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00-09-13
Global labour report denounces repression (ICFTU)
Thousands of people targeted for trade union activities world-wide
Brussels, September 13 2000 (ICFTU OnLine):
At least 140 trade unionists were assassinated, disappeared, or
committed suicide after they were threatened, because they had the
temerity to stand up for workers rights against the state
or unscrupulous employers, according to an annual survey published
today (September 13) by the Brussels-based International Confederation
of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU). The Survey details violations of trade
union rights in 113 countries during the period from January 1,
1999 to December 31, 1999. It says that nearly 3000 people were
arrested, more then 1,500 were injured, beaten or tortured and at
least 5,800 were harassed because of their legitimate trade union
activities. Another 700 trade unionists received death threats.
This years report gives an opportunity to denounce
the prevailing hypocrisy which sees government officials parading
at international gatherings, ostensibly promoting basic workers
rights, while those who actually defend those fundamental rights
at home are being harassed, attacked, threatened, sidelined or silenced
sometimes for ever, said Bill Jordan, general secretary
of the ICFTU while presenting this years findings.
Abuses compiled in the survey range from murder to subtle legislative
arrangements that make trade union activities increasingly looking
like a
daunting obstacle race.
Some 12,000 workers were unfairly dismissed or refused reinstatement,
sometimes with the complicity of the government, because they were
active members of a trade union. At least 140 strikes or demonstrations
were repressed by governments, sometimes with the support of the
employers using strike breakers, while 80 of the 113 countries mentioned
in the survey restrict the right to strike altogether.
Ruthless repression in Latin America, attacks and interference
in Asia,
arrests and imprisonment in Africa, severe restrictions and
non-payment of
wage in Eastern Europe and a growing trend to union busting
activities
in industrialised countries are
key findings of this years findings, according to Bill
Jordan. The
ICFTUs annual report forms part of its campaign to promote
a link between
respect for core labour standards and international trade arrangements.
The survey reports on violations of two
o
f the most ratified Conventions of the UNs International
Labour
Organisation (ILO): Conventions 87 on Freedom of Association
ratified by
130 countries and Convention 98 on the right to organise and
collective
bargaining ratifies by 145 countries.
The ICFTU is the worlds largest international trade union
organisations
with affiliated national centres in 145 countries representing
more than
123 million workers world-wide.
The Americas
The Latin American continent remains the most dangerous place
in the world for trade unionists. 90 trade unionists lost their
lives, twice as many as any other continent, and about 70% of those
arrested world-wide for carrying out trade union activities were
from Latin America.
Forming a trade union within an enterprise is virtually impossible
in many Latin American countries. Workers rights are ignored
in the export processing zones (in particular in Nicaragua, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Mexico and Honduras) and strikes are severely repressed:
726 trade unionists were injured or beaten for trying to enforce
their rights. Those defending the workers cause are constantly
harassed by the authorities and employers. In at least two Export
processing zones, renowned multinational s were described as resorting
to pregnancy tests before recruiting workers.
In Colombia, 76 trade unionists were assassinated or reported
missing.
These included 23 trade union leaders, 52 grass roots union
activists, and
a union bodyguard. There were 676 death threats, 13 attempted
assassinations, 22 kidnaps, 28 forced exiles.
The authorities used unnecessary force to end strikes, 149 people
were
injured and 418 arrested.
In Argentina, mass demonstrations in several provinces to demand
the
payment of wages were brutally repressed by the police, leaving
five dead
and 25 injured.
The situation for trade unionists in Guatemala remained very dangerous.
Three of them were assassinated and there were at least 20 death
threats against trade union leaders. Violence was particularly bad
against workers in the banana plantations, where transitional corporations
tried to destroy the trade unions.
In Costa Rica, banana workers trying to form unions risk the sack,
and are put on black lists. The suppression of labour unions enables
employers to ignore safety regulations. Sometimes with dramatic
results. The use of, otherwise forbidden, pesticides has led to
the death of workers. Cases of sterility and of women delivering
deformed babies were also reported.
In the United States, freedom of association and the right to
strike are severely restricted. At least one in 10 union supporters
campaigning to form a union is illegally fired. The instances of
extreme exploitation have increased in particular of foreign workers
recruited through private employment agencies. About 40% of public
service employees are refused the right to strike and to bargain
collectively. Workers regularly face harassment.
Africa Trade union repression is rife in Africa. In this continent
nearly four out of five arrests world-wide took place in Africa.
80% of the world total of those given prison sentences for their
trade union activities were in Africa. Strikes and demonstrations
were also harshly repressed. The legislation of 23 of the 31 African
countries covered contains restrictive measures on the right to
strike. Trade unionists are frequently harassed in Africa. The survey
lists 834 cases, in nearly two thirds of African countries, a higher
average than any other continent.
An overriding feature in Africa is government interference in
trade unions
internal affairs. In Libya, Sudan, and in Equatorial Guinea
the ban on
independent trade unions remained. In the Central African Republic,
the
government continued to target the
USTC and its leader, Théophile Sonny-Cole, was beaten
up and prevented
from attending international conferences.
In Ethiopia, two leaders of the teachers union ETA died
in prison because
of poor conditions, while another received a 15-year prison
sentence, as
part of continual harassment of the ETA. The national union
centre the
CETU remained under government cont
rol. The authorities in Djibouti imposed their own candidates
at the top
of the UGTD and the UDT, and froze their assets, claiming that
the genuine
organisations were illegal.
In Morocco, 23 trade unionists were sent prison after striking
over labour
law violations, 21 of whom had been tortured by police in detention.
In Swaziland, trade unions continued to be repressed, and the
SFTU and its
leaders were regularly harassed. The police detained the entire
national
executive committee of the Swazi Teachers Union, accusing them
of
un-Swazi behaviour because they had c
arried a coffin during a march.
Zimbabwe was another country where respect for trade union rights
deteriorated dramatically, and three leaders of the ZCTU were
attacked
following a strike. Strikes were declared illegal, and those
taking party
severely harassed.
Asia and the Pacific
At least 37 trade unionists lost their lives during strikes
and many
others were wounded in 1999. All the countries in the survey
have
legislation limiting the fundamental right to organise. In some
countries such as Bangladesh and Pakistan workers ha
ve no trade union rights in the export processing zones, while
in other
countries such as Thailand, Fiji, India and Sri Lanka trade
unions are not
allowed in practice. Strikes and demonstrations are fiercely
repressed.
19 of the 25 countries in the regi
on
have anti-strike legislation. In 40% of countries, trade unionists
were
beaten or injured as a result of their trade union activities.
The
authorities frequently intervened in trade union affairs, as
according to
the survey, nearly half of all cases of
interference took place in Asia.
In North Korea and Burma, the authorities have banned the formation
of
independent trade unions..
China represses any attempt to form independent trade unions.
Many trade
unionists remained behind bars or were sent to prison without
trial. At
least 164 independent labour activists were sent to rehabilitation
through labour camps. Hundreds of Chine
se workers were injured during clashes with the police as they
were
protesting against the closures of factory which have resulted
in millions
of people losing their jobs.
In Indonesia, although the trade union situation has improved
the fall of
President Suharto, the police and military still brutally intervene
in
most strikes.
In South Korea, 230 people were arrested, more than 150 were
injured and
over 650 were harassed in anti-union repression.
The recent history of Australian trade unionism has been one
of continual
assaults on trade unions at national and state level through
the
introduction of repressive legislation to deprive unions of
their rights.
There was no improvement in Pakistans poor trade union
rights record, and
in 1999 the government added to the already severe restrictions.
A wide
range of workers cannot belong to unions, and in the countrys
export
processing zones workers cannot form
unions, bargain or go on strike.
In Turkey the police have a record of continually repressing
demonstrations.
Middle East Trade unions are virtually non-existent in the Middle
East, according to the ICFTUs trade union rights survey.
In all the cases examined by the ICFTU, legal barriers prevent workers
from organising or from holding strikes. In Bahrain, Saudi Arabia,
O man, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, foreign workers, who
make up at least two thirds of the labour force have virtually no
rights and are not covered by any of the existing collective agreements.
The situation is slightly better in Kuwait, where workers who have
been in the country for five years are allowed to join unions.
In Israel, the government used the law to ban strikes in the
public
sector, and Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip who
work in
Israel cannot join Israeli trade unions nor can they organise
their own
unions in Israel.
Europe
Seven people in Europe lost their lives owing to their trade
union
activities, while another two committed suicide to draw the
authorities
attention to the conditions they faced. In one quarter of the
countries
examined, trade unionists were injured or
beaten. In nearly half of Eastern Europe, the government interfered
in
the trade unions internal affairs. This interference
amounted to about
one third of the world total.
In Belarus, President Lukashenko has established total state
control over
trade unions, making it impossible to start independent trade
unions, or
for unions to carry out legitimate activities. Trade unionists
have been
arrested for taking part in demons
trations or threatened with the sack if they do not leave the
union.
In Russia, four trade unionists were assassinated. Throughout
the year
the authorities refused to listen to the strikers demands,
often over the
non-payment of wages.
In Malta, the entire leadership of the General Workers Union
as well as
striking workers were charged with criminal offences, during
the six-month
industrial dispute, and 80 trade unionists were injured and
41 arrested.
Restrictions on trade union rights persisted in Western Europe.
In the
United Kingdom companies used anti-union legislation still on
the statute
books to interfere in union affairs. 300 strikers were fired
during a
dispute with Lufthansa sky chefs, the w
orlds largest catering company.
Belgium is mentioned for court decisions which undermine the
right to
strike, and Germany and Switzerland ban the right to strike
for certain
categories of civil servant.
For more information, please contact the ICFTU Press Department
on +32 2
224 0202 or +32 476 62 10 18.
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