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Article 6(2) of the Convention. Maximum limits on additional hours of work. The Committee has been commenting for a number of years on section 63(2)(b) of the Labour Code of 1987 which provides for the possibility of working up to four additional hours per day in preparatory and supplementary work in industry or in order to meet extraordinary work demands. Despite the Government’s indications in its reports of 1992 and 1998 that legislative measures had been taken to determine an annual limit on the number of additional hours and that the relevant text would be supplied as soon as it was published, the Committee notes with regret that the new draft Labour Code of 2007, which is in the process of finalization and is currently examined by the State Consultative Council, maintains the same provision in identical terms (draft section 63.6(b)). As the Committee has pointed out in previous comments, the single reference to a daily limit of overtime – without determining the maximum number of hours of overtime which may be permitted in the year – might give rise to too many weekly, monthly or annual working hours which could be inconsistent with the spirit in which this Convention was drafted.
In this regard, the Committee wishes to refer to paragraph 144 of its 2005 General Survey on hours of work in which it noted that even though the establishment of specific limits to the total number of additional hours is left to the competent authorities, it does not consider that such authorities have unlimited discretion in this regard. Such limits must be reasonable and they must be prescribed in line with the general goal of Conventions Nos 1 and 30, namely to establish the eight-hour day and 48-hour week as a legal standard of hours of work in order to provide protection against undue fatigue and to ensure reasonable leisure and opportunities for recreation and social life. The Committee hopes that in the ongoing process of revising the Labour Code, the Government will take all necessary measures to establish, within reasonable limits, the maximum number of additional hours which may be allowed in the year in respect of permanent exceptions, in conformity with the Convention. The Committee requests the Government to keep the Office informed of all future developments in this regard and to transmit a copy of the new legislation once it has been adopted.
The Committee notes the information that a Bill is being prepared with a view to setting a limit on the number of hours of overtime which may be allowed and that a copy of it will be sent to the Office as soon as it is published. The Committee recalls that the need to bring the national legislation into conformity with Article 6 of the Convention has been the subject of comments for numerous years.
Article 6, paragraph 2, of the Convention. Further to its previous comments, the Committee notes with interest the Government's statement that legislative measures have been taken to fix the maximum additional hours which may be authorized. It notes that the text of the Act will be supplied as soon as it is published.
Article 8, paragraph 1(a) and (b). The Committee notes, in reply to its previous questions, instruction No. 8672 of 22 August 1989, which obliges employers to post at the workplace the hours of work and rest.
Article 6, paragraph 1(b), of the Convention. Further to its previous comments, the Committee notes with satisfaction that the new Labour Code, No. 71 of 1987, no longer provides for temporary exceptions to normal working hours in cases in which the work is required for development needs or in order to increase production.
Article 6, paragraph 2. The Committee notes that section 63 II(b) of the new Labour Code maintains the possibility of carrying out up to four hours of additional work per day in preparatory and supplementary work in industry or in order to meet extraordinary work demands; it notes that this provision no longer even refers to the temporary nature of the exception as did the former legislation. Such a possibility might imply considerably too many weekly or annual working hours which, in the Committee's opinion, could be in direct contradiction to the spirit in which this Convention was drafted (see in this connection the Committee's 1967 general survey on this instrument, International Labour Conference, 51st Session, 1967, Report III (Part IV), third part, paragraph 239).
The Committee would be grateful if the Government would take the appropriate measures to establish a reasonable limit, in conformity with the Convention's objectives, on the maximum number of supplementary hours which may be worked, for instance on a yearly basis.
Article 8, paragraph 1(a) and (b). The Committee notes that the new Labour Code contains no provisions on posting notices of working hours and rest periods. It requests the Government to take the measures necessary to give effect to these provisions of the Convention.