Centre
for Policy Alternatives E-mail: cpa@sri.lanka.net
Website: www.cpalanka.org PRESS
RELEASE Please give the attached document due publicity. Dr P. Sarvanamuttu Executive
Director

The
Free Trade Zone Workers Union (FTZWU) and the management of Jaqalanka Ltd today
(Thursday, 16th October 2003) reached an agreement, in good faith, to resolve
their dispute over union recognition at the company's factory in the Katunayake
FTZ, Sri Lanka. According to the agreement, Jaqalanka management accepts the FTZWU
as representing the concerns of its members at Jaqalanka Ltd. In return, the FTZWU
agrees to call off the international solidarity campaign that has been waged against
Jaqalanka Ltd. Both parties committed to a process of healing and reconciliation
and agreed to work towards creating an environment conducive to good labour practices.
To demonstrate the understanding reached between the parties and the company's
recognition of the right of workers to freedom of association, copies of this
agreement, in all three languages, will be displayed on the company notice board.
Together with training and capacity building for both parties, the agreement also
provides for the mutually acceptable reformulation of Jaqualanka's internal grievance
procedures. It was agreed that both parties would accept confidentiality as the
guiding principle, and refrain from any form of public declarations on cases under
review. In the first instance, the parties agreed to a dispute resolution and
conciliation mechanism in terms of the Industrial Disputes Act No 56 of 1999.
The meeting was convened by the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA), an
independent public policy organization working on issues of governance and peace
through projects of research and advocacy, on behalf of the Fair Labor Association.
The Fair Labor Association (FLA) is a collaborative effort to improve working
conditions in factories around the world, working cooperatively with forward-looking
companies, NGOs and universities. The FLA promotes a workplace code of conduct
based on International Labour Organization standards. Two FLA participants,
Nike and Vanity Fair, who source from Jaqalanka Ltd in Sri Lanka requested the
FLA to help resolve the dispute. The FTZWU also laid a complaint in terms of the
FLA Third Party Complaints Mechanism. The FLA independently monitors the implementation
of the code of conduct throughout the supply chains of participating companies.
The FLA reports publically on the results of their monitoring and on the implementation
of company compliance programmes. It was agreed, that this forum would reconvene
in six months to consider progress achieved under this agreement. Auret
Van Heerden Executive Director. |