Friday, June 09, 2006

Cuba: Annual Survey of Violations of Trade Union Rights (2006)

Cuba: Annual Survey of Violations of Trade Union Rights (2006)

# Cases before the ILO's Committee on Freedom of Association
# ILO core conventions ratified

Population: 11,300,000 / Capital: Havana / ILO Core Conventions
Ratified: 29 - 87 - 98 - 100 - 105 - 111 - 138

There still is no freedom of association, no genuine collective
bargaining and the right to strike is still not recognised in law. Six
of the seven independent trade union leaders sentenced to lengthy terms
in 2003 remained in prison. An independent trade union leader was
arrested at the beginning of the year.
TRADE UNION RIGHTS IN LAW
A single union

The Cuban authorities only recognise a single national trade union
centre, the Central de Trabajadores Cubanos (CTC). The Labour Code,
which was published in 1985, does not provide for any genuine freedom of
association. The government explicitly prohibits independent trade
unions, though it claims there is no legal requirement for workers to
join the CTC.

The government has told the ILO that it is undergoing a comprehensive
revision of its Labour Code. A new code is unlikely to guarantee genuine
freedom of association, as the government maintains that existing laws
already do so. According to the Cuban authorities "Freedom of
association, protected in Convention 87, does not translate into the
false concept of 'trade union pluralism' imposed by the main centres of
capitalist and imperial power."
Collective bargaining

The Labour Code requires that in order to be valid legally, collective
agreements must be discussed and approved in workers' meetings and be
formally declared in writing and signed by the parties. Any
modifications or additions must be approved in workers' meetings and
signed by the parties, i.e. the employing body as well as the trade
union organisation.

The State controls the employment market and decides on pay and working
conditions in the State sector. In the private sector, the 1995 Foreign
Investment Law requires foreign investors to contract workers through
State employment agencies. The investors pay the agencies in dollars,
but the agencies pay the workers the equivalent figure in pesos,
pocketing up to 95 per cent of their salaries.

There is no legislation covering the right to strike. According to the
government there is no need to call strikes since the demands of
official trade union organisations will always be heard by the authorities.

TRADE UNION RIGHTS IN PRACTICE
No independent trade union activity possible

Any attempts to form free trade unions are obstructed by the government,
chiefly via restrictions set out in the Associations Act (Ley de
Asociaciones). Anyone who engages in independent trade union activity
runs the risk of being persecuted and losing their job. Workers are
required to keep an eye on their colleagues and report any "dissident"
activity. Independent labour activists are periodically arrested,
harassed, threatened with prosecution and pressurised into going into exile.

Those organisations that do exist are unable to represent workers
effectively. As they are not recognised, they cannot engage in
collective bargaining or take strike action. Workers are not able to
exercise their rights or to take part in peaceful marches or
demonstrations in support of their demands. Independent organisations
have been set up by dissidents opposed to the Castro regime, and though
they do defend union rights, their main concern is fighting the regime
and promoting respect of general human rights. Their offices have been
searched, equipment confiscated and communications intercepted. Some of
these unions have been infiltrated by State security agents.

VIOLATIONS IN 2005
Background

About 200 dissidents held a public meeting in May, which the organisers
claimed was the first such gathering since the 1959 revolution. In July,
Hurricane Dennis caused widespread destruction and left 16 people dead.
Independent trade union leader arrested

Juan Antonio Salazar, of the independent trade union "Sindicato Libre de
Trabajadores de Cuba" was arrested by two police officers on 10 January.
They did not explain why he was being arrested at the time, but he was
later charged with making threats, about which he knew nothing. Juan
Antonio Salazar had earlier received a summons to the police station. He
chose to ignore it because it was not on official paper, had no official
stamp, and was not spelt or written correctly. His nephew, who was with
him at the time of his arrest, believes the real reason was his trade
union and political activities, notably his participation in the
celebration of international human rights day on 10 December.
Independent trade union leaders still in prison

Six of the seven free trade union leaders who were jailed in April 2003,
together with 66 dissidents who oppose the Castro regime, remain in
prison. The trade union leaders received sentences ranging from 12 to 25
years. The seventh, Carmelo Díaz Fernández, was released on medical
parole in June 2004, to serve the rest of his 16 year sentence either in
hospital or at home, depending on his state of health.

Calls from the international trade union movement and the ILO for the
release of the prisoners have met with total resistance. The government
denies that the people concerned are trade union leaders, and says they
were not jailed for trade union activity.

http://www.icftu.org/displaydocument.asp?Index=991223866&Language=EN

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