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With reference to its previous comments, the Committee takes note of the information supplied by the Government, received in October 2008, concerning the application of Articles 10(2) and 26(1) of the Convention, as well as the comments made in this respect by the Japanese Trade Union Confederation (JTUC–RENGO). The Committee notes that the Government continues to consolidate the number of occupational injury hospitals, which number 30 as of 2008, in consequence of its “scrap-and-build policy for efficiency”, and that the Government reports it gives full consideration to securing relevant medical care and promoting industrial health activities as part of its policy.
Articles 4(1) and 27. Equality of treatment of foreign trainees. The Committee notes the new comments made by the JTUC–RENGO and the Government’s reply concerning the conditions of employment of foreign trainees by private and public institutions in Japan. The JTUC–RENGO alleges that labour legislation does not apply to foreign trainees as they are not considered to be employed and, consequently, they are not eligible for employment injury benefits in case of an accident at work. The JTUC–RENGO emphasizes that because most trainees who enter Japan under the industrial training and technical internship programme are subsequently performing jobs as workers, there is an urgent need for measures to ensure that trainees are covered by workers’ accident compensation insurance. The Government reports that it undertakes information campaigns regarding the implementation of proper training practices, conducts investigations on the conditions of work of foreign trainees, takes actions and imposes sanctions against practices by employers qualified as “improper conduct”. According to the Government’s report, it developed the “Guidelines Concerning Entry and Residence Management of Trainees and Technical Interns” and revised the Guidelines in 2007. With respect to the review of the training and technical internship programme within the “Three-Year Programme for the Promotion of Regulatory Reform (revised)”, a related bill was supposed to be passed in 2009 to strengthen the legal protection of trainees and their inclusion under the scope of labour legislation. The Committee requests the Government to indicate whether the abovementioned bill was adopted and what provisions in the legislation and the Guidelines mentioned by the Government ensure that foreign trainees in Japan can benefit from the protection offered by the labour and social security legislation. Please provide yearly statistics on the number of inspections and investigations of the proper training practices carried out since 2007, the number of cases of “improper conduct” by the employers registered, and the sanctions imposed.
The Committee notes the Government’s report and the comments made by the Japanese Trade Union Confederation (JTUC–RENGO) concerning the application of Conventions Nos 19 and 121.
Articles 10, paragraph 2, and 26, paragraph 1, of the Convention. Provision of medical and rehabilitation services. According to the comments on Convention No. 121, on 30 March 2004, the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare announced a “reorganization plan for occupational injury hospitals” to close or consolidate them. The Confederation states that these hospitals, which provide preventive care, treatment and rehabilitation, and support for maintaining health at the workplace, should not be closed or consolidated, but be further expanded. The Committee notes from the Government’s reports that the number of specialized occupational injury hospitals established and operated in the country under the workers’ accident insurance compensation scheme has decreased from 37 in 1993 to 33 in 2007, while the number of new recipients of insurance benefits in the period 1999–2005 has not (over 600,000 per year). The Committee also notes from the Government’s latest report that 19 human resources development centres have been established for providing vocational training to disabled persons. In view of the above, the Committee would like the Government to explain its policy as regards the development of occupational injury medicine and rehabilitation services, in particular in the light of the requirements contained in Articles 10(2) and 26(1) of the Convention.
Article 27. Equality of treatment of non-nationals. In its comments concerning Convention No. 19, the Confederation indicates that obligatory reporting of accident compensation given to undocumented foreign workers was abolished in 2006 in accordance with the notice concerning the “simplification of reporting concerning accident compensation given to illegal foreign workers”. As a result, it has become difficult to grasp current conditions, but there seem to be many cases where foreign workers without a work permit fail to file claims for compensation because of lack of information on accident compensation, fear of being deported and undue pressure from their employer. The Confederation also states that many trainees who come to Japan under industrial training and technical internship programmes are in reality working without being legally treated as workers or covered by the Workmen’s Accident Compensation Insurance Law. Taking into account that this Law covers both Japanese and foreign workers without distinction, the Committee asks the Government to explain how it is being applied with respect to foreign workers in the situations referred to by the Japanese Trade Union Confederation.
[The Government is asked to reply in detail to the present comments in 2008.]
Article 22 of the Convention. The Committee notes that, according to the information supplied in the Government's report, benefits due in the case of temporary incapacity are henceforth suspended in the case of the imprisonment of the beneficiary further to the adoption of Law No. 59 of 1986, which includes an amendment to the Workmen's Accident Compensation Insurance Law. It would be grateful if the Government would indicate in its next report, whether part of the benefit thus suspended is paid to the dependants of the person concerned, in compliance with the provision of paragraph 2 of Article 22 of the Convention.