveled all the way to Beijing for
a urban job.
Though she is employed in a plastic factory in
Beijing now, 41-year-old Zeng has been worrying about her lack of necessary
skills to secure their future livelihood and support her two children's
education.
A joint program, the Action of Promotion of
Employment and Rights for female migrant workers in Beijing, was launched on
Monday by China and the European Union in a bid to help female farmers like Zeng
solve their problems.
The program will study and analyze the living
conditions, related policies and regulations, employment, medical care,
insurance, housing, education and democratic rights of female migrant workers,
improve their conditions and provide training and support.
Statistics show that women account for a third of the
4 million migrant workers in Beijing.
Women have become an indispensable part of the
migrant workforce, said Cui Yu, head of the development department of the All
China Women's Federation.
"China tries to make female migrant workers the
participants as well as beneficiaries of building an affluent society," Cui
said.
With acceleration of urbanization, the massive
surplus laborers in rural areas have moved to cities and work in such industries
as construction, housekeeping, processing and service trade.
China has more than 120 million migrant workers. They
have made great contribution to the modernization in cities. But many are still
faced with overdue wages and too much overtime, said Wang Yue, chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Chinese Association of Non-Government Organizations
(CANGO).
The traditional urban management model, especially
the limitations of the residence registration system, has created an unfair
welfare environment for migrant workers, he added. Compared with their urban
peers, migrant workers also lack vocational training and skills.
Liu Danhua, deputy director of the training and
employment bureau with the Ministry of Labor and Social Security, said migrant
workers serve as an important force in building a new socialist countryside. In
recent years, China has abolished restrictions against farmers working in cities
and issued a series of policies favoring migrant workers.
Up until now, the problems of overdue wages of
migrant workers and their children's education have not been improved, Liu said.
In the past few years, China has provided training
programs for women in the countryside, such as housekeeping, babysitting and
taking care of the elderly. Many say that they have "learned skills and grown in
confidence". Enditem |