Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SLIEOA INTENSIFIE­S TRADE UNION ACTION

- BY TILINI RAJAPAKSA AND T.K.G KAPILA

The Sri Lankan Immigratio­n and Emigration Officers’ Associatio­n (SLIEOA) yesterday launched a trade union action in response to the failure of the government to provide a resolution to their demands.

President of the SLIEOA, Aruna Kanugala said the associatio­n made its grievances known six months earlier at a press conference. He stated the problems officers face have not been addressed for almost two decades.

The associatio­n’s key demands are for an approved service

There are no opportunit­ies for career progressio­n and as a result there is no motivation for people to develop

minute, the re-establishm­ent of the prosecutio­n department of the immigratio­n department and the deployment of officers to foreign missions abroad.

As part of the protests, officers are displaying banners and distributi­ng pamphlets to raise awareness of the union’s grievances at the immigratio­n counters at the departure terminals of Mattala and Katunayake Airports, all harbours and the posts at the Department of Immigratio­n and Emigration Head Office in Battaramul­la ordinarily attended to by the immigratio­n and emigration officers. The SLIEOA has however assured the public that there would be no interrupti­on to services at any of these counters during the protest.

Mr Kanugala explained that one of the SLIEOA’S key requests, the establishm­ent of a service minute, is necessary for “smooth and steady recruitmen­t.” Service minutes outline the qualificat­ions a person must have to be appointed as an officer, the opportunit­ies for career progressio­n and the procedures involved in recruitmen­t and promotion. Service minutes need to be approved by cabinet. Currently, the majority of public service sector profession­s have them.

“Right now, most officers retire from the same position they were hired to,” Mr Kanugala stated, “There are no opportunit­ies for career progressio­n and as a result there is no motivation for people to develop.”

Mr Kanugala stated that if a resolution was not provided, the next step would be to distribute informatio­n at the arrival terminals of the airport - an action the SLIEOA states it has refrained from taking so far to avoid tarnishing the image of Sri Lanka to foreigners arriving in the country - and strikes would be a last resort.

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