Thursday, January 06, 2022

 

For Myanmar workers, another problem emerges: labor abuse

Employees say they are forced to work overtime and their pay is often late 
since the Feb. 1 coup.
2022.01.05

For Myanmar workers, another problem emerges: labor abuseA worker wears a face mask at a garment factory in Yangon, Myanmar, in a May 8, 2020 photo AFP

Factory managers in Myanmar are suppressing workers’ rights, with mandatory overtime and late payment of wages now routine following the Feb. 1, 2021, military coup that overthrew civilian rule in the country, sources say.

One worker at a foreign-owned garment factory in Yangon told RFA she now works 11 hours a day but receives no pay for overtime work. Managers have now “taken the upper hand” in their dealings with employees, she said.

“They’ll give you overtime pay, or they may not. This is the sort of situation that we’re in,” Hnin Hnin said. “A typical work day is eight hours, and if we work for 10 hours, those extra two hours should be overtime.

“But they will give that only if the quota for production is reached, and if a piece of cloth falls onto the floor, the price of that cloth is deducted from our wages,” she said.

Around 8,000 workers are employed at her factory, with almost all of them facing the same situation, she said.

Otto — a worker at a sweater factory in Yangon region’s Hlaing Tharyar township — told RFA he has still not received wages owed to him for 10 months of work after his factory closed due to the country’s COVID-19 pandemic.

“We asked for our normal daily wage, and they said they could not pay. Then we asked for half that amount, and they still wouldn’t pay,” he said. “Later, we appealed to the Labor Office for arbitration, and they decided I should be paid 50,000 kyat [U.S. $28] for each of five months that I had worked.”

The factory then reopened for a month, and closed again for another three months, he said.

“The 50,000 kyat per month allowed by the Labor Department is not enough to cover our cost of living, as food and accommodation alone cost around 70,000 kyat per month. But as the Labor Office has already fixed this as the rate, we don’t know what to do,” he said.

Khine Zar Aung, president of the Industrial Workers Federation of Myanmar, said she has received at least 50 complaints about rights violations that can be passed on for litigation.

“Most of these cases are in the garment sector, and though we can help with cases in the garment and footwear sectors, we can’t help anyone not working for international brands,” she said. “There is no rule of law here, so there are cases where rights are being seriously violated, and we can’t do anything about these at all.”

Around 40,000 garment workers are now without jobs in Myanmar as a result of the Feb. 1 coup, but the military has arrested members of trade unions and other workers’ organizations in the country, making it difficult to organize a legal defense.

Myanmar’s Ministry of Labor has denied reports that workers are not receiving the minimum pay allowed by law, but workers in the garment industry say most are not receiving full pay, overtime pay, or severance pay when separated from their jobs.

Reporting on labor rights in the year before the coup, the U.S. State Department noted "continued reports of employers engaging in forms of antiunion discrimination," including firing or other forms of reprisal against workers who formed or joined labor unions.

"Trade unions reported cases in which criminal charges were filed against workers for exercising their right to strike, and trade union members were arrested and charged with violating peaceful assembly laws when holding demonstrations regarding labor rights generally," said the agency's 2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices.

Reported by RFA’s Myanmar Service. Translated by Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Richard Finney.

GENERAL STRIKE AGAINST PUSHBACKS
UK
Borders staff threaten strike over Channel ‘pushbacks’

By Benjamin Fox | EURACTIV.com
Jan 5, 2022

The Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS), whose members include around 80% of the Border Force officials who would be tasked with implementing the ‘pushbacks’ demanded by ministers, have applied for a judicial review against the plans by Home Secretary Priti Patel. 
[Shutterstock/Christine Bird]

UK Border Force staff could go on strike over the government’s “morally reprehensible” plans to turn back dinghies carrying migrants crossing the Channel, a leading trade union warned on Wednesday.

The Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS), whose members include around 80% of the Border Force officials who would be tasked with implementing the ‘pushbacks’ demanded by ministers, have applied for a judicial review against the plans by Home Secretary Priti Patel.

The government plans to introduce tough new measures to restrict arrivals after a sharp rise in the number of people arriving via the Channel crossing in the UK. According to figures compiled by the PA Media news agency, some 28,300 people crossed the Dover Strait onboard small boats in 2021, triple the number for 2020.


The PCS argues that the ‘pushbacks’ policy breaks international law.

“The legality of the pushbacks policy is in serious question, and it is right that the court decides whether it is unlawful to turn back Channel boats,” said PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka.

“We cannot have a situation where our members could be open to potential civil and criminal action for implementing a policy that they do not agree with and know is not safe,” he added.

Even if UK courts deem the policy legal, the PCS has not ruled out the possibility of strike action.

(Benjamin Fox | EURACTIV.com)
‘BRITAIN NEEDS A PAY RISE IN 2022’, TUC WARNS

4th January 2022
Sarah Hughes

The Trade Union Council (TUC) has urged for a payrise across Britain, as real wages are “barely” set to grow in the next five years.

This comes as analysis conducted by the TUC revealed that real wages are set to rise by just 0.6% (£150) a year between now and 2026.

However, the TUC estimates that if real pay growth were back to pre-financial crisis levels, workers would be £500 better off a year and £2,500 better off by 2026.

READ MORE: Almost half of UK supermarket workers earn below the real Living Wage, research reveals

“If I have one message for this government at the start of 2022, it is this: Britain needs a pay rise,” TUC head Frances O’Grady said.

“Our economy will only recover when working people can afford to spend in local shops and businesses. That’s the way to boost demand, grow the economy and protect jobs.” 

With record high inflation rates in over a decade coupled with a cost-of-living crisis, supermarket workers are facing financial hardships with little support.

This comes as Organise revealed one in three Sainsbury’s workers regularly worried about putting food and drink on the table.

Additionally, International Food Aid Network reported an increase in supermarket workers using food banks.

O’Grady added: “This Conservative government has had eleven years to get wages rising. And they have failed, over and over again… unless ministers act now, the future looks bleak.”

As a result, the TUC has urged the government to “get round the table” with unions and employers to negotiate sector-wide fair pay agreements, and that every employer should be bound by them.

Directed to the Prime Minister, O’Grady concluded: “After decades of real wage cuts and falling living standards, no one can seriously say working people don’t deserve a pay rise.”

“That’s my priority, and the priority of the whole union movement, in 2022. The prime minister should shape up and make it his priority too.” 

NETHERLANDS

Collective wage increases lower than inflation

Euros in a wallet
Euros in a wallet - Source: stevanovicigor at DepositPhotos - License: Deposit Photos

Collectively negotiated wages in the Netherlands did not rise as strongly last year as in 2020. Employees did not benefit much, especially at companies hit hard by the coronavirus crisis. In addition, the increase in wages is dwarfed by the price increases consumers have been dealing with recently, much to the dismay of trade union FNV, among others.

According to preliminary figures from Statistics Netherlands (CBS), wages rose by 2.1 percent last year. In 2020, that was 2.9 percent. The most substantial wage increase in 12 years was mainly because most collective bargaining agreements on wage increases were made before the coronavirus outbreak when the economy was doing very well.

The picture for 2021 shows that wage developments are lagging behind inflation. According to the most recent data, daily life was 5.2 percent more expensive in November than a year earlier. The prices that Netherlands residents pay for goods and services have not risen so sharply since September 1982.

According to trade union FNV, employees are tired of having to renegotiate the inflation adjustment and the preservation of their purchasing power every year. Petra Bolster of FNV's daily board points out that employees' situation is deteriorating. "To prevent this, we demand that wages automatically increase in line with prices. This must be laid down in the collective labor agreements," she said. She referred to intentions announced in September for the collective labor agreement negotiations, in which the union already put this requirement on the table. 

Employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement benefited the least in the catering industry last year. In that sector, collectively negotiated wages rose on average by only 0.3 percent since the tables were adjusted for the development of the statutory minimum wage. The catering collective bargaining agreement was extended by one year in 2021 under the same conditions. Therefore, most employees in the catering industry received nothing additional at all. 

Reporting by ANP.

Polish miners threaten energy crisis if wage demands go unmet

By Kinga Wysocka | EURACTIV.pl
Jan 5, 2022

A possible suspension of coal supplies to the power plants may result in a difficult situation for the power system. [EPA-EFE/ZBIGNIEW MEISSNER]

Polish miners established a schedule for further protests, announcing a two-day strike referendum on 12-13 January and a blockade of coal shipping from 17 January until further notice.

Miners are demanding additional money for overtime earned from September 2021. Miners had to do overtime due to the high demand for coal for Polish power plants. Miners are also calling for their average salary to be raised from 7,800 to 8,200 PLN gross.

The list of striking unions is long, and the protesters include representatives of, among others, mining company Solidarność, the Trade Union of Miners in Poland, and the trade union Kadra.

The strikers met with the management of the Polish Mining Group (PGG) board last Tuesday. However, the talks failed. Another attempt, this time with the mediator, is scheduled for 10 January.

The PGG is not willing to meet their demands. According to unofficial information, the cost of implementing the wage demands would be around 130-140 million PLN (€28.3 million- €30.5 million).

A possible suspension of coal supplies to the power plants may result in a difficult situation for the power system. Deputy Minister of State Assets, Piotr Pyzik, called the protest “playing with energy security”.

Polish power plants are already exposed to coal shortages. In mid-December, the Energy Regulatory Office reported that many power plants reported shortages of raw material – including the two largest hard coal-based power plants in Opole and Kozienice.
German union steps up efforts to recruit Tesla workers with office near Berlin plant

IG Metall says automaker offers lower pay than German rivals

NATHAN EDDY
January 03, 2022

REUTERS

About 12,000 employees are expected to build up to 500,000 electric cars a year in Gruenheide, with production expected to start early this year.

BERLIN -- IG Metall, the dominant metalworkers' union in Germany, wants to represent as many employees as possible at Tesla's new factory in near Berlin.

The union has opened an office "very close" to the factory in Gruenheide, its district leader for Berlin, Brandenburg and Saxony, Birgit Dietze, said.

Besides supporting the election of a works council, the union will be available to answer questions on topics including pay, working hours and employment contracts, Dietze told the German Press Agency (DPA).

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has had a rocky relationship with organized labor in the past and was ordered in March last year to delete a tweet from 2018 threatening to strip U.S. employees of their stock options if they formed a union.

IG Metall has said job applicants have told them that the automaker is offering pay 20 percent below the collectively bargained wages paid by German automakers. Tesla is also shaking up conventional German contracts by offering packages with stock options and bonuses rather than predetermined holiday pay.

Musk has made his irritation for German laws and processes known, saying in a letter to authorities in April that the country's complex planning requirements were at odds with the urgency needed to fight climate change. The automaker has repeatedly had to push back the expected opening of the factory due to environmental objections and red tape.

In the future, about 12,000 employees are expected to build up to 500,000 electric cars a year in Gruenheide, with production expected to start early this year.

The union understands that 1,800 workers had been hired by Christmas, the DPA reported.

"We assume that the first production stage will start with about 6,000 employees," Dietze told the news outlet.

She also pointed out additional players in the automotive industry will be established around the plant.

"In terms of transformation, it is necessary to take the employees with us," Dietze said. "We are not the dinosaurs of the industrial age but are looking forward in a progressive way. We are actively intervening in the issues of shaping industrial policy."

Should collective bargaining one day occur between the union and Tesla, one point of contention would already be foreseeable.

According to her findings, part of Tesla's compensation should be achieved through stock options, Dietze told the DPA.

"Optionally, on top of a secured collective bargaining standard like that of the metal and electrical industry, we would have no objection," the trade unionist said. "But what generally does not work in our members' estimation is that parts of the remuneration are so thoroughly flexible that the employee does not know exactly what is coming out for them at the end of the month or the year?"

Tesla posted record 308,600 global deliveries in the fourth quarter of 2021, with the better-than-expected results pushing full-year deliveries to more than 936,000 vehicles.

The Tesla Model 3 is on course to be Europe's best-selling full-electric vehicle in 2021 amid strong gains in overall sales of battery-electric vehicles.

Tunisia’s UGTT criticises president’s road map out of crisis

The trade union says the president’s proposal will not guarantee Tunisia’s return to democracy.

Tunisia’s powerful General Labour Union (UGTT) has criticised President Kais Saied’s road map out of political crisis, saying it did not go far enough.

Last month, President Saied announced a plan to move past the political crisis that has paralysed the country since he suspended parliament, dismissed the prime minister and assumed executive authority last year.

It includes a constitutional referendum, to be held on July 25 following an online public consultation that will start in January, and parliamentary elections at the end of 2022.

“Setting a date for elections is an important step to end the exceptional situation, but it does not break with individual rule and exclusion”, the union said on Tuesday in its first comment on the president’s plan.

Saied, who is seeking to bolster his authority, has called on citizens to send suggestions through electronic platforms from January 1 to March 20 as part of a wide-ranging national consultation process that will help in drafting a new constitution.

The UGTT, which won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2015 as part of the National Dialogue Quartet and represents one million workers, said the online consultation may lead to a monopoly of power and the abolition of the opposition.

“We call [on the government] to resume social dialogue, launch negotiations on the wages of civil servants and begin to tackle basic issues in a participatory manner,” it said.

Last month, the UGTT called for early elections, saying it was concerned for the country’s democratic gains because of the president’s reluctance to announce a plan for political reforms.

In a speech on national television on December 13, Saied announced a reform package and promised to hold a constitutional referendum.

Saied’s one-man mission to rebuild Tunisia’s broken political structures has sparked accusations that he is establishing a new dictatorship in the birthplace of the Arab Spring uprisings.

The envoys of seven Western countries plus the European Union last month urged Tunisia to respect “fundamental freedoms” and set a timeline for a return to democratic institutions.

Saied’s power grab in July 2021 won support from many Tunisians tired of political parties seen as deeply corrupt and incapable of solving the country’s deep social and economic woes.

He has since faced mass demonstrations and growing accusations that he is becoming a new dictator.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

 A GLOBAL PROBLEM

IRELAND

'Absenteeism': Union officials hit out at use of term to describe workers out for Covid reasons

“Covid-related shortages are not the result of ‘absenteeism’, which is defined as an avoidable absence from work.”

Image: Sam Boal

TRADE UNIONS REPRESENTING essential workers have hit out at the use of the term ‘absenteeism’ to describe members who are currently unable to attend work after either testing positive for Covid-19 or being named as a close contact of a confirmed case.

Thousands of workers in both the public and private sectors are out on Covid-related leave at the moment as the nation grapples with a surge in infections.

But Dr Laura Bambrick, head of social policy at the Irish Congress of Trade Unions, told The Journal, “Covid-related shortages are not the result of ‘absenteeism’, which is defined as an avoidable absence from work.”

In recent days, employer’s group Ibec has called on the Government to reduce the Covid isolation periods for essential workers to avoid shortages and supply chain bottlenecks. 

Following a meeting between the three coalition leaders today, it is now expected that the Government will ask Chief Medical Officer Dr Tony Holohan to relax the isolation rules for fully vaccinated close contacts of confirmed cases of Covid-19.

Meanwhile, Irish Rail has had to cancel a number of services over the coming week due to “Covid-19 and close contact absences”.

Last Friday, the UL Hospitals Group announced plans to defer the majority of its scheduled surgery and outpatient appointments at five hospitals in Limerick, Clare and Tipperary due to staff absences.

But the term ‘absenteeism’ is inappropriate to describe the phenomenon, trade union officials have said.

“Workers are following public health guidance, not gaming the system as some throwing the ‘absenteeism’ word around like confetti at a wedding would have the public believe,” Bambrick said.

She added, “Staffing shortages are the result of the surging numbers of Omicron infections and the knock-on effect of tens of thousands of workers self-isolating as close contacts.”

Jonathan Hogan, assistant general secretary of trade union Mandate — which represents 40,000 workers in the retail, pub and administrative sectors — said the current wave of infections is having an impact on staffing, particularly in the retail sector.

“Because the transmission is so high, it has impacted on the number of workers available in the supermarket business, drapery — right across the retail sector,” Hogan told The Journal.

“But I mean, using terms like ‘absenteeism’ in the traditional sense, it’s probably inappropriate. Our members are out through no fault of their own — and most of the time they don’t get paid for that.”

The Government’s plans to introduce statutory sick pay from this month have been delayed, the Irish Independent reported last month.

According to a letter sent by Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise Leo Varadkar’s department to Chartered Accountants Ireland, the new rules will now be enacted later this year.

Workers can apply for the Covid-related Enhanced Illness Benefit if they are out of work due to illness, or if they have been instructed to self-isolate or restrict their movements for a period.

But Hogan added, “Many retail workers don’t get paid when they’re out.

“They can’t afford to be out so what we’re asking employer’s to do is to ensure that [if a worker is out on Covid-related leave], it doesn’t trigger normal absenteeism mechanisms.”

Hogan said this could lead to an investigation being launched into an employee who has been absent from work on different occasions.

“We’re asking all employers to deal with Covid-related absences in the most reasonable, fair way and to take everything into consideration,” he added.

‘Chaotic time’

Separately, a spokesperson for the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO) — which has used the phrase ‘Covid-related leave’ throughout the pandemic’ — said, “The numbers of nurses and midwives on Covid-related leave is of huge concern to the INMO.

“Anecdotally, we are aware that it is incredibly difficult to fill rosters in many hospitals at the moment due to the numbers of staff who are on Covid-related leave.”

The union is calling on the Health Service Executive (HSE) to produce an “urgent capacity” plan and said the political system also has “a responsibility to an exhausted medical workforce to ensure their workplaces are as safe as they can be”. 

The spokesperson added, “There must be no tolerance for hospital overcrowding while a highly transmissible airborne virus is making its way around our hospitals. Improvements to air quality in our hospitals must be a priority.”

“As we head into what is traditionally a chaotic time in our hospitals, the normal January patterns of overcrowding in our hospitals should not be tolerated. Our hospitals cannot operate on the goodwill of staff alone, we need an urgent capacity plan from the HSE.”

INDIA
Trade unions protest against Central Govt’s bid to privatise PSUs

 4th January 2022


Hyderabad: The employees of public sector units have formed a Joint action Committee to protest against the government’s bid to privatize the public sector units (PSUs).


The Committee of various trade unions held its first session in Hyderabad which was attended by representatives from BSNL, LIC,BDL, HAL, BHEL, Railways HMT, Praga tools, Madhani, ECIL, DLRL and employees leaders of various banks.

The union leaders condemned the Central Government’s bid to hand over the PSUs to the corporate sector. They pointed out in the meeting that at one hand the central government is announcing “make in India” while in practice it’s following “the sale in India” policy.

The meeting was chaired by the state’s Planning Board Vice Chairman B Vinod Kumar. “It is necessary to safeguard the PSUs in order to safeguard the country,” Kumar said.

Kumar further said that the TRS supports the trade union agitation wholeheartedly. The Central government’s policy will deprive the SC ST and other backward classes of their employment opportunities,” Kumar warned..

The employees of PSUs have resolved to go to any extent in their agitation to save the PSUs.

“The Central Government is trying to benefit a few corporate houses through the privatization of PSUs,” Kumar alleged.

The Central Government is also trying to privatize Madhani, BDL and ordnance factory where Dr APJ Abdul Kalam and other scientists have done research.

Through the privatization of LIC lakhs of people will be rendered jobless, Kumar said.

Other speakers warned against the government’s bid to privatize the national banks

The prominent Trade union leaders who participate in this meeting included in addition to TRS labor cell, Rambabu Yadav, Roop Singh, Raja Ram Yadav, Satvinder Singh, DJ Chari, Yadav Reddy Venkateswarlu, Bhaskar Reddy, Shrinivas Gaus and others.

UK

Trade unions are more vital than ever - so why is the government attacking them?



As 2022 begins, a pandemic is raging, nearly a million workers are on zero-hours contracts, two million workers have no right to sick pay and five million earn less than the real living wage. And yet the business secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, is making imposing new red tape on unions his workplace priority – and quietly tabling new anti-union legislation in Parliament.

The proposals would impose a levy on trade unions and allow five-figure fines for breaching complex trade union laws.

That’s money from the pockets of care workers, nurses and supermarket staff.

All the while, union members are on the frontline line of the coronavirus pandemic, working in schools, hospitals, shops, in public transport and in the services we all rely on.

Millions have turned to unions to protect their jobs, defend their rights and keep their workplaces safe.

Their unions have worked hard to support them in turn. But now valuable union time and money will be diverted, as unions are forced to jump through yet more hoops.

Now is the time to be working with unions, not undermining them

Let’s be frank. These reforms are based on ideology rather than being about solving the problems working people face.

Political parties don't pay a levy for the Electoral Commission. Charities don't fund the Charity Commission. Yet unions face a whopping seven-figure bill to pay for their regulator, the Certification Officer.

The government's own figures show that this levy will send dozens of unions into the red. And there is little to stop the Certification Officer hiking the levy year after year. Ministers have even dropped a promised review clause aimed at protecting unions from over-zealous regulation.

Then there are the huge financial penalties which could hit unions – fines of up to £20,000 for statutory breaches – which address a problem that doesn’t exist.

In the last financial year, the Certification Officer dealt with just 34 complaints. That's just one for every 200,000 union members. And not one of these resulted in an enforcement order requiring a union to take action.

That’s because unions are accountable to their members through their democratic structures and have a strong track record of complying with their legal duties.

What’s more, these changes would allow non-members to make complaints to the Certification Officer about trade unions. It doesn’t take much imagination to see the work of unions being hindered by vexatious complaints from hostile employers or campaign groups, particularly during legitimate industrial disputes.

The curious timing of these measures is underlined by the fact that this legislation is a relic of another age. Ministers at the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy have dusted off long-forgotten measures from the Cameron government’s 2016 Trade Union Act that were not enacted.

It begs the question – why now? This isn’t the case of simply tying up loose ends. If it was, ministers would have dealt with another outstanding issue from the Trade Union Act 2016: boosting union members’ democratic participation by trialling safe and secure electronic balloting for more union votes, such as the election of general secretaries.

It is telling of the government’s real concerns that they can spend valuable parliamentary time on new anti-union rules.

But the long-promised employment bill, intended to tackle insecure work and promote flexible working in the wake of Brexit, is still nowhere to be seen.

It’s time this government got its priorities right. 

Now is the time to be working with unions, not undermining them. Around the world – from New Zealand to the US – governments are recognising the power of collective bargaining.

Next year, Parliament will debate and vote on these explicitly anti-union proposals. When that moment comes, MPs and peers should reject them wholesale – and instead join with unions and their members in delivering better pay and conditions for working people in every corner of the country.

Frances O'Grady

Frances O’Grady is General Secretary of the TUC