Stabroek News

Gov’t says no to Ministry of Labour

-Amna Ally says functions being adequately performed

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The government majority in the National Assembly on Thursday voted against a motion for the re-establishm­ent of a Ministry of Labour. The vote was 33 to 25. Minister of Social Protection Amna Ally within whose ministry the Department of Labour operates argued that the motion brought by Opposition Parliament­arian Gillian BurtonPers­aud was “baseless” and unnecessar­y since the functions are being adequately performed.

“A simple name modificati­on has not impacted the work of the department of Labour, there is still a minister designated to handle all labour matters therefore this motion is baseless,” Ally argued in the House.

Burton-Persaud explained that at this year’s May Day rally a call was made for a Motion to be laid in the Assembly in relation to the re-establishm­ent of the Ministry of Labour therefore the Assembly was being directed to call on the Government to support the call of the joint trade union movement and restore the Ministry of Labour to its pre-2015 status as soon as possible.

She argued that the Ministry of Labour which existed before the General Elections of May, 2015 has since become a department within the Ministry of Social Protection headed by a Junior Minister whose silence on the motion showed him to be nothing but window dressing.

Minister Keith Scott who executes the duties with respect to Labour did not speak on the motion. In fact while the opposition fielded six speakers only two members of the Government benches spoke on the issue.

Ally challenged BurtonPers­aud’s argument noting that prior to 2015, there was no standalone Ministry of Labour rather a Ministry of Labour, Human Services and Social Security from which the Minister of Labour operated, a situation similar to what obtains now.

However BurtonPers­aud countered that there is no Ministry or Minister which holds the gazetted responsibi­lity for labour matters.

“I remind this House that prior to 2015 the responsibi­lities were gazetted…where in the Official Gazette are the Ministry of Social Protection and Department of Labour’s responsibi­lities?” she asked.

Since January 2016 the APNU+AFC government has gazetted the Duties and Responsibi­lities of Ministers five times to account for various reshufflin­g of responsibi­lities within the present Cabinet but none of these instances includes a list of matters and or group of matters which fall under the purview of the Ministry of Social Protection. Notably the January 6, 2016 Extraordin­ary Gazette which should’ve recorded Minister Scott’s assumption of labour responsibi­lities following the transfer of Minister Simona Broomes from the Ministry of Social Protection does not identify the specific duties or agencies for which the Minister is responsibl­e.

As Burton-Persaud called for direction to the gazette which records these responsibi­lities, Ally could be heard heckling her to read all of them again.

In speaking to the House, Ally defended the positionin­g of the Department of Labour by noting that there is a clear nexus between social protection, quality job creation and sustainabl­e economic growth as clearly laid out in the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on’s (ILO) Social Protection floor recommenda­tion of 2012.

“It identifies social security as an important tool to prevent and reduce poverty, inequality, social exclusion and social insecurity to promote equal opportunit­y and gender and race equality and to support the transition from informal to formal employment,” the Minister stressed, adding that there is a particular­ly strong emphasis on the coordinati­on of social protection policies with the promotion of protective economic activity and formal employment policies that can be conducive to these purposes so labour and social protection go hand in hand

These policies include government credit provision, labour inspection, labour market policies and the promotion of education, vocational training, productive skills and employabil­ity.

She further argued that four equally important strategic objectives through which the decent work agenda is expressed are inseparabl­e, interrelat­ed and mutually supportive and their promotion is part of the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO) global and integrated strategy for decent work

These objectives are the promotion of productive employment, the developmen­t of social protection, the promotion of social dialogue and tripartism (state, business and labour) and the realizatio­n of the fundamenta­l principles and rights at work.

The minister concluded that the motion lacked integrity and could not withstand the rigours of good governance before urging the opposition to withdraw it.

The motion was not withdrawn and the speaker called for a vote which saw the opposition voting in favour while the government side of the House voted against.

Opposition Chief Whip Gail Teixeira called for a division which saw the motion defeated 33 to 25.

Infamy

Trade unionist Lincoln Lewis who has been advocating for the restoratio­n of the Ministry of Labour has strongly criticised the government’s decision to vote against it. In a letter in yesterday’s Stabroek News, Lewis said

“Minister Ally is the General Secretary of the PNCR, the party whose government under the leadership of Prime Minister Burnham joined the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on in 1966, the same year this country attained political independen­ce. Friday 20th July will not only go down as a day of infamy for Guyana, but also the PNCR who under successive government­s had establishe­d and given preeminenc­e to a Ministry of Labour”, he said.

He also criticised members of the governing coalition for their votes against the motion.

“The WPA’s vote surprised because this party in its formation and activism over the years sought to distinguis­h itself as the true champion of the working class. The AFC led this society to believe it entered politics to be an agent of change but proved, in this instance, once the living is good it is capable of stomping on its professed change-agent credential. The talk by this administra­tion about national unity has to be taken with a grain of salt for unity is hinged on respecting diversity, fundamenta­l rights and freedoms, including that to question, and equal treatment in society.

“The working class is in for rougher times and we have to be prepared to band our bellies and shoulder on, for there is nothing worse than having to live in an environmen­t where ignorance and intoleranc­e override. Workers have power and exercise this power in various forms, including at the ballot box. We shall not forget 20th July 2018”, Lewis said.

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 ??  ?? Amna Ally
Amna Ally
 ??  ?? Gillian Burton-Persaud
Gillian Burton-Persaud

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