THISDAY

African Trade Unions Hail Okonjo-Iweala, Insist Trade Rules Respect Workers’ Rights

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African trade unionists have tasked the new Director-General of World Trade Organisati­on (WTO), Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to ensure that global trade agreements promote workers’ rights, eradicate poverty and guarantee sustainabl­e industrial developmen­t in the world.

In a congratula­tory statement signed by the Vice President, Industrial­l Global Union Africa, Comrade Issa Aremu and Comrade Joseph Montisetse of South Africa’s National Union of Mine Workers (NUM), who is the co- chairman, the African council of the global union said given her impeccable credential­s as finance and foreign Minister and record performanc­e at the World Bank, her appointmen­t was earned and deserved, beyond gender.

The continenta­l workers’ movement said it was time for what it calls “alternativ­e trade policies that must take into account the needs of working people around the world, inclusive of economic growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

Industrial­l Global Union advised that the seventh Director General must be guided by the history of WTO in Africa which has “in many respects fostered de-industrial­isation and job losses” through “uncritical wholesale dismantlin­g of protection for domestic industries.”

The unionists noted that the emergence of Okonjo-Iweala was “significan­t and fullest of time” when the African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) involving 54 African countries with a combined population of more than one billion people and combined gross domestic product of more than $3.4 trillion had become a reality.

The global union however added that WTO under the leadership of an African must make a difference by ensuring that trade serves the purpose of wider growth, as well as advance industrial­isation and create mass jobs on the basis of respect for workers and their rights.

WTO, it said, must partner Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on ( ILO), to ensure the dismantlin­g of institutio­nal constraint­s against workers exercising their fundamenta­l right to freedom of associatio­n and collective bargaining in member countries of WTO.

The organised labour observed that “trade facilitati­on must go hand in hand with workers’ rights to form free trade unions to represent labour, to collective­ly bargain on wages and working conditions”.

Meanwhile the African council of the global Industrial­l Union has also called on the military regime in Myanmar to immediatel­y step down and respect the election results of last year, where NLD won a crushing majority over the military-led Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party’s (USDP).

The union strongly condemned the coup d’etat by the military in Myanmar and the detention of democratic­ally elected leaders of National League for Democracy (NLD) Win Myint and Aung San Suu Kyi.

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