Tagged: APFUTU

Punjab / Sindh Labour Code: An Assault on Workers’ Class Identity and Unity

The following statement by Zia Syed, Secretary General of the All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU) was shared with Global May Day network.


Gujrat, 28-07-2024

Understanding why the working class in Pakistan opposes the Punjab / Sindh Labour Code proposed by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the Government of Punjab / Sindh is crucial.

Workers’ primary objection is that this draft was presented without undergoing the internationally and nationally agreed tripartite (workers, employers, and government) consultation process. For such extensive fundamental changes in the current labor laws, it is essential to organize a tripartite labor conference under ILO Convention 144, 1976, and announce a labor policy based on the unanimous recommendations of this conference. Subsequently, labor laws should be formulated and legislated in light of this policy.

Neither at the federal nor provincial level has any tripartite labor conference been organized, nor has any federal or provincial labor policy been announced.

Despite this knowledge, preparing the draft of the Punjab / Sindh Labour Code while bypassing all necessary consultation stages indicates an undemocratic and non-transparent attitude of the ILO and the government. It seems that through this code, some dangerous anti-worker actions are intended, which would have been impossible to achieve through the tripartite consultation process.

The workers’ principled stance has always been that the existing labor laws need to be improved, made more practical, easier, and worker-friendly. Unfortunately, the so-called “Labour Code,” prepared under the supervision of the ILO, indicates stripping away even those basic rights that the working class has achieved through a century-long struggle. For example, it completely abolishes the recognized legal right of workers to permanent employment for permanent nature work as stipulated in the current labor laws.

This code legalizes various forms of the illegal “Contract (Thakadari) system,” including third-party contractual systems, thus imposing a wage slavery system in workplaces whose sole purpose is to provide a legal escape route for the actual employer from responsibilities.

Instead of modernizing and broadening the definition of workers to align with current needs (including home-based workers, domestic platform workers, agriculture, brick kiln, ceramic, furniture, and fisheries), this code complicates it further by dividing it into several categories. It seeks to make workers employees of contractors, sub-contractors, third-party contractors, and recruiting agencies instead of the actual employer, leaving them at the mercy of circumstances. The sole purpose of this is to exempt the actual owners from their legal responsibilities while in formalizing the formal sector. The dangerous result will be that in any industrial dispute, workers will be deprived of any legal action, social security, pension, unionization, bonuses, working hours, and gratuity rights against the actual employer.

The code proposes to further strengthen the inhumane system of “Pashgi” advances (loans), through which employers can buy and sell workers. This will worsen the lives of millions of laborers and peasant families working in brick kilns, ceramic, furniture, metal industries fields, making their lives worse than animals. The advance system is a modern form of slavery, a clear violation of UN and ILO conventions.

The most deplorable aspect of this code is the attempt to deprive employees in many government institutions, ranging from grades 1 to 15, of their right to unionize and collectively bargain under the current labor laws, violating ILO core conventions 87 and 98.

The right to strike is a fundamental worker’s right, which has been significantly weakened in existing labor laws, against which the working class has been continuously raising its voice. Instead of addressing workers’ objections related to the right to strike, the proposed labor code further imposes restrictions, making the right to strike practically ineffective and nearly impossible.

Instead of making the process of resolving industrial disputes accessible, easier, and time-bound for the working class, the code establishes a new parallel system where bureaucracy numerically dominates over other parties (employers and employees). This is a blatant violation of the law, which stipulates that workers and employers should have 40% representation each in labor-related tripartite committees, while government representation should be 20%. The Punjab / Sindh Labour Code grants bureaucracy unlimited powers instead of rationalizing its authorities. The bureaucracy has consciously attempted to strengthen itself further under the guise of the labor code.

The workers’ unrest regarding this code is increasing. It is encouraging that the Government of Punjab / Sindh has officially announced a three-member committee under the leadership of the Minister of Labor, which includes the Secretary and Director General of the Labor Department and the Secretary of the Department of Industries. This committee will gather concerns from stakeholders, including workers and employers, regarding the Sindh Labour Code. However, what will be the committee’s jurisdiction, how will it work, and what has it done so far, perhaps even the committee members themselves are unaware of it. If workers and employers are given representation in this committee, a serious step can be taken towards improving labor laws in Punjab / Sindh.

To address the unrest among workers regarding the Punjab / Sindh Labour Code, it is essential to ensure the convening of a tripartite labour conference in accordance with the ILO Convention for fundamental changes in labour laws. Labour policy should be announced after consultations, and based on this, labour laws should be restructured.

We are looking for your solidarity.
Please send your solidarity message pressing for our demand to the Prime Minister of Pakistan through the nearest Pakistani mission in your region. You can find the Pakistani mission by the following link: mofa.gov.pk
We are waiting for your positive and supporting reply.

In Unity and Friendship.

Mr. Zia Syed
Secretary General

Pakistan: APFUTU demands measures for women’s economic empowerment and gender parity

The General Secretary of the All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU), Zia Syed, released the following statement:

Gujrat: On this International Women’s Day, the All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU) commends the resilience of working women in the face of harmful misogynistic attitudes and unprecedented economic instability. However, it is gravely concerning that Pakistan continues to lag behind global economies in addressing chronic gender disparities.

According to the 2023 Global Gender Gap Index, Pakistan ranks 143rd out of 146 countries for women’s economic participation and opportunity. The 2020-21 Pakistan Labour Force Survey also found that women account for only 23.5 percent of the total labour force despite constituting a significant 49.4 percent of the working-age population. Moreover, women, particularly Christians and Hindus, are continuously denied their rightful inheritance due to a lack of implementation of laws guaranteeing their rights.

More inclusive measures to ensure women’s right to vote and contest elections must also be enacted for true political representation. The state must further take actionable steps to provide more economic opportunities for women, protecting their right to work in a dignified environment free from harassment and with equal pay. Working women are the backbone of global economic development; their inclusion in Pakistan’s workforce must be encouraged regardless of whether they are married or unmarried.

Finally, APFUTU demands the state pay heed to the rights of incarcerated women, many of whom suffer in jails with poor hygienic conditions, little access to healthcare and limited economic recourse for legal representation. The state must do more to uphold their rights, including their right to due process under the law in cases of under-trial female prisoners who have yet to be produced before courts. The demands of Baloch women calling for the return of their disappeared loved ones must be met as well. Pakistan’s international obligations and commitment to meeting the Sustainable Development Goals mandates gender equality be upheld in every sphere.

Zia Syed, APFUTU General Secretary