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Previous comments: C.14, C.106 and C.132
Repetition Article 6 of the Convention. Entitlement to weekly rest. The Committee notes that, under section 121 of the Labour Relations Law of 22 July 2005 (Official Gazette No. 62/2005), a full-time employee may, as an exception, conclude a part-time employment contract with another employer for not more than ten hours a week. It also notes that section 121(2) of the Labour Relations Law requires such a contract to include agreed provisions on the manner in which the employee is expected to exercise the rights and obligations arising from the full-time employment contract. The Committee therefore understands that section 121(2) of the Labour Relations Law seeks to guarantee the worker’s entitlement to weekly rest in case the additional part-time employment would impact on that entitlement.The Committee requests the Government to clarify whether this understanding is correct.Articles 7, 8 and 11. Permanent and temporary exceptions. In reply to the Committee’s previous comment, the Government indicates that, under section 134(3) of the Labour Relations Law, work on the weekly rest day – which in principle is Sunday – may be rendered necessary by objective, technical or organizational reasons, that is, whenever the work process cannot be interrupted without impacting negatively on the enterprise’s work.Recalling that permanent and temporary exemptions to the ordinary weekly rest scheme may be authorized only under the limited circumstances specified in Articles 7 and 8 of the Convention, the Committee requests the Government to provide further clarification on the categories of workers and the types of establishments subject to special weekly rest schemes and to indicate how it is ensured that temporary exemptions granted under section 134(3) of the Labour Relations Law do not go beyond the circumstances provided for in Article 8(1) of the Convention. In addition, referring to section 136(3) of the Labour Relations Law, the Committee again requests the Government to indicate the steps taken or envisaged to re-examine the appropriateness of special weekly rest schemes providing for the averaging of weekly rest over a reference period of up to six months, and to consider the possibility of amending the relevant provisions of the Labour Relations Law accordingly.Article 8(3). Compensatory rest. The Committee requests the Government to indicate how it is ensured in law and in practice that, where temporary exemptions are authorized, compensatory rest of at least a 24-hour duration is granted, as required under Article 8(3) of the Convention.
Repetition Article 6 of the Convention. Entitlement to weekly rest. The Committee notes that, under section 121 of the Labour Relations Law of 22 July 2005 (Official Gazette No. 62/2005), a full-time employee may, as an exception, conclude a part-time employment contract with another employer for not more than ten hours a week. It also notes that section 121(2) of the Labour Relations Law requires such a contract to include agreed provisions on the manner in which the employee is expected to exercise the rights and obligations arising from the full-time employment contract. The Committee therefore understands that section 121(2) of the Labour Relations Law seeks to guarantee the worker’s entitlement to weekly rest in case the additional part-time employment would impact on that entitlement. The Committee requests the Government to clarify whether this understanding is correct. Articles 7, 8 and 11. Permanent and temporary exceptions. In reply to the Committee’s previous comment, the Government indicates that, under section 134(3) of the Labour Relations Law, work on the weekly rest day – which in principle is Sunday – may be rendered necessary by objective, technical or organizational reasons, that is, whenever the work process cannot be interrupted without impacting negatively on the enterprise’s work. Recalling that permanent and temporary exemptions to the ordinary weekly rest scheme may be authorized only under the limited circumstances specified in Articles 7 and 8 of the Convention, the Committee requests the Government to provide further clarification on the categories of workers and the types of establishments subject to special weekly rest schemes and to indicate how it is ensured that temporary exemptions granted under section 134(3) of the Labour Relations Law do not go beyond the circumstances provided for in Article 8(1) of the Convention. In addition, referring to section 136(3) of the Labour Relations Law, the Committee again requests the Government to indicate the steps taken or envisaged to re-examine the appropriateness of special weekly rest schemes providing for the averaging of weekly rest over a reference period of up to six months, and to consider the possibility of amending the relevant provisions of the Labour Relations Law accordingly. Article 8(3). Compensatory rest. The Committee requests the Government to indicate how it is ensured in law and in practice that, where temporary exemptions are authorized, compensatory rest of at least a 24-hour duration is granted, as required under Article 8(3) of the Convention.
Article 3 of the Convention. Scope of application. The Committee takes due note of the Government’s first detailed report. Noting that at the time of ratification the Government has not made a declaration specifying whether it accepts the obligations of the Convention with respect to persons employed in the types of establishments specified in Article 3(1) of the Convention (i.e. administrative services providing personal services, post and telecommunication services, newspaper undertakings, theatres and places of public entertainment), the Committee requests the Government to indicate in its next report whether the Convention applies to those persons.
Article 6, paragraph 4. Respect for traditions and customs of religious minorities. Noting that the Government’s report is silent on this point, the Committee requests the Government to provide additional explanations in this regard.
Articles 7 and 8. Permanent and temporary exemptions. The Committee notes that section 134 of the Labour Relations Law of 22 July 2005 (Official Gazette No. 62/2005) provides for a weekly rest of at least 24 uninterrupted hours, in principle on Sundays, except when due to objective technical or organizational reasons the employee is granted weekly rest on some other day in the week. Recalling that the Convention allows for temporary exemptions under limited and well-defined conditions of accident, force majeure, urgent work to premises and equipment, abnormal pressure of work, and risk of loss of perishable goods, the Committee requests the Government to provide additional explanations and specify the objective technical or organizational reasons that may render work on the weekly rest day necessary within the meaning of section 134 of the Labour Relations Law. It also requests the Government to indicate whether the representative employers’ and workers’ organizations concerned have been duly consulted in this regard, as prescribed by Article 8(2) of the Convention.
In addition, the Committee notes that under section 136(3) of the Labour Relations Law, the minimum weekly rest determined by law shall be assured as an average calculated over a longer period of time which must not exceed six months in the following cases: (i) when the nature of work requires permanent presence; (ii) when the nature of activity requires continuous provision of work or services; and (iii) when uneven or increased volume of work is foreseen. The Committee recalls, in this connection, that the Convention is articulated around three main principles, i.e. continuity (a period of rest comprising at least 24 consecutive hours), regularity (weekly rest to be enjoyed in every period of seven days), and uniformity (weekly rest to be granted as far as possible simultaneously to the whole of the staff). Therefore, according to the spirit of the Convention, workers should enjoy a minimum period of rest and leisure at regular weekly, or in any event, reasonably short intervals. It is true, of course, that Article 7(1) of the Convention permits to apply special weekly rest schemes to specified categories of persons or specified types of establishments where the nature of the work, the nature of the service performed, the size of the population to be served, or the number of the persons employed make it impossible to comply with the normal weekly rest standard. However, in such cases, as Paragraph 3 of the Weekly Rest (Commerce and Offices) Recommendation, 1957 (No. 103), indicates, persons to whom special weekly rest schemes apply should not work for more than three weeks without receiving the rest periods to which they are entitled. The Committee therefore requests the Government to re-examine the appropriateness of special weekly rest schemes providing for the averaging of weekly rest over a reference period of up to six months and consider the possibility of amending the relevant provision(s) of the Labour Relations Law accordingly.
Article 11. List of exemptions. The Committee would appreciate if the Government would communicate together with its next report a list of the categories of persons and the types of establishments that are subject to special weekly rest schemes as provided for in Article 7 as well as information concerning the circumstances in which temporary exemptions may be granted in accordance with Article 8.
Part V of the report form. Application in practice. The Committee would be grateful if the Government would supply general information on the application of the Convention in practice, including for instance statistics on the number of workers covered by the relevant legislation, extracts from reports of the labour inspection services showing the number of violations observed and sanctions imposed in matters related to weekly rest, copies of any collective agreements containing clauses on weekly rest, etc.