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- 275. A complaint of violation of freedom of association against the
- Government of Guatemala has been presented by the Unified Trade Union
- Confederation of Guatemala (CUSG) in a communication dated 20 June 1988. The
- Government sent information and observations on this case in a communication
- dated 7 September 1988.
- 276. Guatemala has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of the
- Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No.87) and the Right to Organise and
- Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
A. The complainant's allegations
A. The complainant's allegations
- 277. In its complaint the CUSG alleges arbitrary acts by the Government
- affecting human rights and freedom of association, and in particular, delays
- in registering trade unions, dismissal of workers who group together in works
- committees and attempt to form trade unions, refusal to assist workers in
- applying agreements concluded and the development of "solidarism".
- 278. As regards the delays in registering trade unions, the CUSG explains
- that registration documents are lying around in the offices of the Ministry of
- Labour, so that the registration procedure is being held up, and notes that it
- is strange that this applies only to trade union organisations, since other
- organisations obtain registration quickly. Therefore, according to the
- complainant, the Ministry is infringing the right of association by making the
- law inoperative.
- 279. As regards the dismissal of workers, the CUSG states that the Mayor of
- the town of San Antonio Suchitepéquez committed arbitrary acts against the
- workers. He dismissed a group of manual workers, including the executive of
- the trade union which was in the process of being set up. According to the
- complainant confederation, events occurred as follows: first of all, the Mayor
- attempted to provoke a confrontation which could have resulted in loss of
- human life, by leading the population and trusted employees to believe that
- the trade unionists threatened the safety of the inhabitants of San Antonio
- because they were communists. Secondly, in order to avoid a confrontation, the
- workers did not hold the assembly that they had called but hid in the local
- cemetery to hold their general assembly. The workers subsequently lodged
- appeals with the courts against their unlawful dismissals ordered by the
- Mayor. The Labour Court ordered the reinstatement of the dismissed workers ten
- months ago, but the workers concerned have still not been reinstated.
- Moreover, under pressure by the Mayor, a new trade union of trusted employees
- was set up, with none other than the chief of police as its secretary general.
- However, according to the Ministry of Labour, it is not permitted for members
- of the police to set up a trade union. This is why the CUSG wonders how the
- chief of police of this town could be allowed to become secretary general of a
- trade union. The most recent case this year is that of the Union of Telephone
- Workers (GUATEL). In addition to the clear intention of the employer to divide
- the organisation by setting up a parallel trade union, the above-mentioned
- trade union - according to the CUSG - was not granted registration, although
- it had met all the conditions required by the General Labour Directorate.
- 280. In another case dating back to 1987, workers employed in the LUNAFIL
- factory had no other alternative but to hold a strike. Since September 1987,
- they had not been given any assistance by the Ministry of Labour in the
- enforcement of the law, thus giving the enterprise a free hand. The management
- sold the factory and the new owners succeeded in having the factory forcibly
- evacuated. The complainant confederation encloses a press cutting from the
- Campo Pagado newspaper, dated 27 May 1988, containing further details on this
- allegation. In the article, the workers' trade union of the LUNAFIL SA factory
- condemns the actions of 500 riot police who entered the factory at 6 a.m. on
- 26 May in order to evacuate the 39 workers who were peacefully defending their
- jobs and freedom of association. The police undertook this evacuation on the
- pretext of executing a court order, but no such order was ever displayed by
- the police. During the action, persons from nearby areas gathered at the
- factory; the outcome was utter confusion, resulting from acts of violence
- committed by the security forces: police fired shots, and a member of the
- trade union's executive, Julio Coj, was injured; two workers from a nearby
- factory were detained by the police and later released. According to the press
- cutting, the trade union considers that the Government applied such methods in
- an attempt to repress and silence the workers, since the state security forces
- only acted to enforce court orders favourable to the employers and failed to
- intervene when such orders were favourable to the workers.
- 281. The CUSG explains further that the Unified Trade Union Popular Action
- Group (Unidad de Acción Sindical y Popular), which is the highest form of
- expression of the Guatemalan workers, signed agreements with the Government on
- 8 March 1988 concerning economic, agrarian and social policy, human rights,
- administrative corruption and energy policy. As regards social policy, the
- agreement provided for a wage increase of at least 50 quetzales per month for
- workers in the private sector, to be implemented within 45 days. However,
- according to the complainant, 90 days later the increase had still not been
- granted, in violation of the agreements of 8 March, and disregarding the
- economic needs of the workers and their families. As regards the grant of
- legal personality to the trade union, the agreements also provided that all of
- the trade unions be registered immediately with the General Labour
- Directorate, allowing a period of 30 days to examine the documents and
- complete the formalities for definitive registration. Again, 90 days have
- passed without the registrations having been completed.
- 282. As regards the so-called "solidarism" movement, the CUSG explains that
- this is an employers' anti-trade union movement based in Costa Rica which is
- growing by leaps and bounds, as it has what workers lack, i.e. money. In
- addition, workers are regularly sent to Costa Rica to be indoctrinated. The
- complainant gives the example of the banana plantations of Izabal, in which
- the trade union is being undermined by "solidarists" who mislead the workers
- with a view to eliminating the trade union organisation.
- B. The Government's reply
- 283. In its reply dated 7 September 1988, the Government communicates
- detailed observations and information on each of the allegations of the
- complainant confederation.
- 284. As regards the allegation of intervention by the Ministry of Labour and
- Social Security in the registration of trade unions, statistical figures of
- the Ministry show that the complainant's allegations are incorrect. At the
- beginning of the current democratic process, 456 trade unions were registered.
- From 1979 to 1985, the era of authoritarian governments, only 39 trade unions
- were registered, that is, an average of 5.5 per year; 1983 being a year in
- which not a single trade union was registered. In the first two years alone of
- the present Government's administration, 62 trade unions were registered, and
- 32 more were registered in the first six months of 1988. According to the
- Government, the amount of time it takes to complete registration formalities
- has been considerably reduced, since in 1984, 121 days were necessary, the
- figure dropping to 24 in 1986, seven in 1987, and six in the first six months
- of this year.
- 285. The Government admits that the provisions of the Labour Code currently
- in force, namely, sections 212, 216, 218, 219 and 233, do not facilitate the
- procedure for registering trade unions, and announces that the Ministry of
- Labour and Social Security has submitted a draft amendment of the legal
- framework, which will probably be examined in the near future by the
- legislative body. This amendment should considerably simplify the registration
- of trade unions. The Government therefore refutes the allegations of the
- complainant confederation and affirms that it does not violate freedom of
- association or make the law inoperative, but that, on the contrary, it is
- making every effort to facilitate the procedure by amending the Labour Code.
- 286. As regards the allegation of arbitrary acts committed by the Mayor of
- the town of San Antonio Suchitepéquez, the Government observes that the
- complainant itself has stated that the case has been brought before the labour
- and social welfare courts. The Government stresses that in Guatemala, in
- accordance with article 141 of the Constitution, no subordination exists
- between the legislative, executive and judiciary bodies. One of the
- cornerstones of the current democratic process is the independence of these
- branches. Therefore, the executive, in this case the Ministry of Labour and
- Social Security, has nothing to do with proceedings instituted before the
- labour courts. Notwithstanding the above, assuming that the allegation of the
- CUSG is true, the Labour Code currently in force sets out penalties for
- disobedience in sections 414 and 440, and thus workers are entitled to
- institute penal proceedings in this case. The Government concludes that the
- Ministry of Labour has no competence in this respect.
- 287. As regards the Union of Telephone Workers (GUATEL), the Government
- indicates that the General Labour Directorate, which is the administrative
- body responsible for registering trade unions, has not received any
- application for the grant of legal personality and the approval of the by-laws
- of any trade union of telephone operators called GUATEL. Therefore the
- allegation of the CUSG is not correct, since the trade union concerned does
- not exist. According to the Government, there is only one file on
- telecommunications workers in the General Labour Directorate. The Union of
- Workers of the Tropical Radio Telegraph Company was founded on 28 April 1957,
- and its by-laws were approved and legal personality was granted at that time.
- In 1966 this trade union changed its name to Union of Workers of International
- Telecommunications of Guatemala and in 1983 this was replaced by its current
- name, the Workers' Trade Union of the Guatemala Telecommunications Company. In
- other words, in the telecommunications enterprise there is and only has been
- one trade union.
- 288. As regards the workers employed in the LUNAFIL factory, the Government
- states that from the outset the current administration of the Ministry of
- Labour and Social Security has taken a special interest in the case of the
- workers in this factory. The case had been brought before the labour courts
- and the Ministry was therefore not able to intervene. The only action open to
- it was that of mediation between employers and workers with a view to reaching
- a settlement which would be acceptable to both parties. The file on this case
- indicates that this was in fact done. The trade union leaders requested
- mediation by the Minister of Labour and, on 23 July 1988, in the presence of
- the Minister of Labour of Costa Rica, the Minister of Labour of Guatemala
- participated in the reopening of the factory and the definitive settlement of
- the dispute. In this connection, the Government encloses a copy of the
- mediation record, signed in the presence of the Minister of Special Affairs by
- several leaders of the workers' trade union of the LUNAFIL SA enterprise and
- by several respresentatives of the employer, in which the parties express
- their desire to reach an agreement in order to achieve a definitive settlement
- of the dispute affecting the enterprise since 9 June 1987. Following
- discussions, the workers consented to leave the premises of the enterprise on
- 22 July. It was decided that measures should be undertaken to enable the
- enterprise to resume operations as from 23 August. The enterprise agreed to
- reinstate 24 of its former employees, whose names were put forward by the
- executive of the trade union. It was also decided that the parties committed
- themselves to discussing a draft collective agreement and to renounce all
- judicial action.
- 289. As regards the agreement signed between the Government and the Unified
- Trade Union Popular Action Group and, in particular, the issue of wage
- increases, the Government explains that the executive has complied with its
- obligations by submitting a bill to the legislative body. However, the
- Government recalls that in view of the separation of powers to which it has
- already referred, the executive cannot compel the legislative body to approve
- a bill.
- 290. As regards "solidarism", the Government states that the Ministry of
- Labour and Social Welfare has decided not to register associations of workers
- formed with the aim of setting up a "solidarist" group. It explains, however,
- that constitutional provisions (article 34) provide for the right of free
- association so that the exercise of this right cannot be denied. The Ministry
- of Labour considers that those wishing to exercise this right in order to set
- up a "solidarist" association must apply to the Ministry of the Interior,
- which, under the law, is alone competent for such matters. Notwithstanding the
- above, the Government adds that the Ministry of Labour is of the opinion that
- it is for the workers themselves to denounce the objectives of "solidarism"
- and its contradictions with the objectives of trade unions. It is not the
- Ministry of Labour which is competent in this respect. The allegations of the
- complainant confederation on this point are therefore unfounded.
- 291. The Minister of Labour concludes by explaining that since he took
- office on 17 October 1987, 59 trade unions have been registered and nine other
- applications are being processed. Enclosed with the Government's letter are
- statistical reports of the General Labour Directorate concerning registration
- of trade unions, which confirm the information supplied by the Government.
C. The Committee's conclusions
C. The Committee's conclusions
- 292. In the first place, the Committee notes with interest that, unlike past
- practice, the Government has collaborated in the procedure surrounding this
- case by sending in September 1988 detailed replies to the allegations
- submitted in June 1988 by the complainant confederation. This is particularly
- gratifying since for many years the Committee has had occasion to regret the
- Government's lack of co-operation in the procedure and since it was obliged,
- many times, to examine the substance of a great many complaints without having
- any information or observations from the Government at its disposal.
- 293. Secondly, on the substance of the matter, the Committee observes that
- the Government's replies to the various allegations submitted in this case
- show that on certain points it has endeavoured, at least in part, to give the
- CUSG satisfaction. However, the versions given by the Government and by the
- complainant confederation are often contradictory and the action taken by the
- Government to redress the violations of freedom of association does not always
- appear to have been adequate.
- 294. As far as the CUSG is concerned, the public authorities are arbitrarily
- violating human rights and freedom of association by failing to register trade
- unions, by allowing the dismissal of works committee members seeking to set up
- new trade unions, by failing to support workers in their attempts to see that
- agreements reached are properly implemented and by encouraging the development
- of "solidarism".
- 295. As regards the first aspect of this complaint concerning the delays in
- registration of trade unions by the Ministry of Labour and Social Security,
- the Government states for its part that, although the successive authoritarian
- governments in power between 1979 and 1985 were very slow in registering trade
- unions (as only 39 unions were registered during the period) , since the
- country's return to democracy in 1985, 94 unions have been registered, 59 of
- them since October 1987. The Government also claims that the amount of time it
- takes to complete registration formalities has been considerably reduced,
- although it admits that the provisions of the Labour Code currently in force
- do not facilitate the procedure, and states that legislative amendments have
- been drafted to solve the problem.
- 296. The Committee trusts that, in conformity with the Government's
- undertakings in its reply, the current review of the legislation on the
- subject will enable the adoption of provisions that are in accordance with
- Articles 2, 3 and 7 of the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right
- to Organise Convention (No. 87), which Guatemala has ratified. In particular,
- the Committee stresses the importance it attaches to the principle that the
- acquisition of a legal personality by workers' organisations must not be made
- subject to conditions of such a character as to impair the guarantees provided
- for in the Convention, and specifically the guarantee that workers will not be
- hindered by the public authorities in the exercise of their right to establish
- organisations of their own choosing without previous authorisation.
- 297. As to the dismissal of works committee members who seek to set up trade
- unions, the Committee notes that the CUSG's allegations regarding the attitude
- of the municipality of San Antonio Suchitepéquez are not very clear, but that
- it would appear from the complaint that workers seeking to establish a union
- of municipal employees have been dismissed and have lodged an appeal with the
- courts on the grounds that their dismissal was illegal. The Government does
- not contest this allegation. Indeed, it confirms that the case has been
- brought before the labour courts, but argues that because of the separation of
- the executive and the judiciary it is not competent in the matter.
- 298. Whenever it has examined cases of anti-union discrimination against
- workers seeking to establish a trade union, the Committee has always recalled
- that one of the fundamental principles of freedom of association is that
- workers should enjoy adequate protection against all acts of anti-union
- discrimination likely to infringe upon freedom of association in their
- employment, such as dismissal, transfer, demotion or other prejudicial
- measures, and that this protection is particularly desirable in the case of
- the founders of trade unions because, in order to perform their trade union
- duties in full independence, they should have a guarantee that they will not
- be prejudiced on account of the mandate that they are seeking or already hold
- from their trade unions. The Committee considers that the guarantee of such
- protection in the case of the founders of trade unions is necessary to ensure
- respect for the fundamental principle that workers are entitled to establish
- organisations of their own choosing without distinction whatsoever. (See 254th
- Report, Case No. 1396 (Haiti), para. 389.)
- 299. In this particular case the Committee stresses that, when Guatemala
- ratified Convention No. 87, the Government freely undertook to guarantee all
- workers, including municipal employees, the right to establish organisations
- of their own choosing to promote and defend their occupational, economic and
- social interests. Consequently, the Committee requests the Government to
- indicate: (1) whether the employees of the municipality of San Antonio
- Suchitepéquez who were dismissed for attempting to found a trade union have
- been reinstated in their jobs, and (2) whether the workers concerned have been
- able to establish a trade union of their own choosing as they were seeking to
- do.
- 300. As regards the allegation that the Government has not supported workers
- in their attempt to ensure that the agreements reached were properly
- implemented, and as regards in particular the alleged infringement of the
- right to strike at the LUNAFIL factory as a result of a labour dispute, the
- Committee notes with regret that to begin with, according to a press cutting
- sent by the CUSG which the Government has not contested, 39 workers inside the
- factory who were peacefully defending their jobs and freedom of association
- were attacked by members of the riot police who used violence to evacuate the
- factory, wounding a trade unionist and arresting two others in the process.
- 301. When it has had to deal with cases of this nature in the past, the
- Committee has expressed the general view that the use of security forces, in
- so far as the facts showed that their intervention was limited to the
- maintenance of public order and did not restrict the legitimate exercise of
- the right to strike, is not in violation of freedom of association. On the
- other hand, the Committee has always regarded the use of police for
- strike-breaking purposes as an infringement of trade union rights. (See 230th
- Report, Case No. 1187 (Islamic Republic of Iran), para. 674 and 234th Report,
- Case No. 1227 (India), para. 312.) Moreover, the Committee considers that
- governments should give strict instructions and initiate effective
- disciplinary proceedings whenever the breaking up of a meeting of workers by
- the police causes grievous bodily harm and is of the opinion that the arrest
- of strikers involves a serious risk of abuse for freedom of association.
- 302. In addition, the Committee notes with interest that the Government
- offered to mediate in the dispute at the LUNAFIL factory and that, following
- an agreement reached through the Minister of Special Affairs, the enterprise
- agreed to reinstate 24 of its former employees whose names were put forward by
- the executive of the trade union; the parties also undertook to discuss a
- draft collective agreement and to renounce all judicial action. In these
- circumstances, while stressing the importance it attaches to the principles
- set out in the preceeding paragraph, the Committee considers that this aspect
- of the case does not call for further examination.
- 303. As regards the complaint concerning the development of "solidarism",
- which the complainant confederation claims is supported by the Government, the
- Committee notes the Government's denial of this charge and its indication that
- the Ministry of Labour and Social Security has decided not to register
- associations of workers formed with the aim of setting up a "solidarist"
- group. The Government explains, however, that the right of association is
- guaranteed by the Constitution and that those wishing to set up such
- associations must apply to the Ministry of the Interior.
- 304. The Committee considers it appropriate to point out that on the subject
- of "solidarism", it already stressed in 1985, when considering a Bill to
- consolidate "solidarity" associations (of the "solidarist" movement) which the
- complainants claimed were supported by the employers and parallel to the trade
- union movement, that the provisions governing "solidarity" associations should
- respect the activities of trade unions guaranteed by Convention No. 98. (See
- 240th Report, Case No. 1304 (Costa Rica), para. 94.)
- 305. In the present case the Committee draws the Government's attention to
- Article 2 of the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention (No.
- 98), ratified by Guatemala, which provides that workers' organisations must
- enjoy adequate protection against any acts of interference by employers or
- employers' organisations and that measures designed to promote the
- establishment of workers' organisations under the domination of employers or
- employers' organisations or to support workers' organisations by financial and
- other means, with the object of placing such organisations under the control
- of employers or employers' organisations, are specifically assimilated to such
- acts of interference. The Workers' Representatives Convention, 1971 (No. 135),
- and the Collective Bargaining Convention, 1981 (No. 154), likewise contain
- explicit provisions guaranteeing that, where there exist in the same
- undertaking both trade union representatives and elected representatives,
- appropriate measures are to be taken to ensure that the existence of elected
- representatives in an enterprise is not used to undermine the position of the
- trade unions concerned.
The Committee's recommendations
The Committee's recommendations
- 306. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
- Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- a) The Committee notes with interest that, unlike past practice, the
- Government has co-operated in the procedure by sending observations and
- information rapidly in reply to the allegations submitted by the complainant
- in June 1988.
- b) With regard to the delays in registration of trade unions which is
- criticised by the complainant confederation, the Committee notes that,
- according to the Government, a considerable number of trade unions have in
- fact been registered since the country's return to democracy and that the
- delays in registration have been reduced. The Committee nevertheless invites
- the Government to follow through with its stated intention to amend the law so
- as to remove the barriers to the acquisition of legal personality by trade
- unions.
- c) The Committee draws the attention of the Committee of Experts on the
- Application of Conventions and Recommendations to this aspect of the case as
- it relates to the application of Convention No. 87.
- d) As regards the anti-union discrimination against workers seeking to set
- up a trade union of municipal employees, the Committee recalls that, in
- accordance with Article 2 of Convention No. 87 ratified by Guatemala, all
- workers, including municipal workers, should have the right to establish the
- organisations of their own choosing in defence of their occupational
- interests; the Committee therefore requests the Government to indicate whether
- the workers of the municipality of San Antonio Suchitepéquez who were
- dismissed for attempting to found a trade union have been reinstated in their
- jobs following their appeal against the dismissals, and whether the union of
- workers of the municipality has been granted legal personality.
- e) As regards the dispute at the LUNAFIL factory which resulted in the
- wounding of a striking worker and the arrest of two other strikers, the
- Committee recalls the importance it attaches to the principle that peaceful
- strike action is one of the essential means that must be available to workers
- to defend their economic and social interests.
- f) Consequently, with respect to the bodily harm inflicted by the riot
- police who were evacuating the factory where, according to the complainant, 39
- strikers were peacefully defending their jobs and freedom of association, the
- Committee recalls that governments should give strict instructions and
- initiate effective disciplinary proceedings whenever the breaking up of a
- meeting of workers by the police causes grievous bodily harm.
- g) As regards the arrest of the two strikers during this labour dispute,
- the Committee stresses that the arrest of strikers involves a serious risk of
- abuse for freedom of association.
- h) The Committee notes, however, with interest that the labour dispute at
- the LUNAFIL factory has been settled thanks to the mediation of the public
- authorities and, while emphasising the importance of the principles set out in
- the foregoing subparagraphs, considers that this aspect of the case does not
- call for further examination.
- i) As regards the allegations relating to "solidarism", the Committee
- recalls the importance it attaches, in conformity with Article 2 of Convention
- No. 98, to protection being ensured against any acts of interference by
- employers designed to promote the establishment of workers' organisations
- under the domination of an employer.