Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Unions threaten pull-out of key labour body

- By Bandula Sirimanna

Labour unions are threatenin­g to pull out of the National Labour Advisory Council (NLAC) next month if the government fails to implement proposals governing contract work, which has been endorsed by all stakeholde­rs.

The call - at this week's meeting on Monday of this tripartite body - was made by veteran trade unionist and General Secretary of the govern- ment-controlled Sri Lanka Nidahas Seveka Sangamaya, Leslie Devendra. He told the Business Times that the delay in presenting to parliament the proposed Wages Board Ordinance amendment bill on contract labour, was due to undue interferen­ce of Treasury officials.

He strongly condemned the interferen­ce of top treasury officials into workers issues, which has become a practice during the past few years. Citing one example Mr. Devendra no- ted that the controvers­ial private Pensions Bill was prepared by the Finance Ministry without consulting trade unions, employers and other stakeholde­rs and it became a major issue due to bureaucrat­ic bungling.

Other trade union leaders present at the meeting including Palitha Athukorala and Anton Marcus said Mr Devendra referred (in particular) to the Treasury Secretary Dr P.B. Jayasunder­a. "The irony is that while everyone - the President, workers, employers (Employers Federation of Ceylon-efc) - are in favour of this legislatio­n, the Treasury and the Secretary are blocking it," Mr Athukorala, President of the Progress Union, told the Business Times. Treasury officials are not in favour of the proposal saying it would deter foreign investors. The amendment, unanimousl­y agreed by NLAC representa­tives including employers (EFC), is aimed at ending the practice of recruiting contract workers to fill core job vacancies. The next meeting of the NLAC is scheduled for April 2 which is the deadline set by the trade unions to implement this proposal. Mr Devendra said that some companies deploy contract workers so that they can get rid of them at any time and this amendment is to prevent such practices. Mr Devendra also said the NLAC has become a talk shop and warned that trade unions will resort to internatio­nal action to pressure the government to imple- ment this law. Another issue resisted by the Treasury is a recommenda­tion by the Census & Statistics Department to raise the unit value in the Cost of Living Index. Mr Marcus, General Secretary- Free Trade Zones & General Services Employees Union of Sri Lanka, said that unions have been complainin­g that there is a growing tendency by the private sector to substitute core staff with contract workers, as it costs less.

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