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Haiti: SOKOWA union struggle forces IFC to recognise ILO core standards

Batay Ouvriye | 02.03.2006 12:34 | Globalisation | Workers' Movements | World

The struggles of the CODEVI Free Trade Zone Workers’ Union in Ouanaminthe, Haïti, have established a HISTORIC, WORLDWIDE PRECEDENT!

Feb. 25th, 2006 - PRESS NOTE from Batay Ouvriye

Batay Ouvriye wishes to inform the press and the public in general that, following the tireless struggles of the SOKOWA-Batay Ouvriye trade union at the Ouanaminthe free trade zone, and thanks to the vigilance and important commitment of the union sector and national and international progressives, peoples of the whole world will from here on benefit from new standards destined to lessen to some degree the ferocious exploitation of the planet's multinationals. (see ICFTU news release below)

The International Finance Corporation (IFC), which is the World Bank’s investment branch and had loaned 20 million dollars to the Dominican Republic’s Grupo M to set up this Haitian free trade zone, has finally adopted a set of regulations conditioning its disbursements on social responsibility and sustainable development. Amongst these regulations are the right to unionize and collective bargaining, health rights, and protection against unemployment.

Certainly, this measure has real limitations, particularly concerning efficient measures of implementation, as well as often vague terminology and insufficient specific constraints. These are a reflection of the IFC's major resistance to its adoption, thereby revealing its basic unity with the multinationals. The Code remains nevertheless a turning point that we have to continue to promote, so it can spread to all the international organizations investing in our countries. It’s also our responsibility to continue to enforce the regulatory code, such as it.

As part of this struggle that has established a worldwide historical precedent that will allow workers internationally to benefit from these significant advances, Batay Ouvriye wishes to draw attention to the stance of the Haitian private sector and the Association of Haitian Industrialists (ADIH) in particular, and point out just how selfish, archaic and unsustainable are its members' attempts to block the fundamental rights of the workers on a national level. Even recently, the application of the wage adjustments in the Ouanaminthe free trade zone were slowed down because of the reservations and comments of members of this group.

The Batay Ouvriye movement will continue ceaselesly to participate in all the national and international struggles in defense of all exploited workers:

ORGANIZED WORKERS WILL BE VICTORIOUS, ALWAYS!

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Action by World Bank’s IFC on Workers’ Rights a Major Step Forward 22/2/2006

Brussels, 22 February 2006 (ICFTU online): The ICFTU has applauded yesterday’s adoption by the International Finance Corporation (the private sector lending arm of the World Bank) of a new loan performance standard on labour rights and working conditions. After the new standard is implemented in the coming weeks, all companies that borrow from the IFC will be required to abide by the core labour standards (CLS) as defined by the International Labour Organization (ILO). The CLS prohibit the use of forced labour, child labour and discriminatory practices, and require recognition of freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining. The new standard also obliges IFC clients to observe some other basic conditions, including health and safety standards, protection for contract workers, and a policy for managing reductions in employment.

“Thousands of workers in IFC-financed projects stand to benefit from this decision, which we believe should be a precedent for international lending in both the private and public sectors”, said ICFTU General Secretary Guy Ryder. “The World Bank funds billions of dollars of development projects each year, and we will be working to ensure that this landmark decision is extended across the entire scope of its activities. In the meantime, we have offered to work with the IFC to implement this new standard”, he added.

The IFC decision demonstrates what can be achieved when the World Bank engages in serious consultation with trade unions. “In the two years during which the standard has been developed, the IFC sought input from trade unions and the ILO as well as IFC’s traditional partners, governments and business. As a result, the IFC corrected several problems and weaknesses in earlier drafts that we helped them identify,” said Ryder.

At the ICFTU’s suggestion the IFC accepted two years ago, on a pilot basis, to include a CLS condition in a loan to a clothing manufacturer, Grupo M, which opened new production facilities in Haiti. The firm initially dismissed hundreds of workers when they attempted to create a union, and it took several months of pressure by the Haitian union, along with international support from trade unions and other organizations, before the workers were rehired and the company recognized the union. In December 2005 Grupo M and the Haitian union signed the first collective agreement aimed at improving wages and working conditions.

The Haitian example demonstrates both the challenges and opportunities created by the new IFC standard, especially the need for an effective implementation mechanism. An effective mechanism, coupled with the CLS standard, can have a tremendous positive impact on workers’ living standards and working conditions. This is particularly significant in a country such as Haiti, where workers’ rights have been ignored and the poor disenfranchised for so long.

Ryder believes that the onus is now on the other branches of the World Bank, namely those that lend to the public sector, to follow the positive step taken by the IFC: “This is not a matter of asking the Bank to do the job of the ILO, governments or anyone else. It is a matter of asking the Bank to ensure that all of the its operations abide by internationally-recognized workers’ rights’ standards.”

In 2004, a coalition of Indonesian trade unions and researchers published a report showing that child labour, discrimination against women workers and denial of freedom of association were taking place in public infrastructure projects financed by the World Bank. The Bank’s spokesperson in Indonesia acknowledged at the time that the practices were inconsistent with Bank policy and promised corrective action. However, except for this IFC standard, the Bank has not taken measures to ensure respect for CLS in its projects.

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Forwarded by the Haiti Support Group - solidarity with the Haitian people's struggle for human rights, participatory democracy and equitable development - since 1992
 http://www.haitisupport.gn.apc.org "

Batay Ouvriye
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