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  • 3 hours ago
Christmas brings joy worldwide, but for Pakistan's Christian workers, it often means unpaid wages, threats of dismissal and lives pushed to the limits.
Transcript
00:00Transcribed by ESO, translated by —
00:30Christmas is in the last month and we have what we have done in the last month and we have finished our last month and we have no salary or any kind of system that we can do our own.
00:45We need to be equal to each other.
01:15The children of Pakistan have also been experienced.
01:20You can also think that they can be strengthened by their own people.
01:34We are not able to live in Pakistan.
01:38They say we are free, but we are not free.
01:40We are not able to take off our own.
01:42so they say no, if we give one, then we give two, then they say,
01:46baby, you are far away, you don't have to, then we think that if our duty is going to
01:52go, then we will do what to do, so we have to think so that if we have to do it again,
01:57then we will do it again, if we have to do it again, then we will do it again,
02:01this is very difficult for us.
02:12The salary is not that we have to earn all of us, but we will have to do it again,
02:30we will pay for our first time.
02:41You get to say that you have written and written that you have to give the salary advance.
02:49You give it a little bit, but you don't give it a little.
02:53Some people don't get it.
02:55So, you have to go through the difficult day.
03:00About a year ago, I did suggest the government that it should be made a policy
03:06that over Christmas or Easter, the salaries should be given automatically a week before it.
03:12And that happens with Eve also.
03:14And rather than just making it a plea every year, why can't we just have a policy?
03:20So, I think, yes, in a country, in a society like ours, there is a margin for positive discrimination.
03:36So, let's do that.
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