New Delhi: A bill that proposes six months' maternity leave for all working women has been passed by the Rajya Sabha today, the second last day of the monsoon session. Tracking it closely was Maneka Gandhi, minister for women's welfare, who says it is the result of two years of hard work.
The amendments to Maternity Benefits Act has been drafted by Mrs Gandhi's Ministry for Women and Child Development, but her colleague labour minister Bandaru Dattatreya introduced the bill in the upper house.
"All through the two years while we've been pushing for this, pregnant women have mailed me asking, `Is it through yet?" the minister said. They had asked for seven months' maternity leave, but the government settled on making it compulsory for all offices in the public and private sector to give six months.
This, the minister hopes, will go a long way in fixing the problem of a shrinking woman workforce. Mrs Gandhi said it would affect about 70 per cent of the woman workforce.
"You may ask if it will dissuade companies from hiring more women but I don't think so. I think women know how to multitask,'' she said.
The bill was to have been introduced in the Lok Sabha on Tuesday, but then there was what government sources described as a "scheduling goof-up".
With only three days of the session left, they then decided to bring it first in the Rajya Sabha, since a bill introduced in that house does not lapse with the end of a session.
It was slotted for Wednesday in the Rajya Sabha, which then decided to put aside all work to debate the crisis in Kashmir. Many see the delay as symptomatic of how women's issues are prioritised.
31 of the 244 members in the Rajya Sabha are women. The 543 seat Lok Sabha has 61 women.
The amendments to Maternity Benefits Act has been drafted by Mrs Gandhi's Ministry for Women and Child Development, but her colleague labour minister Bandaru Dattatreya introduced the bill in the upper house.
"All through the two years while we've been pushing for this, pregnant women have mailed me asking, `Is it through yet?" the minister said. They had asked for seven months' maternity leave, but the government settled on making it compulsory for all offices in the public and private sector to give six months.
"You may ask if it will dissuade companies from hiring more women but I don't think so. I think women know how to multitask,'' she said.
Advertisement
With only three days of the session left, they then decided to bring it first in the Rajya Sabha, since a bill introduced in that house does not lapse with the end of a session.
Advertisement
31 of the 244 members in the Rajya Sabha are women. The 543 seat Lok Sabha has 61 women.
COMMENTS
Advertisement
Opinion: Opinion | 12 New Opposition MPs India Should Watch Out For - Part 2 Expelled For Anti-Party Activities, Ex MP Of Naveen Patnaik's BJD Joins BJP Opinion: Opinion | 12 New MPs To Watch Out For - By Derek O'Brien AAP Asks Its Rajya Sabha MP Swati Maliwal To Quit Over Atishi Remarks "Your Duty...": Chief Justice On Bengal's 'No Night Shift For Women' Note AAP's Atishi To Be Delhi's New Chief Minister, Chosen By Arvind Kejriwal "He's Boss Even After Congress Lost Thrice": Kiren Rijiju Jabs Rahul Gandhi Study Shows How Long Covid Is Debilitating Children's Health Arvind Kejriwal Resigns After Choosing Atishi As His Replacement Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.