Duterte told: Don’t blame striking workers
President Rodrigo Duterte should not "demonize" and blame workers for strikes that he says are scaring away foreign investors, a labor alliance said Thursday.
In a controlled briefing with Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Salvador Panelo, Duterte said labor groups like the Kilusang Mayo Uno weaken the economy because strikes keep investors away.
"[N]andiyan pa 'yang KMU, sige strike. Strikestrike nila 'di magsara. Sinong magutom? Pilipino. Kasi kayo nagpapadala ng... Ayaw ninyong humintay kasi alam ninyo walang pera. Walang negosyante ngayon magpapasok na after three months mag-strike kayo malugi ‘yung kapital niya," the President said.
KMU, which Duterte accused last year of being in league with communist rebels, responded on the same day that "the upsurge of workers' strikes these past months are results of Duterte's failure to end contractualization, refusal to address the rising prices of commodities by implementing a significant wage hike, and of the government's fascist attacks against trade union and human rights."
Data from the Department of Labor and Employment shows there had been 155 notices of strike from January to July 2018, up by 18.7 percent against 126 notices in the same period in 2017. A notice of strike is a requirement for a legal strike and should be filed at least 15 days before the date of the intended strike. Most of the strikes were due to unfair labor practices.
Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino, in a statement, stressed that "the highest law of the land and international statutes grant workers the right to legally impede company operations, as last recourse, in order to protect their rights and welfare."
"The BMP condemns this old tactic of demonizing the right to strike. The Integrated Bar of the Philippines should move to disbar Duterte for forgetting that the lawful exercise of the right to strike is guaranteed by the constitution," the group also said.
It also cited the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas' Business Expectations Survey for the 3rd Quarter of 2018, which noted lower optimism among firms surveyed and the factors for that lower optimism.
Respondents in that survey attributed their lower business optimism to:
Increasing prices of basic commodities in the global market and the effects of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Law on local prices
• Rising overhead costs and lack of supply of raw materials
• Interruption of business activities and lower crop production during the rainy season
• Slack in consumer demand as households prioritized enrollment expenses
• The suspension of commercial fishing in Davao Gulf from June to August
• A weakening peso
• Stiffer competition Respondents also said they were more optimistic for Q4 because of an expected rise in spending during the holiday season, better weather, and the roll-out of government infrastructure and development projects.—
Philstar.com