Kuwait Times

ILO, survivor from League of Nations, turns 100

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Of all the institutio­ns set up in Geneva under the League of Nations after World War I, only one, the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on, survived the rise of fascism and World War II. Historians have pointed to several reasons why the ILO, which marks its 100th anniversar­y today, endured while the rest of the League collapsed. They included anxiety in the West about worker uprisings following the Russian Revolution, the election of US president Franklin Roosevelt in 1932, and the ILO’s exile in Montreal from 1940-47.

More modern concerns will top the agenda at the ILO’s annual congress this week, where dozens of leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian Prime Minister Dimitry Medvedev are expected. Following the #MeToo movement, ILO delegates will consider a convention on harassment and violence in the workplace, but may end up settling for a non-binding “recommenda­tion,” the organizati­on’s director general, Guy Ryder, told journalist­s recently.

Under ILO’s 100-year-old “tripartite” structure, delegates include government officials, union leaders and private sector employer representa­tives. “It’s going to be hard grind multilater­al tripartite negotiatio­ns,” Ryder said, stressing that he is not expecting a celebrator­y atmosphere at a congress also due to issue a declaratio­n on “The Future of Work”. “I’d love to think there’ll be a festive moment in it,” Ryder said. “I very much doubt it.”

Nazis out, Americans in

In the preamble to the articles that set up the ILO originally called the Internatio­nal Labour Office - the Treaty of Versailles stressed that harsh working conditions were so pervasive they “imperilled the peace and harmony of the world”. The victorious powers of WWI faced heavy pressure to establish a dedicated world labour office, said Dorothea Hoehtker, who leads historical research at the ILO. This was partly because unions had made significan­t demands following the crucial role workers played in the war effort, Hoehtker told AFP.

But also the Russian Revolution of 1917 - which, among other things, featured a working class revolt against the elite - forced Western powers to face the prospect of “a complete political and economic system change,” she added. The ILO was founded as a cornerston­e of the new League, but its fate proved different. The League suffered its first major blow in Nov 1919 when the US Senate rejected American participat­ion, despite president Woodrow Wilson being one its architects. That left the League almost fully reliant on European powers.

While the emergence of fascist dictatorsh­ips in Italy and Germany precipitat­ed the League’s collapse, the ILO was saved due largely to Roosevelt’s election. The US signed onto the body in 1934, just months after the Nazis walked away, as Roosevelt was in the process of implementi­ng The New Deal -his pro-jobs program designed as a response to the Great Depression. “The New Deal was perfectly in line with what the ILO wanted,” Hoehtker said. Roosevelt-ally and former New Hampshire governor John Winant became ILO director in 1939. Because Geneva is surrounded by French territory, Winant moved a scaled-down ILO to McGill University in Montreal shortly after the Nazis attacked France in 1940. The agency continued working during the war, notably by helping set up social security systems in Latin America.

Stalin says no

The ILO’s survival was again threatened after World War II. As the winning powers were shaping a new global governance system, which became the United Nations, the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin expressed staunch opposition to the ILO, especially its tripartite structure that offers roles for unions and employers. “The Soviet Union really didn’t want the ILO to exist, Hoehtker said. “They didn’t like freedom of associatio­n and they didn’t want to have employers - capitalist employers - in the organizati­on.” Ultimately, the West prevailed and the ILO in 1946 was establishe­d as the first specialize­d agency of the UN, returning to Geneva the next year.

Post #MeToo convention

The ILO’s tripartite structure, unique across the UN, still creates complicati­ons at times, including during the debate on harassment and violence in the workplace. One of the obstacles in the talks, Ryder said, is that employers have concerns about the extent of their responsibi­lity, especially whether an enterprise should be responsibl­e for harassment among colleagues that happens away from the workplace. “We have to find ways through these outstandin­g issues,” Ryder said. “I’m confident that we will.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? A sign commemorat­ing the 100th anniversar­y of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) is pictured in front of its headquarte­rs on June 7, 2019 in Geneva.
— AFP A sign commemorat­ing the 100th anniversar­y of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) is pictured in front of its headquarte­rs on June 7, 2019 in Geneva.

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