398. In its 295th Report (November 1994, approved by the Governing Body at its 261st Session), the Committee asked the Government to accept a direct contacts mission concerning Cases Nos. 1512, 1539, 1595, 1778 and 1786 to enable it to obtain the necessary information and be able to examine the allegations in full knowledge of all the facts (see 295th Report, paragraph 12). In the same way, the Committee addressed an urgent appeal to the Government for it to transmit its observations on Case No. 1740 as a matter of urgency (see 295th Report, paragraph 13); the gathering of information on this case would logically also be one of the objectives of the above-mentioned direct contacts mission.
- 398. In its 295th Report (November 1994, approved by the Governing Body at its 261st Session), the Committee asked the Government to accept a direct contacts mission concerning Cases Nos. 1512, 1539, 1595, 1778 and 1786 to enable it to obtain the necessary information and be able to examine the allegations in full knowledge of all the facts (see 295th Report, paragraph 12). In the same way, the Committee addressed an urgent appeal to the Government for it to transmit its observations on Case No. 1740 as a matter of urgency (see 295th Report, paragraph 13); the gathering of information on this case would logically also be one of the objectives of the above-mentioned direct contacts mission.
- 399. The Government of Guatemala accepted the direct contacts mission in a communication dated 9 December 1994. The mission took place between 13 and 17 February 1995 and was headed by Mr. Enrique Marin Quijada, a professor of labour law at the Central University of Venezuela (see the mission report in Annex II).
- 400. Guatemala has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, 1948 (No. 87), and the Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
A. A. The complainants' allegations
A. A. The complainants' allegations
- 401. Since the report of the direct contacts mission contains a summary of the
- allegations made in the six cases, the replies by the Government to some of
- these and the conclusions of the Committee in its previous examinations of
- Cases Nos. 1512, 1539 and 1595, the Committee will proceed directly to the
- formulation of its conclusions, although it will not be able to take into
- account in its examination of the cases the recent extensive communication of
- the Government dated 16 May 1995 containing information on the alleged acts of
- violence against unionists (whether or not there were denunciations, cases in
- which further information was requested, cases for which investigations had
- been set up, etc.).
B. B. The Committee's conclusions
B. B. The Committee's conclusions
- The Committee's conclusions
- 402 The Committee takes note of the report of Professor Enrique Marin on the direct contacts mission which he carried out in Guatemala between 13 and 17 February 1995 and would like to thank him for his report. The Committee observes with interest that "the mission was able to carry out a wide exchange of ideas with high Government and non-governmental authorities, employers' representatives and important workers' organizations, and obtain valuable information". In this context, the Committee notes that the mission met with high-level representatives of the Government and the social partners. In particular, the mission was received by His Excellency Mr. Ramon de Leon Carpio, President of the Republic, Mr. Aciscio Valladares, Public Prosecutor of the Nation, Mr. Jorge Mario Garcia Laguardia, Human Rights Commissioner, Mrs. Gladys Annabella Morfin, Minister of Labour and Social Insurance, Mr. Vicente Arranz Sanz, Chairman of the Presidential Commission on Human Rights, Mr. Oscar Barrios Castillo, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Mr. Ramses Cuestas Gomez, Attorney General of the Republic, as well as by various authorities and ministerial officials. It also met with the Coordinating Committee of Agriculture, Commercial, Industrial and Financial Associations (CAFIC), and with representatives of the following trade union organizations: the General Confederation of Workers of Guatemala (CGTG), Central Organization of Rural Workers (CTC), Confederation of Trade Union Unity of Guatemala (CUSG), Trade Union of Workers of Guatemala (UNSITRAGUA), and the Federation of Banking and Insurance Employees (FESEBS). Finally, the mission met with the head of the United Nations Mission for the Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA) and with officials of this mission.
- 403 The Committee observes that the complaints refer mainly to: (1) the assassination, disappearance, abduction, assault, arrest of or death threats against a very large number of trade union officials and trade unionists; (2) obstacles to the establishment of trade union organizations; (3) numerous acts of anti-union discrimination; and (4) the violations of the right to collective bargaining.
- Violent deaths, disappearance, abduction, assault, arrest of and death threats against trade unionists
- 404 The Committee notes that the mission report emphasizes "the very complex situation in Guatemala concerning the war and the efforts being made to achieve peace. There have been important achievements in the search for a more complete state organization, in the context of a transition regime and a climate of poverty; and although there is a continued policy to promote human rights, this has not prevented many serious violations, many of which remain unpunished". Another part of the mission report points out that "The high state authorities responsible for the vigilance of human rights are extremely concerned about the frequency and seriousness of the violations, which occur despite their efforts to prevent them and believe that the situation as compared with ten years ago is favourable, although progress now has become slow and difficult (...), the number of denunciations made to the (Human Rights) Commissioner rose considerably in 1994, which indicates a greater awareness of this means of redress and perhaps greater confidence by the population, although some of these denunciations (1,806 out of a total of 13,431) were not within the competence of the Commission. Furthermore, there has been a marked increase in the number of bodies which receive denunciations of violations of human rights". In this general context in which the exercise of trade union rights must be set, the Committee observes that, according to the information contained in the report of the direct contacts mission, the situation of human rights in the trade union world would not appear to have worsened in recent years as regards violent deaths and disappearances, although this is not true as concerns death threats.
- 405 The Committee also takes note of the "large majority of crimes which have gone unpunished" and of the "lack of capacity by the State to investigate punishable acts". The Committee observes in this connection that the Government has provided only very little conclusive information on the allegations of assassination and other acts of violence against trade unionists and that the authorities interviewed pointed out that: (1) the majority of these acts occurred long before the present period of government (while they did acknowledge that violations of human rights and trade union rights have also occurred during the current Government); (2) some allegations do not contain the necessary details to enable a reply to be given; (3) that for the moment no positive results have been achieved from the complainant trade union organizations which had been requested to provide additional information (names, dates, places, etc); (4) a climate of fear exists in the country which is detrimental to the giving of evidence; and (5) there were deficiencies in the judicial organization up to July 1994, since information on trials was not centralized (it could be obtained only from each court or tribunal). The Committee notes with interest that the Attorney General of the Republic has undertaken to open inquiries on all the denunciations pending before the Committee, if such inquiries have not already been initiated, and that "as a result of the direct contacts mission and on the express wish of the President of the Republic, a liaison committee had been set up by the Presidential Commission on Human Rights (COPREDEH) on labour matters in the sphere of human rights, which logically included trade union matters. The purpose of the committee was to monitor all the cases submitted to the Committee on Freedom of Association, and coordinate action by the Ministry of Labour, the Office of the Attorney General and the national police. In this way, the Minister of Labour would be able to pass on automatically to the liaison committee the complaints received".
- 406 The Committee deeply deplores the many violent deaths of trade union officials and trade unionists, as well as the disappearances, abductions, arbitrary arrests, acts of aggression and death threats which have occurred since the presentation of the complaints (1990), and expresses its deep concern at the situation of impunity (only in one of the assassinations to which the Government refers does it appear that the authors have been identified) and insists on the absolute need to open judicial inquiries on all the cases before the Committee with a view to ascertaining the facts and punishing the guilty parties. In this connection, the Committee recalls the commitment made by the Attorney General of the Republic to open inquiries on all the cases placed before the Committee and asks the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- 407 Although it is aware of the difficult situation affecting Guatemala and of the Government's policy for the promotion of human rights, the Committee recalls that "the rights of workers' and employers' organizations can only be exercised in a climate that is free from violence, pressure or threats of any kind against these organizations' leaders and members and that it is for governments to ensure that this principle is respected" (see 291st Report, Case No. 1700 (Nicaragua), para. 310, and 294th Report, Case No. 1761 (Colombia), para. 726). Furthermore, in the event of assaults on the physical or moral integrity (death threats) of individuals, the Committee believes that steps should be taken immediately to "institute an independent judicial inquiry with a view to clarifying the facts, determining responsibility, punishing those responsible and preventing the repetition of such acts" (see 268th Report, Case No. 1341 (Paraguay), para. 378(e)). When judicial investigations into the murder and disappearance of trade unionists have not been successful the Committee considers it indispensable that measures be taken to identify, bring to trial and convict the guilty parties and points out that such a situation means that serious violations of trade union rights may occur in conditions of impunity for the guilty parties, which reinforces the climate of violence and insecurity and thus has an extremely damaging effect on the exercise of trade union rights (see 283rd Report, Cases Nos. 1434 and 1477 (Colombia), para. 246(a); 283rd Report, Cases Nos. 1478 and 1484 (Peru), para. 72; 284th Report, Case No. 1538 (Honduras), para. 743; 284th Report, Case No. 1572 (Philippines), para. 832, and 284th Report, Case No. 1598 (Peru), para. 968). The Committee also believes that "justice delayed is justice denied" (see 265th Report, Cases Nos. 988 and 1003 (Sri Lanka), para. 14 and 284th Report, Case No. 1508 (Sudan), para. 427).
- 408 More specifically, and without taking account of the recently received government communication of 16 May 1995, the Committee observes that for now the Government has only provided information on some allegations and has stated that:
- - a judicial inquiry or an inquiry by the Public Ministry has been opened into the assassination of the trade unionists Carlos Enrique Cardenas Segastume, Dinora Gossep Perez Valdez, Oscar Oswaldo Luna Aceituno, Federico Tay Osorio, Federico Tay Vicente, German Alfred de Leon Parajon, Manuel de Jesus Alonso, Rene Cabrera Estrada (only in this last mentioned case has it been possible to identify the author of the crime, which - according to the Government and the ICFTU - was the result of personal problems);
- - the trade unionist Mauricio Raxcaco Enriquez was beaten and threatened; he fled the country in 1991;
- - the trade unionists Amilcar Mendez and Jose Gil were threatened with death and COPREDEH was informed of their case;
- - the trade unionist Armando Sanchez did not appear to make a denunciation despite the request to do so by the Office of the Attorney General;
- - Debora Guzman was arrested, assaulted and threatened on 6 October 1994; COPREDEH received the denunciation and proceeded to coordinate inquiries with the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic and the Directorate General of the National Police.
- Furthermore, the Government had informed the Committee (see 284th Report, para. 720) on the judicial inquiries into the murders of Jose Orlando Pantaleon, Jose Leon Segura de la Cruz and Carlos Humberto Rivera, stating that the courts had ordered a temporary stay of proceedings because they did not find sufficient evidence to bring to trial the persons accused of the murders. In the same way, the Committee notes that according to the mission report, MINUGUA and COPREDEH have set up a unit for the protection of persons who have been threatened, and which has already carried out some important work.
- 409 In these circumstances, the Committee regrets that it has not received all the information requested from the Government concerning the deaths and the other alleged acts of violence and urges it to reply as a matter of urgency to the list of allegations contained in Annex I and to take the necessary measures to guarantee the safety of trade unionists who have been threatened with death and to determine the whereabouts of those who have disappeared.
- Obstacles to the establishment of trade union organizations
- 410 The Committee notes with interest that, according to the mission report "the allegations concerning obstacles to the establishment and functioning of trade unions were fully answered and, in most cases, the replies were positive. Furthermore, the mission learned that significant efforts had been made in the Ministry of Labour to speed up the process for granting legal personality to trade unions and their registration in the respective register - although opinions differ concerning the results obtained - on the basis of new regulations, the provisions of which should be analysed". The Committee notes that since 1993 the procedure for the recognition of the legal personality, approval of statutes and registration of trade union organizations has been simplified, that the average length of the process has been reduced from 400 to 55 days and that the number of organizations registered in 1993-94 totalled 116. The Committee also notes that "the mission had reason to believe that in fact the Ministry of Labour had indeed endeavoured to reduce the number of stages and time of the procedure for the establishment of trade unions". However, the Committee shares the view expressed by the mission that "the reduction in the number of stages in the procedure for the establishment of trade unions was a positive development but that further steps should be taken in this direction, with account being taken of the provisions of the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, No. 87". The Committee asks the Government to take measures to this end within the framework of its current policy for the promotion of trade union organizations with a view to ensuring workers the right to organize freely.
- 411 In particular, the Committee notes with interest that legal personality has been granted to the following trade union organizations, the establishment of which, according to the allegations, had encountered obstacles: the Street Vendors' National Front Trade Union; the Trade Union of Customs Workers; the Trade Union of Workers of the State Enterprise of Puerto Quetzal; the Trade Union of Workers of the Forestry Commission; and the Trade Union of Workers of the La Mariposa SA bottling enterprise. Furthermore, the Committee notes in connection with the allegation concerning the establishment of the Trade Union of Workers of the Guatemalan Red Cross that this matter calls for no further consideration since the Guatemalan Red Cross has ceased to exist due to financial reasons. The Committee also notes that, according to the Government, no request for the registration of trade unions has been made in the enterprises Manufacturera Integridad SA, Koram SA, Bocco & Cia. Ltd., Disenos Panamericanos SA, Confecciones Isobal SA, Transporte Urbano Union, Bolivar, EGA, La Fe and La Morena.
- 412 Furthermore, the Committee notes that, according to information given to the mission by the authorities, the application for legal personality made by the Trade Union of Workers of the Ministry of Government is now at the final stage and that the Ministry of Government believed "that the establishment of this trade union was a positive development if its activities remained within the scope of the law and its statutes".
- 413 Finally, at its meeting in November 1992 (see 294th Report, Case No. 1595, para. 585(f)), the Committee noted that the Government had stated that the members of the Executive Committee of the Workers' Union of Hotel Ritz Continental had in 1990 presented an official document dissolving the union after 22 workers had left the union and it requested the complainant organizations to provide details of the reasons why, and the circumstances in which, the resignation of the workers took place and to provide a copy of the document of dissolution of the trade union. In this connection, the Committee notes that according to information from the Government the dissolution did not materialize because the representatives of the trade union had not presented themselves to the administrative authorities.
- Acts of anti-union discrimination
- 414 Before examining the allegations, the Committee would like to refer to the provisions of the Labour Code as regards anti-union discrimination, which are reproduced below:
- Section 209. Workers may not be dismissed for participating in the establishment of a trade union and shall enjoy the right of non-removability from the time that notice is given to the General Labour Inspectorate that they are establishing a trade union and they shall enjoy such protection up to 60 days after the publication of the trade union's statutes in the Official Gazette.
- In the event of failure to comply with the provisions of this section, the worker(s) concerned shall be reinstated within 24 hours and the official responsible shall be sanctioned with a fine of 1,000 quetzales (5.63 quetzales = US$1); furthermore, payment shall be made of the wages not received by the workers concerned. (...)
- Section 379. From the time when the statement of demands is handed to the competent judge, the dispute shall be deemed to have begun, so that neither of the parties may take reprisals against the other party or obstruct the other party in the exercise of his rights. If any person is guilty of a contravention of this provision, he shall be liable to a fine of between 1,000 and 5,000 quetzales and to detention of between 15 and 30 days, according to the extent of the reprisals taken and the number of persons affected thereby. In addition, he shall be bound to pay compensation forthwith for any loss caused provided that this shall not exempt him from any penal liabilities incurred. (...)
- Section 380. If work contracts are terminated without completion of the procedures established in this section, the judge shall apply the sanctions to which reference is made in the previous section and shall order the immediate reinstatement of the worker(s) dismissed and in the event of non-compliance with the order shall double the sanction. In the event that such non-compliance continues, he shall order the arrest of the person responsible to comply with the detention to which reference is made in the previous section, without this exonerating that person from the obligation of reinstating the worker(s) concerned. (...)
- 415 The Committee believes that the legal system for protection against anti-union discrimination is in conformity with the provisions of Convention No. 98 and observes that in 1994 the Committee of Experts considered this legislation as a case of progress. However, according to the mission report, in practice acts of anti-union discrimination frequently occur and in many cases legislation is not respected. As regards the reasons for this situation, the conclusions of the mission report indicate the following:
- The allegations concerning acts of anti-union discrimination have helped highlight the existence of complex problems concerning the illegal dismissals and refusals to reinstate dismissed workers. Such events which concern labour matters often give rise to problems concerning trade unions and matters of public order and of a civilian and criminal kind which are of national concern. The use made of illegal and often collective dismissals may give rise to strong and wasteful legal proceedings or the occupation of enterprises, with or without the intervention of the police, or other situations. The measures suggested to overcome this situation are of a legislative and administrative kind. From the legislative point of view, the mission was told that there was a need to give powers of sanction to the Labour Inspectorate, without waiting for the intervention of a judge; and that at all events there was a need to reform and speed up the judicial procedure in the event of dismissals, to ensure the immediate reinstatement of a worker or the application of sanctions, as provided for in section 380 of the Labour Code; or in the event of a summons being served on an employer. Some persons consulted believed, however, that the legislation was clear, but that it had been distorted by judicial interpretations. (...) From an administrative point of view, all the sectors agreed on the need to increase the number of labour and social insurance courts and that they should incorporate courts of conciliation and arbitration on a permanent basis, in accordance with the provisions of section 294 of the Labour Code. Furthermore, representatives of the workers' organizations and officials of the Human Rights Commission said that more effective action could be carried out by the Labour Inspectorate, even within the current legal framework.
- 416 In these circumstances, and in the light of the many allegations of mass dismissals for trade union activities, the Committee concludes that with a view to guaranteeing existing legal protection against acts of anti-union discrimination, the judicial procedure should be amended to speed it up and make it more effective and the number of labour and social welfare courts and conciliation and arbitration courts should be increased. The Committee requests the Government to take steps to amend legislation and practice in this respect.
- 417 As regards the specific allegations of anti-union discrimination, the Committee notes the information provided by the Government to the mission and in particular that: the workers dismissed in the La Torre farm were reinstated in their workplaces and paid their outstanding wages; workers in the La Abundancia farm reached an extra judicial arrangement with the enterprise; the intervention of the Labour Inspectorate resulted in the settlement of the disputes in the Municipality of Santa Cruz Verapaz; the transfer of the Este Oeste SA enterprise was permitted by legislation and that workers were paid their wages and benefits as prescribed by the wage agreement in force; the mass dismissals in the Ministry of Urban and Rural Development were due to the abolition of this Ministry for budgetary reasons and that workers had been paid their legal benefits; the dismissals in the Municipality of Palin were authorized by the courts; the ESDEE enterprise closed down its operations in 1994 and the legal benefits were paid to its workers.
- 418 Furthermore, the Committee observes that concerning a large number of allegations of anti-union dismissals, the Government merely states that no denunciations have been made. In this respect, the Committee notes that the non-presentation of denunciations does not necessarily mean that acts of anti-union discrimination have not occurred, especially bearing in mind that the judicial system functions very slowly and has shown itself incapable of providing the necessary protection. However, since it is aware that in practice the possibilities for the reinstatement of unlawfully dismissed trade unionists are almost non-existent in the case of dismissals which occurred a number of years ago, the Committee will limit its examination to allegations concerning events which took place from 1 January 1993.
- 419 The Committee notes that from this date a number of cases of alleged discrimination have been placed before the courts (sometimes on the initiative of the Labour Inspectorate requesting the imposition of penal sanctions) or in which the administrative conciliation process had been exhausted, leaving the way open to judicial proceedings. The cases concerned are the following: dismissals in the International Textile Corporation SA, dismissals and other acts of anti-union discrimination in the M.J. SA, and L&L SA, Unicasa SA, Welly SA enterprises, the Nueva California farm, the El Salto farm, the Bolivia farm, the Medellin farm, the Municipality of El Estor and the La Mariposa bottling enterprise. The Committee also observes that the Government has requested details from the complainants concerning the dismissals in Disenos y Maquilas SA, and reports that no denunciations have been made concerning the dismissal of trade unionists in the Municipality of Coban and in the La Argentina farm. Furthermore, the Government confirms that the COCAPSA enterprise did not comply with the court order for the reinstatement of the workers dismissed and does not refer to the reinstatement of the workers of Agropecuaria Los Angeles SA, which had been ordered by the judicial authority. The Committee also notes that the Government has not sent its observations on the recommendations made in Case No. 1595 (see 294th Report, para. 585) which remain pending and are reproduced below:
- Noting with interest the Government's statement that the Union of Peasant Workers of the La Patria farm and the enterprise have reached an agreement on the reinstatement of the dismissed workers in their jobs, the Committee requests the Government to transmit a copy of that agreement and to indicate whether these workers were indeed reinstated in their jobs. (...)
- The Committee requests the Government to conduct an investigation into the alleged anti-union dismissals at the El Trapichito and El Naranjo farms and, should these dismissals be related to legitimate trade union activities, to ensure that the workers concerned are reinstated in their posts. It requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- The Committee once again requests the Government to keep it informed of the decisions handed down in the legal proceedings concerning the dismissal of several trade union leaders of the Workers' Union of the San Juan de Dios Hospital and in the administrative procedures concerning the dismissal of the Secretary-General of the Trade Union of Bakers of Chiquimula, the dismissal of 20 members of the Trade Union of Shipping Workers of Santo Tomas de Castilla. (...)
- 420 As regards the allegations mentioned in the previous paragraphs, the Committee notes that most of these cases concern mass dismissals on trade union grounds such as the establishment of trade unions, trade union membership or the carrying out of trade union activities. The Committee notes that in some cases it was the Labour Inspectorate itself which initiated punitive proceedings against the enterprises, and that some of the alleged events occurred in 1993 and 1994, thus corroborating in many cases the lack of diligence and efficiency in the protection of trade unions against acts of discrimination due to trade union membership or activities. The Committee therefore requests the Government to report on the above-mentioned dismissals and on the steps being taken by the national authorities, and in all the cases in which there have been anti-union dismissals, irrespective of whether or not judicial action has been taken, to adopt as rapidly as possible the necessary measures to enable trade union officials and members who have been dismissed for their legitimate trade union activities to secure reinstatement in their jobs and to ensure the application against the said enterprises of the corresponding legal sanctions. The Committee draws the Government's attention to the principle that no one should be dismissed for trade union membership or activities and to the importance of redressing all acts of anti-union discrimination.
- 421 In the same way, the Committee requests the complainants to provide the details requested by the Government concerning the dismissals in Disenos y Maquilas SA.
- 422 Finally, the Committee observes that the Government states, as regards the alleged surveillance of the IUF premises by persons unknown on 23 August 1993, that a request has been made for an inquiry by the Office of the Attorney General. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- Collective bargaining
- 423 As regards the allegation of non-compliance with provisions of collective agreements, the Committee notes that according to the Government, the Hotel El Dorado enterprise has discontinued the change made to work schedule shifts which was contrary to the collective agreement and which had been criticized by the complainants, and that the employer in the Agroport enterprise has fled the country, making it impossible to take action to ensure the application of the respective collective agreement. Furthermore, the Committee notes that according to the Government, the employer and workers in the Imperial Food Products SA enterprise told the Labour Inspectorate that the collective agreement had not given rise to any violations and that their problems had been resolved by the direct method.
- 424 The Committee also notes that as regards the La Mariposa bottling enterprise, the Government states that the collective agreement with the ad hoc committee was concluded before the trade union obtained its legal personality and that it was agreed to negotiate an agreement with this trade union - set up in September 1993 - as from September 1994; as regards the alleged favouritism shown to members of the ad hoc committee (which according to the complainants resulted in wage increases only for its members), the Government states that this agreement did not infringe workers' rights. Given the contradiction between the allegations and the Government's reply, the Committee recalls that "the Collective Agreements Recommendation, 1951 (No. 91), stresses the role of workers' organizations as one of the parties in collective bargaining; it refers to representatives of unorganized workers only when no such organization exists. In these circumstances, direct negotiation between the undertaking and its employees, bypassing representative organizations where these exist, might be detrimental to the principle that negotiation between employers and organizations of workers should be encouraged and promoted" (see Digest of decisions and principles of the Freedom of Association Committee, 3rd edition, 985, para. 608).
- 425 The Committee also notes that the allegations concerning the management of the National Committee for the Blind and Deaf Mutes of Guatemala and the Autonomous Sports Confederation of Guatemala are now before the judicial authority; the Committee therefore requests the Government to keep it informed of the outcome of these judicial proceedings.
- 426 Finally, the Committee proposes that the Government and the social partners set up a national tripartite committee, the usefulness of which is accepted by all parties although details still have to be worked out on the methods of its operation. The Committee also encourages the initiative taken during the mission to resolve the problems of communication between the national authorities, providing a more satisfactory reply to allegations concerning matters of freedom of association. The Committee recalls that ILO technical assistance is available to the Government with respect to all these matters.
The Committee's recommendations
The Committee's recommendations
- 427. In the light of its foregoing interim conclusions, the Committee invites the Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The Committee takes note of the report of Professor Enrique Marin on the direct contacts mission which he carried out in Guatemala between 13 and 17 February 1995 and thanks him for his report, and expresses its gratitude to the authorities and the social partners for their full cooperation.
- (b) The Committee deeply regrets the many violent deaths of trade union officials and trade unionists, as well as the disappearances, abductions, arbitrary arrests, assaults and death threats which have occurred since the presentation of the complaints (1990), expresses its deep concern at the situation of impunity (only in one of the assassinations to which the Government refers do the authors seem to have been identified) and insists on the absolute need for judicial inquiries to be opened on all cases pending before the Committee with a view to clarifying the facts and punishing the guilty parties. In this respect, the Committee recalls the commitment made by the Attorney General of the Republic to open investigations on all the cases presented to the Committee and requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- (c) Regretting that it has not received all the information requested from the Government concerning the violent deaths and other alleged acts of violence, the Committee urges it to reply as a matter of urgency to the list of allegations contained in Annex I and to take the necessary measures to guarantee the safety of trade unionists under threat of death and to determine the whereabouts of those who have disappeared. The Committee proposes to examine the Government's communication of 16 May 1995, which contains additional information on the alleged acts of violence, at its next meeting.
- (d) Although it takes note that "the mission had reason to believe that in fact the Ministry of Labour had indeed endeavoured to reduce the number of stages and time of the procedure for the establishments of trade unions", the Committee believes that it would be appropriate to go further in this direction and requests the Government to take measures to this end within its current policy for the promotion of trade union organization.
- (e) Believing that the judicial procedure should be amended to speed it up and make it more effective and that the number of labour and social welfare courts and conciliation and arbitration courts should be increased, the Committee requests the Government to take measures to amend the legislation in this respect.
- (f) The Committee asks the Government to provide information on the dismissals and other acts of anti-union discrimination (indicating the steps taken by the national authorities) in the following enterprises or institutions: International Textile Corporation SA, M.K. SA, L&L SA, Unicasa SA, Welly SA, Nueva California farm, El Salto farm, Bolivia farm, Medellin farm, Municipality of El Estor, La Mariposa bottling enterprise, Municipality of Coban, La Argentina farm, COCAPSA and Agropecuaria Los Angeles SA.
- (g) The Committee repeats its previous recommendations on some of the dismissals:
- noting with interest the Government's statement that the Union of Peasant Workers of the La Patria farm and the enterprise have reached an agreement on the reinstatement of the dismissed workers in their jobs, the Committee requests the Government to transmit a copy of that agreement and to indicate whether these workers were indeed reinstated in their jobs (...). The Committee requests the Government to conduct an investigation into the alleged anti-union dismissals at the El Trapichito and El Naranjo farms and, should these dismissals be related to legitimate trade union activities, to ensure that the workers concerned are reinstated in their posts. It requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect. The Committee once again requests the Government to keep it informed of the decisions handed down in the legal proceedings concerning the dismissal of several trade union leaders of the Workers' Union of the San Juan de Dios Hospital and in the administrative procedures concerning the dismissal of the Secretary-General of the Trade Union of Bakers of Chiquimula, the dismissal of 20 members of the Trade Union of Shipping Workers of Santo Tomas de Castilla.
- (h) The Committee asks the Government in all the cases in which there have been anti-trade union dismissals, and irrespective of whether judicial proceedings have or have not been taken, to take as rapidly as possible the necessary measures to enable the trade union officials and members who have been dismissed because of their legitimate trade union activities to be reinstated in their workplaces and to apply the corresponding legal sanctions against the enterprises.
- (i) The Committee requests the complainants to provide the details requested by the Government concerning the dismissals in Disenos y Maquilas SA.
- (j) Noting that the Government states, as regards the alleged surveillance of the UITA premises by persons unknown on 23 August 1993, that it has requested an inquiry be carried out by the Office of the Attorney General, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- (k) Noting that the allegations concerning collective bargaining by the management of the National Committee for the Blind and Deaf Mutes of Guatemala and the Autonomous Sports Confederation of Guatemala are now before the judicial authorities, the Committee requests the Government to inform it of the outcome of these judicial proceedings.
- (l) The Committee suggests that the Government and the social partners set up a national tripartite committee. The Committee also encourages the initiatives taken in particular to provide a more satisfactory reply to the allegations concerning freedom of association.
- (m) The Committee urges the Government to ensure the fulfilment of all the commitments which the authorities made to the mission.
- (n) The Committee recalls that ILO technical assistance is available to the Government with respect to all these matters.
Annex I
Annex I- Allegations pending with respect to acts of violence against trade unionists
- Assassinations of trade unionists
- - Tyron Francisco Segastume, Trade Union of Workers of the Coca-Cola bottling
- enterprise, (STETCSA), in February 1990;
- - Nestor Rene Osorio Sandoval, Trade Union of Electricity Workers (STINDE), in
- March 1990;
- - Juan Tarax, trade union activist in the Sugar Enterprise of El Pilar
- (Retalhuen), in April 1990;
- - Jose Maria Ixcuyat, peasant activist, in May 1990;
- - Petronila Hernandez Vasilio, secretary responsible for organization of the
- Trade Union of Independent Agricultural Workers of La Reformita (Moyuta,
- Jutiapa), in July 1990;
- - Lilian Elizabeth Juarez Escobar, member of the special strike committee of
- the Trade Union of Workers of the Social Security Institute (STIGGS), in April
- 1991;
- - Camila Ajqui Gimon, member of the Council of Ethnic Communities;
- - Rujunel Junam (CERJ), on 14 April 1991;
- - Julio Cesar Perez (rural worker), on 13 July 1991;
- - Pedro Genoveno Escobar (rural worker), on 20 July 1991;
- - Edwin Giovanni Hidalgo Jerez (member of STINDE), in August 1991;
- - Adrian Miranda Lopez, member of the Trade Union of the San Gregorio farm,
- murdered on 6 May 1993;
- - Velizario Lopez Rojas, Trade Union of Workers of the San Gregorio farm, on
- 30 October 1993;
- - at its meeting in November 1992, referring to the murder of a worker on 5
- August 1989 during a labour dispute at the La Patria farm, the Committee
- requested as a matter of urgency the opening of a judicial inquiry to clarify
- the facts and punish the guilty parties and for it to be kept informed of
- developments in this respect.
- Disappearances, abductions, assaults and arrest of trade unionists
- - grenade attack on the home of Edgar Sanchez Velasquez (rural worker), and
- his subsequent arrest on 21 April 1990;
- - attempted abduction of Filiberto Ramirez (member of the Trade Union of
- Workers of the TIPIC SA enterprise), on 28 May 1990;
- - police repression of strikers at the Social Security Institute, STIGGS, on
- 11 February 1991;
- - the physical assault of and death threats against Ramon Jacome Pinto
- (General Secretary of the STIGGS), on 6 February 1991;
- - the abduction and physical assault of Aura Violeta Flores Acevedo, member of
- the Trade Union of Workers of the Ministry of Culture and Sports (SITRACUDE),
- on 21 March 1991;
- - the armed attack against Fernando Lucero and Luis Ramirez (SITRACUDE
- activists), on 20 March 1991;
- - arrest of 50 leaders of the STIGGS strike in April 1991;
- - the arrest, physical assault of and criminal trials against Otto Ivan
- Rodriguez Vanegas (former General Secretary of STINDE), on 5 April 1991;
- - the armed attack which seriously wounded Victor Alfred Chacoj (member of the
- Road Transport Trade Union), in April 1991;
- - the abduction and subsequent arrest of Jose Vidal Pamal Tuchan (General
- Secretary of the Trade Union of Workers of the Psychiatric Hospital), on 30
- May 1991;
- - the attempted abduction and death threats which forced Dora Arriaza, leader
- of the Trade Union Federation of Public Employees (FENASTEG), into exile, on
- 14 May 1991;
- - the attempted abduction of Yolanda Figueroa (official of the Trade Union of
- Customs Officers), and her two daughters, on 21 June 1991;
- - the abduction, death threats and physical assault of Wosveli Castro, General
- Secretary of the Federation of Trade Unions in the Metal Trades (FETRAMEGUA),
- on 16 May 1991;
- - death threats and physical assault of Rosendo de Leon Dubon, official of the
- National Press Trade Union (STN);
- - the arrests of Silvio Pastor, Pablo Itzel Hernandez, Teodoro Pastor Itzep,
- Rolando Pastor Hernandez and Francisco Pastor Hernandez (members of CERJ), on
- 24 and 26 May 1991;
- - the abduction and subsequent disappearance of Felipe Lopez Mendoza (member
- of CERJ), in June 1991;
- - the physical attack against a member of FESINTROP, on 14 February 1991;
- - the abduction of Mr. Edi Antonio Conde Lu, General Secretary of the Trade
- Union of Electricity and Energy Workers and secretary responsible for
- organization of the Confederation of Trade Union Unity of Guatemala (CUSG) on
- 8 September 1994; subsequently he was brutally beaten, threatened with death
- and had to flee the country;
- - the disappearance of the trade unionist Gustavo Rosalio Vasquez Lopez, in
- February 1992;
- - the detention of members of the trade union at the Mahler y Sucesoras
- enterprise for more than six hours, inside the plant, where they were
- subjected to pressure and intimidation to make them sign documents and
- harassment (intimidation continued outside the enterprise);
- - the abduction of Mr. Ernesto Bol, secretary responsible for records of the
- Trade Union of the Municipality of Coban (district of Alta Verapaz), on 15
- July 1993. He was subsequently released, threatened and intimidated;
- - Mr. Werner Coc Ramirez, a leader of the Bakers' Trade Union, who was
- savagely beaten in Ciudad Peronia (district of Villa Nueva) by persons who set
- upon him and criticized him for his trade union activities (15 July 1993);
- - Mr. Walter Manuel Najera Molina, member of the Trade Union of Workers of the
- Central Bottling (Coca-Cola) enterprise who was abducted, tortured,
- interrogated and subsequently released (11 July 1993);
- - in the ESDEE Guatemala maquila enterprise, members of the trade union
- received death threats and were abducted, with the participation of mobile
- units of the military police;
- - the attempted abduction of Mr. Pablo Mazariegos (SITRAEMSA trade unionist),
- on 3 December 1993;
- - Mr. Eligio Quej Moran, member of the ad hoc committee of workers of the
- national police was abducted on 31 May 1994, and tortured. On 25 March 1993
- the National Federation of Public Servants (FENASEP) began the process of
- organizing workers in the national police; the members of the ad hoc committee
- which was set up have since that time been harassed and received death threats
- from the "Jaguar of Justice" death squadron;
- - imprisonment of Mr. Ruben Terry Amezquita, General Secretary of the Trade
- Union of Workers of the state enterprise of Puerto de Quetzal.
- Annex II
- Report of the direct contacts mission carried out in Guatemala from 13 to 17
- February 1994 by Mr. Enrique Marín Quijada, Professor of Labour Law, Central
- University of Venezuela
- Introduction
- I. The complainants' allegations, replies received from the
- Government and conclusions of the Committee on Freedom of
- Association
- Cases Nos. 1512 and 1539
- Case No. 1595
- Case No. 1740
- Case No. 1778
- Case No. 1786
- II. Agenda of activities carried out
- III. Information on the allegations obtained during the mission
- IV. Conclusions and personal reflections
- List of persons interviewed
- Report of the direct contacts mission carried out in Guatemala from 13 to 17
- February 1994 by Mr. Enrique Marín Quijada, Professor of Labour Law, Central
- University of Venezuela
- Introduction
- In its 295th Report (November 1994, approved by the Governing Body at its
- 261st Session), the Committee on Freedom of Association adopted the following
- decisions concerning the cases pending against the Government of Guatemala,
- presented by national and international organizations of workers:
- As regards Cases Nos. 1512, 1539, 1595, 1778 and 1786 (Guatemala), concerning
- a great number of allegations which relate to murders, physical attacks, death
- threats and arrests of trade unionists, the Committee expresses its concern
- over the seriousness of the issues raised and considers that a direct contacts
- mission would be very useful in order to obtain the necessary information and
- to examine the allegations in full knowledge of all the facts. The Committee
- requests the Government to accept such a mission and proposes to examine these
- cases on the basis of the mission report.
- Urgent appeal
- As regards Case No. 1740 (Guatemala), the Committee observes that, despite the
- time which has elapsed since the presentation of these complaints, it has not
- received the Government's observations. The Committee draws the attention of
- the Government to the fact that, in accordance with the procedural rules set
- out in paragraph 17 of its 127th Report, approved by the Governing Body, it
- may present a report on the substance of this case, even if the observations
- or information requested have not been received in due time. The Committee
- accordingly requests the Government to transmit its observations or
- information as a matter of urgency. (See 295th Report, paras. 12 and 13.)
- The Government of Guatemala accepted the direct contacts mission in a
- communication dated 9 December 1994.
- The Director-General of the ILO appointed me as his representative to carry
- out this direct contacts mission, which took place in Guatemala from 13 to 17
- February 1995. I was accompanied by Mr. Alberto Odero, an official of the
- Freedom of Association Branch, and Mr. Germán López Morales, Standards
- Specialist, Multidisciplinary Team of San José. From 23 to 25 January 1995,
- Mr. López Morales carried out a preparatory mission aimed at organizing the
- mission's programme and handing over to the authorities a document on the
- replies made so far by the Government with regard to the outstanding
- allegations before the Committee, so that the Government knew exactly what
- remaining information the direct contacts mission wished to obtain. Mr. Ian
- Chambers, Director of the ILO Office for Central America and Panama,
- accompanied the mission when it met with the President of the Republic.
- The mission's mandate was to request information concerning a considerable
- number of allegations relating to various and complex events which occurred
- between 1990 and 1994. These allegations relate to violations of fundamental
- human rights as well as to more specific violations of freedom of association
- of which trade union leaders and activists were allegedly victims.
- The mission was cordially received by government representatives, senior
- authorities from non-governmental organizations and representatives of
- occupational organizations. Everyone collaborated so that the work could be
- carried out properly, within the administration's limitations as will be
- described in the following pages. I would like to express my profound
- gratitude to all.
- More specifically, the mission met with His Excellency Mr. Ramiro de León
- Carpio, President of the Republic, His Excellency Mr. Acisclo Valladares,
- State Attorney General, His Excellency Mr. Jorge Mario Garciá Laguardia,
- Attorney for Human Rights, Her Excellency Mrs. Gladys Annabella Morfín,
- Minister for Labour and Social Welfare, His Excellency Mr. Vincente Arranz
- Sanz, Chairman of the Presidential Commission for Human Rights, His Excellency
- Mr. Oscar Barios Castillo, President of the Supreme Court of Justice, His
- Excellency Mr. Ramsés Cuestas Gómez, Public Prosecutor of the Nation, as well
- as with several officials and ministerial figures. The mission also met with
- the Coordinating Committee of Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial and
- Financial Associations (CACIF) as well as with the representatives of the
- following trade union organizations: the General Confederation of Workers of
- Guatemala (CGTG), the Federation of Rural Workers (CTC), the Confederation of
- Trade Union Unity of Guatemala (CUSG), the Union of Workers of Guatemala
- (UNSITRAGUA) and the Federation of Employees of Banks and Insurance Companies
- (FESEBS). Lastly, the mission met with the head of the United Nations mission
- in Guatemala (MINUGUA) and its officials. (A complete list of persons,
- institutions and organizations that the mission met with is annexed hereto.)
- In order to clearly show the information obtained by the mission and to
- evaluate it in the light of the situation that is currently prevailing in
- Guatemala, this information will be divided into three parts: the first part
- will contain the complainants' allegations and the Government's observations
- and, where possible, the Committee's conclusions and recommendations in these
- cases; the second part will reflect the activities accomplished; the third
- part will analyse the different issues raised by these complaints.
- I. The complainants' allegations, replies received from the Government and
- conclusions of the Committee on Freedom of Association
- Cases Nos. 1512 and 1539
- These cases were presented by the International Confederation of Free Trade
- Unions (ICFTU), the World Confederation of Organizations of the Teaching
- Profession (WCOTP) and the Latin American Central of Workers (CLAT).
- The Committee has examined these cases on a number of occasions, the last
- being at its November 1992 meeting, when it submitted an interim report to the
- Governing Body (see 284th Report of the Committee, paras. 706-720, approved by
- the Governing Body at its 254th Session (November 1992)). In communications
- dated 26 April 1993, 16 January and 27 March 1995, the Latin American Central
- of Workers (CLAT) made new allegations. In communications dated 23 September
- and 20 December 1993 and 9 June, 7 and 28 September, 31 October and 29
- November 1994, as well as 13 March 1995, the International Confederation of
- Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) made new allegations and presented additional
- information. The Government sent some observations in its communications dated
- 5 November 1993 and 14 July, 7 September and 6 October 1994.
- A. Previous examination of the cases
- As regards the complainants' allegations that remained pending, the Committee
- requested information on inquiries into murders, physical attacks, abductions,
- arrests, death threats and on anti-union discrimination practices.
- At its November 1992 Session, the Governing Body approved the following
- recommendations of the Committee (see 284th Report of the Committee, para.
- 720):
- - "the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed on the outcome of
- the judicial inquiries into the murders of José Orlando Pantaleón, José León
- Segura de la Cruz and Carlos Humberto Rivera" (the Government had stated that
- the courts had ordered a temporary stay of proceedings because they had not
- found sufficient evidence to bring certain persons to trial);
- - "the Committee requests the Government once again to inform it whether the
- dismissed teachers were in fact reinstated in their jobs" (these were teachers
- who had been dismissed by the previous government and who had participated in
- a strike from May to August 1989);
- - "the Committee requests the Government to inform it whether workers in the
- teaching sector have the right to conclude collective agreements";
- - "the Committee expresses its concern at the seriousness of the new
- allegations submitted by the ICFTU and the CLAT and requests the Government to
- reply to these as soon as possible, indicating whether judicial inquiries have
- been carried out with a view to shedding light on the murders, abductions,
- arrests and physical attacks against trade union officials and activists, and
- to determining responsibility and punishing the guilty parties".
- The latter allegations of the ICFTU and the CLAT were appended to the previous
- examination of Cases Nos. 1512 and 1539 by the Committee and are reproduced
- below.
- Trade union officials and activists murdered
- 1. Carlos Enrique Segastume; and
- 2. Tyron Francisco Segastume (Workers' Union of the Central Coca Cola Bottling
- Enterprise - STECSA) in February 1990;
- 3. Néstor René Osorio Sandoval (Workers' Union of the National Electricity
- Institute - STINDE) in March 1990;
- 4. Juan Tarax (trade union activist in the El Pilar Retalhuen sugar
- enterprise) in April 1990;
- 5. Petronilo Hernández Vasilio (Organizing Secretary of the Independent
- Agricultural Workers' Trade Union of La Reformita, Moyuta, Jutiapa) in July
- 1990;
- 6. Lilian Elizabeth Juarez Escobar (member of the special strike committee of
- the Workers' Trade Union of the Social Security Institute - STIGSS) in April
- 1991;
- 7. Dinora José Peréz Valdez (bank trade union activist) in April 1991;
- 8. Oscar Oswaldo Luna Aceituno (member of the Workers' Trade Union of the
- University of San Carlos) in June 1991;
- 9. Edwin Giovanni Hidalgo Jerez (member of STINDE) in August 1991;
- 10. José María Ixcuyat (peasant activist) in May 1990;
- 11. Camilo Ajqui Gimon (member of the Council of Ethnic Communities, Rujunel
- Junam - CERJ) on 14 April 1991;
- 12. Federico Tay Osorio; and
- 13. Diego Tay Vicente (rural workers) on 6 July 1991;
- 14. Julio César Pérez (rural worker) on 13 July 1991;
- 15. Pedro Genevevo Escobar (rural worker) on 20 July 1991.
- Assaults, abductions and arrests of trade unionists
- 1. The grenade attack on the home of Edgar Sánchez Velásquez (rural worker)
- and his subsequent arrest on 21 April 1990;
- 2. the attempt to abduct Filiberto Ramírez (member of the Workers' Trade Union
- of the TIPIC SA enterprise) on 28 May 1990;
- 3. the police repression of strikers of the Social Security Institute (STIGSS)
- on 11 February 1991;
- 4. the physical assault on and death threats against Ramón Jacome Pinto
- (Secretary-General of STIGSS) on 6 February 1991;
- 5. the arrest of 50 strike leaders from STIGSS in April 1991;
- 6. the abduction of and physical attack against Aura Violeta Flores Acevedo
- (member of the Workers' Trade Union of the Ministry of Culture and Sport -
- SITRACUDE) on 21 March 1991;
- 7. the attack with firearms against Fernando Lucero and Luis Ramírez
- (SITRACUDE activists) on 20 March 1991;
- 8. the arrest, physical attack against and criminal trial against Otto Iván
- Rodríguez Vanegas (former Secretary-General of the STINDE) on 5 April 1991;
- 9. the armed attack against Victor Alfredo Chacoj (member of the Road
- Transport Union), resulting in his being seriously injured, in April 1991;
- 10. the abduction and subsequent arrest of José Vidal Pamal Tuchan
- (Secretary-General of the Psychiatric Hospital Workers' Union) on 30 May 1991;
- 11. the attempt to abduct and death threats against Dora Arriaza (leader of
- the Trade Union Federation of State Employees - FENASTEG) on 14 May 1991,
- which forced her into exile;
- 12. the attempt to abduct Yolanda Figueroa (official of the Customs Officials'
- Trade Union) and her two daughters on 21 June 1991;
- 13. the abduction, death threats against and physical attack on Wosveli Castro
- (Secretary-General of the Federation of Trade Unions in the Metal Trades -
- FETRAMEGUA) on 16 May 1991;
- 14. death threats against and physical attack on Rosendo de León Dubón and the
- attempt to abduct Mauricio Raxcacó Henríquez (officials of the National Press
- Trade Union - STN);
- 15. the arrests of Silvio Pastor, Pablo Itzel Hernández, Teodoro Pastór Itzep,
- Rolando Pastor Hernández and Francisco Pastor Hernández (members of CERJ) on
- 24 and 26 May 1991;
- 16. the abduction and subsequent disappearance of Felipe López Mendoza (member
- of CERJ) in June 1991;
- 17. the physical attack against a member of the FESINTROP on 14 February 1991.
- Death threats against trade unionists
- 1. Luis Fernando Juárez Girón, Francisco Alberto Ortíz and Juan José Ortíz
- Aguirre (Secretary-General, Secretary of inter-union relations and Treasurer
- of FESINTROP) in February and March 1991;
- 2. all of the Executive of FENASTEG on 6 May 1991;
- 3. Byron Morales and Sergio Guzmán (leaders of the Union of Workers of
- Guatemala - UNISTRAGUA) on 17 May 1991;
- 4. Juan Francisco Alfaro Mijangos (Secretary-General of the Confederation of
- Trade Union Unity of Guatemala);
- 5. Clemente Morales Chavez and David Noé Morales de la Cruz (Secretary-General
- and Registrar of the Union of Workers of Public Works in Encuintla) in May
- 1991;
- 6. Sonia Argueta Sis (Street Vendors' Trade Union) in May 1991;
- 7. Carlos Molina Ochaeta (Civil Aviation Workers' Union in Petén) in May 1991;
- 8. Irene Dieguez and Eva Judith Gálvez (Sales Representatives' Association) in
- May 1991;
- 9. Amilcar Méndez Urizar (CERJ official) in August 1991;
- 10. Crisanto García in August 1991;
- Acts of anti-union discrimination
- 1. The dismissal of 29 workers from the La Torre estate, with a view to
- disbanding its trade union;
- 2. the dismissal of 60 workers belonging to the trade union of the Banco
- Metropolitano in February 1991;
- 3. the violent police repression of workers on strike at the CAVISA glass
- factory on 3 July 1990;
- 4. the refusal to recognize the legal personality of the union of workers of
- the state enterprise in the port of Quetzal, and the imprisonment and
- subsequent refusal to reinstate the Secretary-General of the trade union,
- Rubén Terry Amézquita;
- 5. the setting up of solidarist associations to undermine the workers' trade
- unions in the enterprises Distribuidora de Sur Occidente and Compañia de
- Productos Duralita;
- 6. the refusal to recognize the legal personality of the Workers' Union of the
- General Directorate of the Forestry Commission and subsequent dismissal of 21
- workers on 27 July 1990;
- 7. the campaign of intimidation against workers belonging to the municipal
- workers' trade union in Cuyotenango, Suchitepéquez;
- 8. the dismissal of 30 employees of the Municipality of Malactan on 15 January
- 1991;
- 9. the dismissal of 30 employees of the Municipality of Esquipulas, who had
- tried to set up a trade union, on 23 January 1991;
- 10. dismissals of employees in the Municipalities of San Martín
- (Guetzaltenango), San Andrés Xecul (Totonicapan), Chiquimulilla (Santa Rosa),
- Santa Catarina Ixatahuacan (Solala), Rabinal (Baja Verapaz), San Mateo
- (Quetzaltenango), Coatepeque (Quetzaltenango), San Andrés Villa Seca
- (Retalhuleu), San Pedro Carcha (Alta Verapaz), Cuyotenango (Suchitepéquez),
- San José el Idolo (Suchitepéquez), San Antonio (Suchitepéquez) and Salcaja
- (Quetzaltenango);
- 11. the persecution of workers belonging to trade union organizations in
- various estates in the south of the country;
- 12. the dismissal, on anti-trade union grounds, of 29 workers at the La
- Abundancia estate, belonging to the Corporación de Inversiones Metropolitanas
- SA;
- 13. the dismissal of 65 workers in the Municipality of Palín who are members
- of the workers' union, despite the fact that a court order had been issued for
- their reinstatement.
- B. New allegations and information from the complainants
- In its communication dated 26 April 1993, the CLAT denounces a number of
- situations involving the infringement of trade union rights:
- - Trade Union of Workers in the Ministry of the Interior: the procedure for
- the granting of legal personality to the trade union and the approval of its
- constitution was initiated in January 1991. Despite the period of time which
- has elapsed, the Ministry of Labour has taken no decision since the
- Provisional Executive Committee of the said trade union did not endorse the
- contents of the decision dated 26 February 1991, which excludes from the right
- to trade union membership the 22 secretaries in the same number of
- departmental offices of the Ministry of the Interior, who were said to be
- employees in positions of trust with authority to sign on behalf of the
- Governor;
- - Street Vendors' National Front Trade Union: the application for legal
- personality and the approval of its constitution was made in 1988, without any
- decision having been issued to date;
- - Trade Union of Customs Workers: the application for registration has been
- pending since 1988;
- - Trade Union of Workers of the Guatemalan Red Cross: this union was
- arbitrarily abolished by the enterprise, following a declaration of bankruptcy
- without having exhausted all the judicial procedures;
- - Trade Union of Workers of the Secretariat of Social Welfare: despite the
- legality of the elections of trade union officials, which were carried out in
- the presence of labour inspectors, the Ministry of Labour accepted the
- challenge made by the losing list of candidates, and ordered the holding of
- another extraordinary general meeting, which it subsequently cancelled;
- - Trade Union of Bakers: dismissal of the general secretary of the union for
- the exercise of trade union activities and refusal of the labour authority to
- notify the enterprise of the trade union immunity (fuero sindical) of the
- worker concerned;
- - Trade Union of Shipping Workers: on 19 February 1992 the documentation for
- the establishment of the trade union was presented to the Ministry of Labour,
- which resulted in the dismissal of the executive committee and more than 20
- workers by the shipping companies. When challenged, the employers alleged the
- prescription of rights, although this was to be ascribed to the slowness with
- which the Ministry of Labour had acted;
- - Trade Union of the Autonomous Sports Confederation of Guatemala: refusal of
- the labour authority to approve a collective agreement, alleging that it had
- been submitted after the expiry of the time-limit prescribed by the law
- (within 24 hours of its signature), a circumstance which was beyond the
- control of the workers, and requesting the parties to conclude a new agreement
- at a time when their mutual relations are not very harmonious;
- - Trade Union of Workers of the San Juan de Dios Hospital: several of its
- members were dismissed, and although the Vice-Minister of Public Health agreed
- to reinstate them in their workplaces, the Director of the Hospital refused to
- comply with this decision unless the dismissed workers accept the application
- of a sanction consisting of 30 days' suspension from work without pay, and
- their transfer to other care centres in the provinces;
- - Trade Union of Workers in the Imperial Food Products SA enterprise: failure
- to implement a collective agreement and dismissal of several workers for
- participating in the establishment of the trade union.
- In communications dated 23 September and 20 December 1993, and 9 June and 7
- September 1994, the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)
- states that on 19 August 1993, workers from the "La Mariposa" SA bottling
- plant presented a copy of the act of constitution of the trade union of the
- enterprise, SITRAEMSA, in accordance with the provisions of the Labour Code.
- The same day they presented a legal document requesting respect for workers'
- dignity, freedom of association and stable labour relations. As a result, the
- management of the enterprise is carrying out a violent campaign of repression
- against trade union officers and members. The ICFTU also alleges (a) the
- murder of Germán Alfredo de León Parajón, a founder member of the Union of
- Workers of Quetzaltenango (UTQ), (b) numerous death threats (Raúl Rodríguez, a
- member of the executive committee, in August 1993; Crisanto García, in August
- 1991; José Antonio Alvarez, in December 1993; Nery Barrios and the other
- members of the UTQ; Armando Sánchez, an officer of the National Trade Union
- Federation of State Employees of Guatemala (FENASTEG); Dick Fletcher, Humberto
- Sánchez and Dante Monerroso, members of the Trade Union and Popular Action
- Unit (UASP); José Pinzón, Conrado Alberto Solís, Tránsito de Jesús López,
- Carlos Enrique Solís Ramos and Félix Hernández (the latter a member of the
- National Federation of Public Servants); all of the members of the executive
- committee of the Electric and Power Workers' Union); Roberto Rosales and
- Carlos López, members of this trade union, have also received death threats at
- their homes); nine general secretaries of the General Confederation of Workers
- of Guatemala (CGTG), and seven members of the Union of Workers of the Coca
- Cola bottling plant (in August 1994), and (c) various acts of anti-union
- discrimination: surveillance of the premises of the UITA by unidentified
- persons, on 23 August 1993; harassment and persecution of trade union
- activists; pressure on three members of the executive committee of the
- SITRAEMSA to force them to resign, on 24 and 31 August and on 9 September
- 1993; refusal to engage in collective bargaining with the trade union and
- simulation of the signature of a collective agreement with an "ad hoc"
- committee set up by the enterprise, the agreement having been registered with
- the Ministry of Labour on 16 September 1993; the officers of the ad hoc
- committee are entirely free in the plant to attack the trade union, while the
- activities of the trade union officers are under strict surveillance; pay
- increases granted only to the members of the ad hoc committee, and attempts to
- abduct Pablo Mazariegos on 3 December 1993.
- In a communication dated 7 September 1994, the ICFTU alleges that on 31 August
- 1994, following a demonstration organized by the Trade Union and Popular
- Action Unit (UASP) to protest against the death of three workers during their
- removal from an estate in the western part of the country, the Treasurer of
- the Union of Workers in the Guatemala Coca Cola bottling plant, René Estrada,
- was the victim of an attack by unknown persons carrying knives and firearms.
- René Estrada, who along with the other members of the union (seven) had
- already received threats against his life, is in serious condition in
- hospital.
- In its communication dated 28 September 1994, the ICFTU reports the abduction
- of Edi Antonio Conde Lu, General Secretary of the Electric and Power Workers'
- Union and Organizing Secretary of the Confederation of Trade Union Unity of
- Guatemala (CUSG) in the night of 8 September 1994. He was released the next
- day at about 6 a.m.; his abductors were four persons in national police
- uniform driving a 405 radio patrol car. During the night he was brutally
- beaten, as a result of which his right shoulder was fractured and he is
- suffering from cerebral problems caused by the blows he received in the head.
- He is in a serious condition. His abductors threatened to murder him if he did
- not leave the country immediately and the threats continued on 10 and 11
- September, notes being left in his home to the effect that he would be killed
- if he remained in the country. For the above reasons, Mr. Conde, his wife and
- two small children had to leave the country with the assistance of
- international trade union solidarity.
- In its communication dated 31 October 1994, the ICFTU alleges that since 27
- May 1994, faced with the imminent closure of the plant, 41 workers belonging
- to the Union of Workers of the "Lunafil" factory, affiliated to the Union of
- Workers of Guatemala (UNSITRAGUA), have been demonstrating in front of the
- enterprise in protest against its illegal closure. Since then workers have
- been subjected to various forms of intimidation such as provocations, threats
- and insults from the private security guards of El Ebano, who have even
- managed to take photographs of each of the trade union officers and members.
- In addition, in May unidentified armed men threatened trade union member José
- Gil at his home on several occasions. The ICFTU adds that on 6 October 1994,
- at 7.30 p.m., in the street in Amatitlán, a group of men with their faces
- covered and wearing gloves forcibly detained Débora Guzmán, wife of Félix
- González, Dispute Secretary of the trade union, attacked her and told her in
- threatening tones that if her husband and another trade union officer, Julio
- Coj, the Treasurer, did not withdraw from the trade union, she would be
- murdered, and that she had 48 hours to convince them. Moreover, on 7 October
- 1994 various anonymous phone calls were received in the offices of UNSITRAGUA
- (the Lunafil trade union and UNSITRAGUA have their offices in the same
- building). One of these calls threatened that if the trade union members did
- not give up their struggle they would kill Débora Guzmán, the wife of trade
- union member Félix González, and the last phone call stated that she was in
- their power and that Félix González should be told that whether she would
- return alive depended on him. The officers of the trade union and members of
- UNSITRAGUA immediately mobilized to ascertain whether what these persons had
- said was true, and found that fortunately it was not. In the night of 8
- October 1994, unidentified persons brought the following anonymous message
- into the home of Félix González: "Mrs. Guzmán, we hope you have done as you
- were told. We know you are at home and we will not go back on what we said. We
- will do what we said. We warn you that this is not a joke as you might think;
- do not hide from us, we will find you. Anonymous.". It should be pointed out
- that the trade union is fairly certain that the Lunafil enterprise is behind
- the attacks and harassment.
- In its communication dated 29 November 1994, the ICFTU states with regard to
- the attack against René Cabrera Estrada, an officer of the Union of Workers in
- the Guatemala Coca Cola bottling plant, that according to the International
- Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied
- Workers Associations, the origin of this attack was a family dispute which had
- nothing to do with his trade union and social activities. The event gave rise
- to confusion since it occurred immediately after a popular demonstration.
- In its communication of 16 January 1995, the CLAT alleges that death threats
- have been made against trade union official José E. Pinzón (CGTG) and Felix
- Hernández (FENASEP), and that the trade union official Manuel de Jesús Alonso
- of the CGTG has been murdered and that unionist Mateo Santos Cuom Xom (trade
- union being created at the Esquipulas Municipality, Chiquimula) has been
- abducted and subsequently released.
- In a communication of 13 March 1995, the ICFTU expresses its deepest concern
- over the kidnapping of Mrs. Débora Guzmán Chupen, Secretary for Finances of
- the Trade Union of Workers of the Maquiladora MJ and L & L Modas enterprise,
- situated in Atitlan. She is also the companion of Mr. Félix González,
- Secretary for Disputes of the Trade Union of Workers of the "Lunafil" factory.
- The latter was one of several trade unionists who were calling for the factory
- to be reopened following its illegal closure in 1994. In view of the
- confrontational attitude of the owners of the Maquiladora MJ and L & L Modas
- enterprise, the workers occupied the premises peacefully. During the month of
- January, one of the owners of the enterprise brutally attacked a leader of
- this union, which shows that this dispute is very recent.
- The ICFTU adds that it was in October 1994 that the first acts of intimidation
- were carried out against Débora Guzmán and that, finally, she was arrested at
- 0930h on 28 February 1994, when she was heading towards the Amatitlán market.
- It was then that some heavily armed men approached her. They told her to
- accompany them and that they would not use their arms. Then they injected a
- drug into her. She woke up on 1 March at 0800h in a large room. They
- threatened her and hit her and demanded that she call UNSITRAGUA, saying "that
- you have to tell the person who answers that your husband should withdraw from
- the trade union of Lunafil if he wishes to see you again". Thus, she talked to
- the trade unionist Hugo Morales, coordinator of UNSITRAGUA on the telephone
- and told him about the requirements of those who had kidnapped her. The trade
- unionist could only partly respond because one of the kidnappers intervened
- and the line was cut. Following this, Débora Guzmán was once again hit and
- threatened. They put her in a vehicle with her hands bound and after a
- two-hour journey they abandoned her in the locality of Le Caminos, Toponicapan
- (24 km from Guatemala City). Here somebody helped her. She underwent a medical
- examination in the Toponicapan Hospital in the presence of officials from
- UNSITRAGUA and was then immediately transported to the capital. During the
- journey, she had violent nervous seizures.
- The ICFTU further alleges that, at 1830h on 5 March 1995, some strangers left
- a new message containing threats which literally stated the following: "...
- Madam, you know what it is like to be kidnapped and detained. Therefore, we
- are asking you to ask your husband to resign from the trade union within 72
- hours. Otherwise, we will carry out what we said we would do. We know that you
- are not scared but we will do everything possible to convince you ..." The
- same day, some heavily armed men in a lorry drove towards the "Lunafil"
- factory and fired some shots into the air.
- In a communication of 27 March 1995, the CLAT alleges that trade union leaders
- of the Federation of Peasants of Guatemala (FEDECAMPO), Messrs. Manuel Pablo
- Quino and José Morales Técun, were faced with death threats following the
- publication of a FEDECAMPO information bulletin dated 21 March 1995 reporting
- the dissolution of patrols of civilian self-defence in the Lacama Canton I;
- these patrols were not useful in the view of the agriculturers of the region.
- The CLAT adds that the leader of FENASEP, Mr. Félix Hernandez, who had been
- the victim of death threats, continued to be perpetually harassed; one of
- these acts took place following his participation in a radio broadcast. He was
- intimidated by two vehicles which forced him to take refuge in the
- headquarters of the radio station. The CLAT concludes by pointing out that the
- inquiries into the murder of the trade union leader Manuel de Jésus Alonso
- have not produced any results.
- C. The Government's reply
- With respect to the allegations still pending since November 1992 relating to
- acts of anti-union discrimination, in its communication of 7 September 1994
- the Government states the following: (1) as regards the dismissal of 29
- workers from the La Torre estate, they have been reinstated in their jobs and
- have received the wages due to them; (2) according to the records of the
- labour inspectorate, no complaint has been lodged regarding the dismissal of
- 60 members of the Trade Union of Workers of the Banco Metropolitano. Moreover,
- the deadline for lodging a complaint has now elapsed; (3) regarding the
- violent police repression of workers on strike at the CAVISA glass factory,
- the Labour Tribunal declared the strike illegal and, in accordance with
- section 244 of the Labour Code, the workers were dismissed and duly
- compensated; (4) regarding the refusal to recognize the legal personality of
- the Trade Union of Workers of the Quetzal port enterprise, the union was
- recognized in 1990 under Government Agreement No. 879-90, and Rubén Terry
- Amézquita was appointed as its provisional general secretary. As to the
- latter's imprisonment and the subsequent refusal to reinstate him, there is no
- trace of any complaint on file or with the General Labour Inspectorate; (5)
- regarding the setting up of solidarist associations to undermine workers'
- trade unions in the Distribuidora del Sur Occidente and Compañía de Productos
- Duralita enterprises, there is no trade union in the Distribuidora del Sur
- Occidente, and the complainants are asked to explain exactly what they mean by
- "undermining"; (6) regarding the refusal to recognize the legal personality of
- the Trade Union of Workers of the General Directorate of the Forestry
- Commission and subsequent dismissal of 21 workers on 27 July 1990, no trade
- union of that name has applied for recognition, although there is a Trade
- Union of the General Directorate of Woods and Forests, whose legal personality
- was recognized on 20 June 1992. The Ministry of Labour has no record of any
- complaint regarding the dismissals; as regards the alleged campaigns of
- intimidation and dismissal of employees in various municipalities (numbers 7,
- 8, 9 and 10 of the list appended to the previous examination of the cases),
- the relevant information will be submitted in November as it is first
- necessary to make inquiries in the interior of the country; (11) regarding the
- persecution of workers belonging to trade union organizations in various
- estates in the south of country, the Government requests that the complainants
- specify the name and location of the estates, the relevant date and the names
- of the workers affected so that it can make its observations on this subject;
- (12) regarding the 29 workers dismissed from the La Abundancia estate, they
- were given land instead of financial compensation and agreed to this
- arrangement; (13) as regards the dismissal of 65 workers in the Municipality
- of Palín, during talks held the Mayor of Palín offered to pay them the wages
- that were due to them but the workers chose to take the matter to court. The
- Government will inform the Committee of the outcome of the case next November;
- (14) the Office of the Public Prosecutor has been asked to investigate the
- matter of the surveillance of the UITA premises by unknown persons on 23
- August 1993; (15) as regards the harassment and persecution of trade union
- activists, the complainants are requested to provide information on the date,
- place, enterprises and names of the workers concerned; (16) regarding the
- alleged pressure to force the resignation of three members of the executive
- committee of SITRAEMSA ("La Mariposa" bottling plant), there were no
- dismissals; regarding the refusal to engage in collective bargaining with the
- trade union and the simulation of the signature of a collective agreement with
- an "ad hoc" committee by the enterprise, the collective agreement on working
- conditions that was concluded with the "ad hoc" committee was approved on 16
- September 1993 and SITRAEMSA obtained recognition of its legal personality
- subsequently, on 28 September 1993. It was also agreed to negotiate a new
- collective agreement with the trade union as from September 1994; regarding
- the alleged anti-union discrimination (numbers 19 and 20) to favour the
- members of the "ad hoc" committee, the General Labour Inspectorate has already
- taken action, the outcome of which the Government will communicate next
- November. Regarding the attempted abduction of Pablo Mazariegos on 3 December
- 1993, the Office of the Public Prosecutor has been asked to investigate the
- matter.
- With respect to the recommendations adopted by the Committee in November 1992,
- the Government makes the following comments in its communication of 7
- September 1994: the teachers dismissed in 1990 were subsequently reinstated in
- their jobs after having been paid the salaries due to them; as to the right of
- teachers to conclude collective agreements, they are entitled to do so as
- there is no provision to the contrary.
- As regards the new allegations presented by the CLAT concerning various
- instances of infringement of trade union rights, the Government states the
- following in its communications of 5 November 1993 and 7 September 1994: as
- regards the Trade Union of Workers of the Ministry of the Interior, the
- Ministry of Labour was prevented by legal restrictions from recognizing this
- newly created trade union officially, as it wishes to include categories of
- employees that are regarded as holding positions of trust, such as the General
- Secretaries of departmental offices of the Ministry of the Interior, the
- Vice-Ministers of the Ministry of the Interior, and members of the national
- and finance police; as regards the Street Vendors' National Front Trade Union,
- a resolution of the Ministry of Labour and Social Insurance dated 12 August
- 1993 granted legal personality to the union and approved its constitution; as
- regards the Trade Union of Customs Workers, resolution No. 1146 of the
- Ministry of Labour, dated 5 August 1993, granted legal personality to the
- union and approved its constitution; as regards the Trade Union of Workers of
- the Guatemalan Red Cross, the institution terminated its public services for
- financial reasons on 31 October 1992 and ceased to exist as such; as regards
- the Trade Union of Workers of the Secretariat of Social Welfare, the elections
- were declared null and void in a decision by the labour authority dated 21
- December 1992, a decision which was approved by the Office of the Public
- Prosecutor; as regards the Trade Union of Bakers, the initial application was
- made in November 1992, and the application is now in the final stage of the
- approval process; as regards the Trade Union of Shipping Workers, the
- application did not meet the legal requirements and, in a resolution of the
- Ministry of Labour dated 16 August 1993, the trade union was requested to
- comment on a number of observations, a request which has not yet been
- answered; as regards the Trade Union of the Autonomous Sports Confederation of
- Guatemala, the collective agreement was signed in April 1993 but presented to
- the labour authority only in the month of June, and it was for this reason
- that it was suggested that the parties conclude a new updated agreement; as
- regards the Trade Union of Workers of the Municipality of Palín, the matters
- are now beyond its jurisdiction and will be resolved by the labour courts; as
- regards the Trade Union of Workers of the Imperial Food Products SA
- enterprise, the labour authority quoted the representative of the enterprise,
- who was prepared to make the respective compensation payment, but when the
- workers concerned were asked to present themselves they did not turn up.
- As regards the new allegations by the ICFTU (dated 23 September and 20
- December 1993 and 9 June 1994), in a communication dated 14 July 1994 the
- Government states that the collective agreement concluded with "La Mariposa"
- SA enterprise on 14 September 1993 does not infringe or diminish the rights of
- workers guaranteed by labour law. The Government also points out that on 28
- September 1993 the labour authority issued resolution No. 1906 granting legal
- personality to the Trade Union of Workers of the "La Mariposa" SA bottling
- plant. As regards the denunciation of acts of anti-union discrimination and
- reprisals by the enterprise, the Government states that on 14 December 1993,
- the labour inspector went to the enterprise with a view to establishing a
- direct agreement between the disputing parties on the specific cases in
- question. Several recommendations were made, with the fixing of a time-limit
- of fifteen (15) days for the settlement of the dispute. After several visits
- to the enterprise, inquiries and investigations, the labour authority was able
- to establish that the enterprise was in fact carrying out acts of anti-union
- discrimination against workers who were trade union members. Protective
- measures were formulated respectively for each case denounced, with a 48-hour
- time-limit being fixed for their implementation. On 18 April 1994 it was
- established that the enterprise had not carried out these instructions, as a
- result of which appeal was made to the Sixth Labour Court on 17 May 1994 for
- punitive proceedings and the application of the respective sanctions in
- accordance with the law; the Government will inform the Committee of the
- outcome of this appeal subsequently.
- In its communication dated 6 October 1994, the Government sends the following
- letter from the Office of the Public Prosecutor of the Nation to the Ministry
- of Labour:
- I have the honour to inform you that, at the request of your department
- concerning the list of violations of human rights, the Office of the Public
- Prosector of the Nation has initiated the following measures:
- 1. Locating the case files referred to in the list appended to your letter in
- order to ascertain which departments are processing them and what stage has
- been reached in the process.
- 2. Locating the family members of the victims of human rights violations in
- order to interview them and inquire whether judicial proceedings have been
- instituted in order to ascertain the circumstances of the murders, threats and
- intimidation against their family members.
- 3. Coordinating measures with the departmental public prosecutors' offices to
- institute inquiries into the human rights violations referred to in the list
- appended to your letter and to see that they are given special attention in
- order to expedite the proceedings.
- 4. Accordingly, instituting inquiries to determine the guilt of the persons
- accused of the above-mentioned human rights violations or, where appropriate,
- to ascertain whether these were merely common-law crimes.
- The Office of the Public Prosecutor, through its Human Rights Unit, will
- inform you of the outcome of the initial inquiries and interviews with the
- victims, and will report on the status of the proceedings already under way in
- the courts of jurisdiction.
- Case No. 1595
- Previous examination of the case
- This case was presented by the General Confederation of Workers of Guatemala
- (CGTG) and examined by the Committee on three occasions, most recently at its
- June 1994 meeting, at which it submitted interim conclusions (see 294th Report
- of the Committee, paras. 572-585, approved by the Governing Body at its 260th
- Session (June 1994)).
- The allegations pending refer to the murder of a worker during a labour
- dispute, the dissolution or non-recognition of the legal personality of
- several trade unions, obstacles to the establishment of trade union
- organizations and acts of anti-trade union discrimination. At its previous
- examination of the case, the Committee formulated the following conclusions
- and recommendations (see 294th Report, paras. 578-585):
- In the first place, the Committee once again deplores the fact that the
- Government has not communicated its observations concerning the murder of a
- worker on 5 August 1989 during a labour dispute between the La Patria farm and
- the trade union, and requests that a judicial inquiry begin without delay to
- establish the facts and punish the guilty parties. The Committee requests to
- be kept informed of the developments in the investigation.
- As regards the allegations for which the Committee requested the Government to
- keep it informed of developments in the corresponding judicial proceedings,
- the Committee notes with interest that the Government mentions that the Union
- of Peasant Workers of the La Patria farm and the enterprise have reached an
- agreement which provides for the reinstatement of the dismissed workers. The
- Committee requests the Government to transmit a copy of that agreement and to
- indicate whether these workers were indeed reinstated in their jobs. The
- Committee also notes that the Villa Nueva Municipal Workers' Union has not
- been dissolved, contrary to the complainants' allegation.
- As regards the allegations concerning measures taken to obstruct the creation
- of trade unions at the Manufacturera Integridad SA, Koram SA, Bocco & Cía.
- Ltda., Diseños Panamericanos SA, Confecciones Isabel SA and "Sam Agliano y Don
- San" in-bond "maquila" enterprises, the Committee notes that the Government
- states that the Sam Agliano y Don San enterprise has closed and that there are
- no trade unions at the other enterprises, nor have procedures been initiated
- for the recognition of trade unions there, and that the Ministry has organized
- an awareness campaign for the employers and has held a seminar on their rights
- and obligations. The Committee regrets to observe that the Government has not
- sent observations concerning the allegations of attempts to obstruct the
- establishment of trade union organizations at the Unión Bolívar, EGA, La Fé
- and Morena urban transport companies. In these circumstances, the Committee
- emphasizes the importance it attaches to the fact that workers and employers
- should in practice be able to form and join organizations of their own
- choosing in full freedom (see Digest of decisions and principles of the
- Freedom of Association Committee, 3rd edition, 1985, para. 222), and requests
- the Government to take the measures necessary to ensure that in practice the
- workers of the ten enterprises mentioned by the complainants can form trade
- unions and freely exercise their trade union rights. The Committee requests
- the Government to keep it informed of developments in the situation in these
- enterprises.
- As regards the legal proceedings concerning the dismissal of several trade
- union leaders of the executive committee of the Workers' Union of the San Juan
- de Dios Hospital and the administrative procedures concerning the dismissal of
- the General-Secretary of the Trade Union of Bakers of Chiquimula, the
- dismissal of 20 members of the Trade Union of Shipping Workers of Santo Tomás
- de Castilla and the recognition of the legal personality of the Workers' Union
- of the Ministry of the Interior, the Committee, as it did during its previous
- examination of the case, requests the Government to keep it informed of the
- decisions handed down.
- As regards the allegations of dismissals at the Fábrica Pundú SA, the
- Committee notes that according to the Government the enterprise has closed and
- the question of reinstatement is no longer relevant. As regards the dismissal
- of all the members of the Workers' Union of the El Trapichito farm and the
- dismissal of 55 members of the Workers' Union of the El Naranjo farm, the
- Committee notes that the Government states that there are no records of these
- allegations. Regretting that the Government has not provided any information
- to make it possible to determine whether these dismissals were anti-trade
- union in nature, the Committee points out to the Government that no one should
- be subjected to acts of anti-union discrimination for carrying out legitimate
- trade union activities and draws its attention to the fact that "protection
- against acts of anti-union discrimination should cover not only hiring and
- dismissal but also any discriminatory measures during employment, in
- particular transfers, downgrading and other acts that are prejudicial to the
- worker" (see Digest, op. cit., para. 544). In these circumstances, the
- Committee requests the Government to conduct an investigation into the alleged
- anti-union dismissals and, should these dismissals be related to legitimate
- trade union activities, ensure that the workers concerned are reinstated in
- their posts. It also requests the Government to keep it informed in this
- respect.
- As regards the allegations of requests for the dissolution of the San Antonio
- Suchitepequez Municipal Workers' Union, the Committee takes notes of the
- Government's statement that the union's legal personality was recognized in
- August 1988. Similarly, as regards the requests for the withdrawal of the
- legal personality of the Workers' Union of the Compañía Centroamericana
- Administradora de Hoteles y Turismo SA (Hotel Ritz Continental), the Committee
- takes note of the Government's statement that the union's executive committee
- members presented an official document dissolving the union in 1990 after 22
- workers had left the union. The Committee requests the complainant
- organizations to provide details on the reasons why, and circumstances in
- which, the resignation of workers took place and to provide a copy of the
- document of dissolution of the trade union.
- In the light of its foregoing interim conclusions, the Committee invites the
- Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) Deploring the murder of a worker on 5 August 1989 during a labour dispute
- at the La Patria farm, the Committee once again requests that a judicial
- inquiry begin without delay so as to establish the facts and punish the guilty
- parties, and requests to be kept informed of the developments in the
- investigation.
- (b) Noting with interest the Government's statement that the Union of Peasant
- Workers of the La Patria farm and the enterprise have reached an agreement on
- the reinstatement of the dismissed workers in their jobs, the Committee
- requests the Government to transmit a copy of that agreement and to indicate
- whether these workers were indeed reinstated in their jobs.
- (c) Emphasizing the importance that it attaches to the fact that workers and
- employers should in practice be able to form and join organizations of their
- own choosing in full freedom, the Committee requests the Government to take
- the measures necessary to ensure that in practice the workers of the
- Manufacturera Integridad SA, Koram SA, Bocco & Cía Ltda., Diseños
- Panamericanos SA, Confecciones Isabel SA, and Unión, Bolívar, EGA, La Fé and
- la Morena urban transport companies can form trade unions and freely exercise
- their trade union rights. The Committee requests the Government to keep it
- informed of the developments in the situation in these enterprises.
- (d) The Committee requests the Government to conduct an investigation into the
- alleged anti-union dismissals at the El Trapichito and El Naranjo farms and,
- should these dismissals be related to legitimate trade union activities, to
- ensure that the workers concerned are reinstated in their posts. It requests
- the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- (e) The Committee once again requests the Government to keep it informed of
- the decisions handed down in the legal proceedings concerning the dismissal of
- several trade union leaders of the Workers' Union of the San Juan de Dios
- Hospital and in the administrative procedures concerning the dismissal of the
- Secretary-General of the Trade Union of Bakers of Chiquimula, the dismissal of
- 20 members of the Trade Union of Shipping Workers of Santo Tomás de Castilla,
- and the recognition of the legal personality of the Workers' Union of the
- Ministry of the Interior.
- (f) Noting the Government's statement that the members of the executive
- committee of the Workers' Union of Hotel Ritz Continental have presented in
- 1990 an official document dissolving the union after 22 workers had left the
- union, the Committee requests the complainant organizations to provide details
- on the reasons why, and the circumstances in which, the resignation of the
- workers took place and to provide a copy of the document of dissolution of the
- trade union.
- Case No. 1740
- The complaint is contained in a communication from the Union of Workers of
- Guatemala (UNSITRAGUA) dated 26 October 1993. This organization presented
- additional information and new allegations in a communication dated 18
- December 1993.
- As regards Case No. 1740, at its November 1994 meeting (see 295th Report,
- para. 13), the Committee observed that, despite the time which had elapsed
- since the presentation of these complaints, it had not received the
- Government's observations. The Committee drew the attention of the Government
- to the fact that, in accordance with the procedural rules set out in paragraph
- 17 of its 127th Report, approved by the Governing Body, it may present a
- report on the substance of these cases at its next meeting, even if the
- observations or information requested have not been received in due time. The
- Committee accordingly requested the Government to transmit its observations or
- information as a matter of urgency.
- A. The complainant's allegations
- UNSITRAGUA alleges the following violations of trade union rights:
- - The Workers' Union of the Corporación Textil Internacional SA (CORTEX),
- organized on 16 March 1993, summoned the enterprise before the labour
- tribunals. The employer reacted by carrying out dismissals and issuing death
- threats (complaints have been filed to this effect).
- - The Trade Union of ESDEE Guatemala SA (SINTEGSA) was organized on 29 April
- 1993. The enterprise reacted by carrying out dismissals, issuing death
- threats, terminating contracts, setting up shock units and forging signatures.
- - The Workers' Union of the Diseños y Maquilas SA enterprise (SINTRADIMASA
- (MARISA)) was organized on 24 July 1993; the enterprise has been summoned
- before the labour tribunals. There have been unlawful dismissals, physical
- attacks on workers, as a result of which a complaint was filed for assault and
- death threats, and workers have been used to set up a trade union that is
- sympathetic to the employer.
- - The Union of Municipal Workers of Coban, department of Alta Verapaz
- (SITRAMCO) was organized on 10 March 1993; the employer's reaction took the
- form of dismissals carried out by the Mayor and the municipal corporation. In
- addition, the general secretary of the trade union was abducted and released
- hours later.
- - The Union of Workers of the Municipality of Santa Cruz Verapaz was organized
- on 3 July 1993; the municipality dismissed most of the trade union's officers
- and refuses to comply with the orders for reinstatement issued by the
- competent labour tribunal.
- - In March 1993 trade union member Byron Morales received a death threat from
- a paramilitary squad in the form of an anonymous message, warning him to leave
- the country. This threat was accompanied by numerous instances of surveillance
- and attempts at intimidation.
- - On 20 March 1993 trade union member Gustavo Rosalio Vasquez López
- disappeared after carrying out a protest demanding a settlement to the labour
- dispute on the San Gregorio farm, where the entire membership of the trade
- union had been dismissed in February 1992. The disappearance of this trade
- union member has not been elucidated.
- - On 6 May 1993 Adrián Miranda López, a member of the San Gregorio farm
- Workers' Union, was murdered after having been questioned regarding his trade
- union activity. Several other members of the trade union subsequently also
- received death threats.
- - On 30 October 1993 Velizario López Rojas, a member of the San Gregorio farm
- Workers' Union, was murdered during the labour dispute. It should also be
- pointed out that the enterprise has still not reinstated the 310 workers
- dismissed, despite having been ordered to do so.
- - Members of the union of the Malher y Sucesoras enterprise were detained for
- over eight (8) hours in the factory and subjected to pressure and intimidation
- to force them to sign documents and cease exercising their rights, and were
- subsequently subjected to systematic harassment and surveillance outside the
- enterprise.
- - On 15 July 1993 at 9 p.m., Ernesto Bol, Minutes Secretary of the Trade Union
- of Workers of the Municipality of Coban, district of Alta Verapaz, was
- abducted. He was subsequently released, threatened and intimidated.
- - On 15 July 1993 in Ciudad Peronia, district of Villa Nueva, Werner Coc
- Ramírez, an officer of the Trade Union of Bakers, was accosted and savagely
- beaten by persons who criticized him for his trade union activity.
- - On 11 July, at 6 p.m., four heavily armed men in a yellow car abducted
- Walter Manuel Nájera Molina, a member of the Workers Union of the Central
- Bottling Plant (Coca Cola); he was tortured and interrogated, and subsequently
- released.
- - In the enterprise ESDEE de Guatemala in-bond "maquila" enterprise, workers
- are savagely beaten and dismissed, with the participation of the national
- police. Trade union members have received death threats and been abducted with
- the participation of mobile units of the military police.
- - Officers of the trade union of the MJ Modas in-bond "maquila" enterprise
- have received new death threats targeting their families and children. Such
- threats were made against Natividad Salazar Barrera, María del Carmen Cruz
- Fuentes and Dicky Marroquín. The trade union is involved in a heavy dispute
- with the employer.
- - On 5 October, a paramilitary group again threatened a group of Guatemalans
- with death. The list of persons threatened includes officers of the UASP, to
- which the UNSITRAGUA is affiliated. One of the officers who received threats
- is Byron Morales, a member of the Trade Union of Workers of the National
- Committee for the Blind and Deaf Mutes and Coordinator of the Organizing
- Committee of UNSITRAGUA.
- - On 12 February 1992 the COCAPSA enterprise carried out unlawful and unjust
- mass dismissals of 310 workers at the San Gregorio Piedra Parada farm, in the
- district of Coatepeque, Quezaltenango, the Compañía Agrónomo Pecuaria SA (San
- Gregorio Piedra Parada farm) having been summoned to court and a decision
- having been handed down by the Second Labour Court of the First Instance of
- Coatepeque, prohibiting the enterprise from terminating any contract of
- employment without the authorization of the labour judge. On 17 August 1992,
- the First Chamber of the Court of Appeals (Labour and Social Welfare) upheld
- the proceedings for reinstatement instituted by the workers. It should be
- pointed out that the unlawful mass dismissals in violation of the rights of
- the San Gregorio farmworkers was carried out with the intention of impairing
- and cutting short the workers' efforts to organize, which constitutes a grave
- violation of Convention No. 87 by the Compañía Agrónomo Pecuaria SA and the
- State of Guatemala, where as the result of impunity there is no compliance
- with labour law or respect for workers' rights.
- - On 22 March 1993 an agreement was signed between the trade union of the
- Agroport SA in-bond "maquila" enterprise and the employer, in which the
- enterprise makes the following basic commitments: to comply with labour
- legislation; to pay the workers a transport allowance for moving from the
- enterprise to another plant; to resume work - which had been suspended - and
- to refrain from reprisals; this agreement was approved by the labour
- authorities on 30 March. On 12 April the plant was closed without any of the
- items in the agreement having been carried out, and the majority shareholder
- or owner, William Johosep Hulsizer, a United States national, fled to the
- United States.
- - The women workers of the MJ, SA, and the L & L, SA, enterprises have been
- subjected to numerous instances of abuse, changes in conditions of work, and
- moral and physical harassment in retaliation for their participation in the
- trade union, as well as numerous unlawful dismissals. These are destabilizing
- acts carried out by the employer with the aim of destroying the trade union
- organization. On 16 December 1993 several officers were locked inside the
- enterprise in an arbitrary and unlawful manner.
- - In the ESDEE de Guatemala enterprise, after a trade union had been formed
- and applied for registration, reprisals were carried out against the trade
- union officers and members of the organization, and it was ultimately decided
- to close down the enterprise unlawfully. Specifically, the complainant
- organization alleges that the employer committed the following anti-union
- acts: (1) it refused to bargain with the trade union and decided to set up a
- parallel organization with persons having the employers' trust; (2) trade
- union officer Pilar Cifuentes Aguilar was denied access to the enterprise in
- April 1993 and the General Secretary of the trade union was dismissed in July
- the same year; (3) various trade union members were dismissed one after the
- other between July and October 1993, and ultimately all of the workers were
- dismissed; and (4) a woman trade union member was physically assaulted on 20
- September 1993 while the workers were protesting against the closure of the
- enterprise.
- - The management of the National Committee for the Blind and Deaf Mutes of
- Guatemala categorically refused to negotiate a collective agreement with the
- representative trade union organization (SINTRACNPS), instead of which it has
- exerted its influence to delay the process as long as possible; the case has
- been before the Ministry of Labour and the Fourth Labour and Social Welfare
- Court for exactly 19 months.
- B. The Government's reply
- In its communication dated 5 January 1994, the Government states that on 16
- March 1993 the General Labour Directorate of this Ministry received an
- application for recognition of legal personality of the "Trade Union of
- Workers of the Corporación Textil Internacional SA" which was processed in
- accordance with the law. However, the legal adviser's office of that
- directorate considered that certain legal requirements had not been met and
- informed the persons concerned accordingly. Once the defects had been remedied
- and the other legal procedures had been carried out, on 21 October 1993 the
- General Labour Directorate issued a favourable decision and forwarded the file
- to this office. On 27 October, the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare, by
- decision No. 2176, recognized the legal personality of the trade union in
- question, approved its bylaws and authorized it to begin its activities.
- Finally, on 12 November last, this ministerial decision was published in the
- Diario de Centroamérica, thus completing the procedure.
- The Government states that no complaint has been filed with the Ministry of
- Labour concerning intrigues, dismissals, threats and the setting up of shock
- units by employers, and therefore, should such occur or have occurred in the
- past, it suggests that the victims file complaints to that effect with the
- authorities.
- Case No. 1778
- The complaints are contained in a communication from the Latin American
- Central of Workers (CLAT) dated 1 June 1994. The CLAT sent additional
- information and new allegations in communications dated 6 June and 1 November
- 1994.
- The complainant's allegations
- The CLAT states that it has received information to the effect that on 31 May
- 1994 Eligio Quej Morán, a member of the ad hoc committee of workers of the
- national police, was abducted. According to the same information, he was
- tortured and his abductors injected him with a drug which caused haemorrhages.
- His life is in danger and he has apparently lost his sight. The CLAT states
- that on 25 March 1993 the National Federation of Public Servants (FENASEP)
- began organizing the workers in the national police force. Since then members
- of the ad hoc committee set up on that date have been persecuted and issued
- with death threats by the "Jaguar Justiciero" death squad for having
- exercised, in accordance with the law, their right to organize and put forward
- legitimate demands. This event seriously endangers the physical integrity of
- all of the workers on this committee and is a sign of the increasing climate
- of violence against workers. According to the CLAT, the previous Minister of
- the Interior recognized and began to observe the human, economic and social
- rights of the workers serving on the national police force; however, the
- rights acquired under the previous administration are now being denied.
- The CLAT forwards a letter from the General Confederation of Workers of
- Guatemala (CGTG) to the Director-General of the national police expressing its
- concern at the transfer to other areas of three members of the ad hoc
- committee, Felipe de Jesús Cirín Aguilar, Arnoldo Farján Enríquez and Roberto
- Eligio Quej Morán, which it describes as a reprisal.
- Lastly, the CLAT alleges that other members of workers' organizations have
- been receiving anonymous messages containing death threats from the "Jaguar
- Justiciero" group.
- On 24 October 1994, at 11 p.m., Manuel de Jesús Alonso, General Secretary of
- the Trade Union of Workers of the Municipality of Puerto Barrios (department
- of Izabal) and coordinator of the CGTG in northern Guatemala, was shot. These
- events occurred when he was in front of the door of his home in Puerto
- Barrios. The perpetrators were not identified. On 29 October he died after
- suffering for several days. The trade union of which he was the leader was
- affiliated to the National Federation of Public Servants (FENASEP) and to the
- CGTG. It should be pointed out that the northern regional organization of the
- CGTG had been the target of threats from this group in recent months. The
- trade union leader Manuel de Jesús Alonso had displayed solidarity with the
- inhabitants of El Estor and had denounced abuses committed by the Mayor of
- this town. He had also made public various unlawful acts committed by
- officials of the municipalities of Puerto Barrios and the Izabal office of the
- Ministry of the Interior.
- Case No. 1786
- The complaints in this case are contained in communications from the General
- Confederation of Workers of Guatemala (CGTG) and the World Confederation of
- Labour (WCL) dated 18 and 24 June 1994, respectively.
- The complainants' allegations
- The trade union organizations allege the following violations of trade union
- rights in the private sector:
- - The enterprise Operadora de Empresa, SA, which owns the El Dorado Hotel,
- signed a collective agreement on working conditions with the Trade Union of
- Workers of the El Dorado Hotel and other activities which are part of the same
- economic unit, the provisions of which are being violated by the employer, in
- particular as regards work shifts. There are three work shifts - day, night
- and mixed shifts - which were duly negotiated between the parties; however,
- the employer has divided the shifts to suit itself and not in accordance with
- the agreement signed between the trade union and the employers. For example,
- an eight-hour continuous day shift is divided so that after a first period of
- three or four hours, the worker stops working and returns to complete his
- shift after four or five hours. This interval during which he does not work is
- not remunerated, despite the fact that the worker remains at the employer's
- disposal, and constitutes an infringement of collective bargaining.
- - An in-bond "maquila" enterprise, J & R Ropa Deportiva de Centroamérica, SA,
- operating in the free industry and trade zone of Santo Tomás de Castilla
- Puerto Barrios, in the department of Izabal, in April 1994 dissolved the local
- of the Trade Union of Workers of the Clothing Industry (STIC) by means of
- reprisals, intimidation, mass dismissals, unfair sanctions against workers,
- privileges for the non-unionized and reprisals against unionized workers,
- until the union membership was decimated, also as the result of death threats
- against trade union officers of Puerto Barrios by the far right and the
- "Jaguar Justiciero" death squad; today there is no trade union in that
- enterprise. The negligence of the Second Labour Judge of the First Instance
- contributed enormously to dissolving this trade union organization.
- - Este Oeste, SA, an in-bond "maquila" enterprise operating in the capital,
- also destroyed the local of the STIC by means of mass dismissals; in order to
- dismantle the trade union organization the enterprise closed down its
- operations in the capital and was later transferred to the city of Villa
- Nueva, District of Guatemala, 20 kilometres from the capital; the workers'
- contracts of employment were terminated and they were paid only 50 per cent of
- their remuneration; however, in order to obtain this remuneration the workers
- had to peacefully occupy the Embassy of the Republic of Korea, of which the
- Consul intervened; the premises of the Este Oeste, SA, enterprise were taken
- over and the local of this trade union entirely annihilated. A wage agreement
- was signed, but is also being violated by the employers, as pay checks are
- issued but are not backed by money in the bank.
- - Unicasa, SA, and Welly, SA, both in-bond "maquila" enterprises operating in
- the capital, have taken various reprisals against workers, in the form of
- unnecessary suspension of work, dismissals, raising production goals and
- deteriorating working conditions, for the sole purpose of dismantling the
- trade unions affiliated to the STIC.
- Working conditions of the workers in the in-bond "maquila" enterprises are
- subhuman; the workers are reduced to slavery; they are not granted time off to
- undergo medical examinations of the Guatemalan Social Security Institute
- (IGSS); when a worker is found to be pregnant she is dismissed; production
- targets are set inhumanly high and constitute ruthless exploitation; the
- workers are not allowed to relieve themselves; the toilet facilities (two or
- three of them) are open half an hour twice a day for 400 or 600 workers;
- overtime is not remunerated as such; average hours of work in these
- enterprises are 12 hours a day from Monday to Saturday, amounting to 72 hours
- per week, while the Constitution provides for a 44-hour working week.
- - On the Santa Anita farm, owned by Agropecuaria Santa Anita, SA, located in
- the district of San Miguel Pochuta, department of Chimaltenango: 42 members of
- the trade union of workers on the farm were dismissed; in this case, the
- employer resorted to intrigues with the officials of the Second Court of the
- First Instance of Chimaltenango, cancelling the warnings issued by the same
- Court, the employer being aware that since the enterprise was engaged in a
- collective dispute of a socio-economic nature protected under the Labour Code,
- any termination of an employment contract (dismissal) must be authorized by
- the Court. None the less, at the enterprise's request, the warnings were
- cancelled and the notification of the decision running counter to the rights
- and interests of the working class was dated four days earlier than the date
- on which it was actually issued, which prevented the workers from appealing
- this decision; in other words they were denied the right to defend themselves.
- On the same day on which the notification was issued all of the trade union
- members were dismissed; a petition was made for their reinstatement but the
- Court rejected it.
- - The Nueva California farm, owned by Agropecuaria Inmobiliaria Miramar, SA,
- located in the district of San Miguel Pochuta, department of Chimaltenango,
- has dismissed 40 workers who are members of the Trade Union of Workers of the
- Nueva California Farm. They have not been reinstated to date, despite the
- major efforts made by the union leadership at every level. Efforts to summon
- the employer to engage in collective bargaining on working conditions have
- been unsuccessful.
- - The El Salto farm, owned by Plantación San Carlos, SA, also in the district
- of San Miguel Pochuta, department of Chimaltenango, has dismissed 80 workers
- who are founding members of the trade union of workers of the San Carlos and
- El Salto farms, despite the fact that section 209 of the Labour Code provides
- that "workers shall not be dismissed for having participated in forming a
- trade union" and that when a collective dispute of a socio-economic nature is
- under way with a view to collective bargaining of working conditions, any
- termination of an employment contract must be authorized by the judge handling
- the dispute; these standards, however, are a dead letter as far as the
- employers are concerned. Proceedings have been instituted with a view to
- obtaining the reinstatement of these workers.
- - The Bolivia farm, owned by Agropecuaria Bolivia, SA, in the district of
- Cicacao, department of Suchitepéquez: 102 workers who are founding members of
- the trade union of workers of this farm have been dismissed despite the
- prohibition laid down in section 209 of the Labour Code and the protection
- against dismissal ordered by the General Labour Inspectorate. Their
- reinstatement has been demanded but the employers have stated categorically
- that they will not reinstate anyone.
- - The Los Angeles farm, owned by Agropecuaria Los Angeles, SA, has dismissed
- 26 workers despite the fact that a court order was issued for their
- reinstatement. The legal representative of this enterprise has said that they
- will not be reinstated; moreover, reprisals have been severe, including a wage
- reduction of up to 50 per cent, equivalent to 1.03 dollars, an increase in the
- workload, withholding of pay and failure to pay other remuneration. All of
- this is aimed at creating despair among the workers so that they will leave
- the farms, thus denying the right to freedom of association and collective
- bargaining.
- - The Medellín farm, owned by Agropecuaria Abal, SA, located in the district
- of Chicacao, department of Suchitepéquez, engaged in illegal intrigues and
- arrangements with a woman employed in the offices of the human rights body
- (the place designated by the workers for the receipt of notifications). The
- record shows that a notification was issued warning the employer not to
- dismiss workers and it is suspected that the woman in question (a relative of
- the employer) hid the notification. Later a mass dismissal of all the trade
- union members (a total of 60) was carried out. The workers have instituted
- legal proceedings. The trade union has been completely destroyed.
- The complainants allege further that the situation of rural workers is
- becoming increasingly difficult. The employers circulate lists of unionized
- workers to the other farms in the southern coastal area of the country, so
- that they are not given work and have to emigrate very far from the area.
- Rural workers, their children and their families are being subjected to
- significant tribulations merely for having exercised their right of
- association and collective bargaining.
- Finally, the complainants allege the following violations of trade union
- rights in the public sector:
- - The Ministry of Urban and Rural Development once employed 880 trade union
- members, now reduced to 30, as the other workers were dismissed. The mass
- dismissals in the Ministry of Urban and Rural Development occurred in the
- context of the structural adjustment programme advocated by the main
- proponents of the neo-liberal project. In this case the government authorities
- disregarded the right of workers to organize freely and the warnings issued by
- the labour judge examining a collective dispute of a socio-economic nature, as
- a result of which the Ministry had been summoned and warned not to dismiss any
- worker without the authorization of that judge. These warnings were a dead
- letter as far as the Government was concerned.
- - Municipality of El Estor, department of Izabal. The workers employed by this
- municipality were in the process of forming a trade union; however, 20 of the
- main founding members have been dismissed and over six months have passed
- without their being reinstated. The case is now before a court of appeal but
- it is doubtful that the law will be duly applied, given the recent tendency of
- the courts to do away with the basic principles underlying labour law.
- II. Agenda of activities carried out
- In accordance with the usual direct contacts procedure, the mission met with
- representatives of the Government, of an employers' organization and of
- workers' organizations. It also met with high non-governmental authorities
- competent in the matters referred to in the complaints.
- President of the Republic. The mission, accompanied by the Director of the ILO
- Office for Central America and Panama, was received by His Excellency the
- President of the Republic, Licenciado Ramiro de Leon Carpio, in an audience at
- which the Minister of Labour was also present. After referring to the serious
- problems which exist in the world today and even in the international
- organizations themselves, the President expressed his firm belief in democracy
- and stated that the policy of repression which had reigned in his country for
- a long time had now been replaced by a policy for the promotion of human
- rights, even though unfortunate events continued to occur and an atmosphere of
- impunity and fear remained to a large degree. He emphasized the enormous
- progress achieved in his country in the field of individual rights and, at the
- same time, the enormous difficulties of all kinds which the country faced, in
- particular as regards social, cultural and economic rights. He expressed
- serious concern about the present situation and what would happen once the
- armed conflict was over and peace achieved, because then the social problems
- and lack of social structures would become more evident and require urgent
- action and a frontal attack on poverty, although without social justice the
- peace process would be slowed down. In this context efforts had been made to
- introduce a policy to strengthen the trade union movement and promote the
- creation of trade union organizations (in this regard specific instructions
- had been given to the Minister of Labour) and he stated that he was ready to
- do all that he could to help make this goal a reality. The Minister of Labour
- confirmed that she had received formal instructions to this end.
- The President expressed his gratitude to the ILO and welcomed the presence of
- the mission to which he offered his full support. As a result of his
- day-to-day work in the presidency of the Republic and his earlier wide
- experience as Human Rights Commissioner, the President said that he fully
- understood the nature and seriousness of the matters before the Committee on
- Freedom of Association and expressed his willingness to take measures so that
- these complex matters be gradually resolved, including through tripartite
- means.
- The Director of the ILO Office for Central America and Panama emphasized the
- importance of the mission in itself and in the context of the peace process
- currently under way in the country and in which the ILO was playing a direct
- part. At the same time he offered the Government ILO technical cooperation to
- help it overcome present problems regarding freedom of association as well as
- in other spheres, for which the President thanked him.
- Minister of Labour. The mission examined in detail with the Minister of Labour
- the matters pending; the main difficulties in responding to the allegations
- made by the complainant organizations, both in substance and in the light of
- the structural situation and circumstances facing the country, as well as the
- nature of some of the allegations, and the efforts which had been made in this
- respect. The Minister was convinced that the progress which could be achieved
- in the labour sphere would make an important contribution to the peace
- process.
- There was also a fruitful exchange of ideas on the programme to be carried out
- by the mission and the kind of results which could be achieved, in accordance
- with the procedural requirements concerning complaints before the Committee on
- Freedom of Association. The Minister said she was fully ready to cooperate and
- study any measures which might be necessary to adopt. She also said that she
- was ready to meet with representatives of the employers' and workers'
- organizations to examine on a tripartite basis the matters pending and the
- possible action to be taken. Subsequently, the mission met once again with the
- Minister to give a provisional progress report on the results achieved.
- In general, the Minister of Labour made the following observations on the
- substance of the complaints:
- (a) As regards the alleged violations of human rights, most of which occurred
- long before the present period of government, she said that before the arrival
- of the mission she had requested the cooperation of the Public Ministry
- concerning the outcome of the inquiries carried out or the holding of new
- inquiries.
- (b) As regards the delay in the establishment of trade unions, the Minister
- informed the mission that some of the cases denounced had been resolved and
- she mentioned the progress achieved through a reform of the respective
- administrative procedure to enable completion within the 55 days prescribed by
- the law and that the results achieved so far were satisfactory, as could be
- seen from ministry statistics.
- (c) As regards the problem of the illegal dismissal of workers protected from
- removal and employers' resistance to their reinstatement, there was a need for
- legislative reform to give the labour inspector effective powers of sanction
- and to speed up the procedure, and that a legislative commission of the
- Ministry would participate in this process; there was also a need for
- administrative measures to increase the number of conciliation and arbitration
- courts and to ensure their establishment on a permanent basis, a matter which
- fell within the competence of the Judicial Department, presided over by the
- Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. These matters would be examined in more
- detail during the course of the mission.
- (d) It was a matter of regret that many of the allegations made to the
- Committee lacked the necessary details to enable a reply to be made.
- The Minister was sympathetic to the idea of establishing a body or tripartite
- mechanism to ensure the effective examination of complaints made by the trade
- union organizations and examination of other matters relating to freedom of
- association, within the framework of the Tripartite Consultation
- (International Labour Standards) Convention, 1976 (No. 144), which had been
- ratified by Guatemala. The practice of tripartism was not new in the country
- since there had been several recent experiences of this type on the fixing of
- the minimum wage, the study - under way - of a system of vocational training,
- productivity, child workers and a critical analysis of the work of the
- Ministry of Labour, amongst others. Furthermore, as part of the modernization
- of the Ministry, which was of particular interest to her. The number of labour
- inspectors had been increased and their work methods reorganized. The Minister
- was also in favour of the establishment of channels and means of communication
- between state bodies as a way of resolving the problem of lack of replies to
- most of the allegations made before the Committee.
- In a written communication, the Minister said that the Government was taking
- steps to protect persons and families and that its supreme objective was the
- common good. The State should guarantee its inhabitants the right to life,
- freedom, justice, security, peace and the integrated development of
- individuals. These objectives were enshrined in constitutional principles but
- had moreover resulted in policies and measures introduced by the Government,
- not only to preserve the State based on rule of law but also to promote the
- protection of human rights and labour rights. These measures included the
- introduction of the new Penal Code of Procedure and the Organic Law of the
- Public Ministry, adopted by Decree No. 40-94. As regards the protection of
- human and labour rights, she said that new labour courts had been established.
- Furthermore, protection units for working women, child workers and the
- integration into work of persons with disabilities had been set up. The
- following instruments had been promulgated to improve and speed up the
- exercise of the right to freedom of association and collective bargaining; the
- regulations governing the recognition of the legal personality; approval of
- statutes and registration of trade union organizations, contained in
- Government Agreement No. 639-93 of 2 November 1993; and the regulations
- governing the negotiation, approval and denunciation of collective agreements
- on working conditions in an enterprise or specific production centre,
- contained in Government Decree No. 22-94 of 13 May 1994. She also mentioned a
- series of texts on the minimum wage policy unanimously adopted by the National
- Wage Commission, a tripartite body. (Endnote 1)
- In her communication, the Minister emphasized the efforts made to modernize
- the Ministry of Labour and Social Insurance, with the cooperation of the ILO,
- including the purchase of computer equipment, as well as programmes, projects,
- courses and seminars in various spheres, amongst which she mentioned the
- improvement of labour relations and collective bargaining. (Endnote 2) In this
- context she also mentioned the establishment of a multisectoral body to
- promote multipartite training in the country: to this end a Letter of
- Understanding had been signed with representatives of the following
- organizations: CACIF, ANACAFE, AGA, FEPYME, CONFECOOP, CUSG, CGTG, UNSITRAGUA,
- CTC, FESEBS, FENASTEG and FENASEP. (Endnote 3)
- Labour Directorate. With a view to examining the subject of the establishment
- of trade unions, which was raised in several allegations, the mission held a
- meeting with an adviser of the Minister and officials of the General Labour
- Directorate; the Child Labour Unit and the Women's Protection Unit, which
- depended upon the Social Insurance Directorate; as well as with the Department
- of Statistics.
- At that meeting the mission was given a detailed explanation of the procedure
- for the granting of legal personality, the approval of the statutes and the
- registration of trade union organizations; this procedure included a large
- number of unnecessary or repetitive steps which made it excessively long. On
- the instructions of the Ministry of Labour, an analysis was undertaken which
- resulted in the adoption of Government Agreement No. 639-93 of 2 November 1993
- which established the regulations and procedure to be followed in this
- respect, a procedure which has been simplified and which should not exceed the
- 55 days prescribed by the law. (Endnote 4) The Minister observed in this
- respect that the following figures on the establishment of trade unions and
- the number of days required for the registration of trade unions and trade
- union officials showed the progress achieved from one year to the next:
- Registration of trade union organizations
- _________________________________________________________________
- Year Applications Registrations Days
- (average)
- _________________________________________________________________
- 1993 61 52 400
- 1994 57 64 55
- Source: General Subdirectorate of Labour, 14 Feb. 1995.
- _________________________________________________________________
- Registration of legal status (registration of officials)
- _________________________________________________________________
- Year Registrations
- _________________________________________________________________
- 1993 164
- 1994 225
- Source: General Subdirectorate of Labour, 14 Feb. 1995.
- _________________________________________________________________
- However, despite the reforms made, there may still be delays, essentially for
- reasons not ascribable to the Ministry, or in any event to the Directorate. It
- was unfortunately not possible to meet with officials of the General Labour
- Inspectorate, which is competent for some aspects of the above-mentioned
- procedure. This was all the more regrettable since some of the criticisms
- which the mission was subsequently to hear from trade union organizations
- referred precisely to the Inspectorate's role in the procedure and the
- criteria applied by this body. The external factors which might still slow
- down the establishment of trade unions included workers' ignorance about the
- procedure, the scant legal advisory services available, the presentation of
- defective statutes or documents without the necessary signatures and problems
- of communication concerning notification of the interested parties,
- deficiencies in the postal system or changes of address and even the lack of
- means of the parties concerned to go to the Ministry. But these deficiencies
- and the resulting delays arose only in a minority of cases, approximately 30
- per cent of the total, and concerned above all workers who are not members of
- any central organization which could advise them. The officials of the
- Ministry believed that it would be useful to draw up model statutes (which
- would not be obligatory of course) or for each central trade union
- organization to prepare its own, with the approval of the Ministry, to speed
- up the process and make it more reliable, although they understood that this
- had already been done in the different central organizations. For its part the
- mission pointed out that a reduction in the number of stages in the procedure
- for the establishment of trade unions was a positive development although it
- would be advisable to go further in this respect, bearing in mind the
- provisions of the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to
- Organize Convention, 1948 (No. 87).
- As regards the establishment of trade unions, the ministerial officials gave
- information to the mission on the total number of trade unions registered in
- the country and the membership rate, although they pointed out that the
- ministerial statistics were defective because of the system itself and the
- failure of trade unions to comply with the requirement to send in their
- membership data at periodical intervals.
- Between December 1943 and May 1994, 995 trade unions had been set up in the
- country, including 38 federations and five confederations, of which 833 were
- in the private sector and 162 in the public sector (Endnote 5) but, for
- various reasons, there was no way of knowing how many of these trade unions
- had ceased to exist and therefore how many trade unions actually existed now.
- Subject to the same reservation, the total number of members according to
- ministerial records was 86,752, including 78,901 men and 7,851 women. The
- regional distribution of the total number of established trade unions (Endnote
- 6) is as follows:
- Established trade unions: Regional distribution
- _________________________________________________________________
- Region Registered trade union organizations
- _________________________________________________________________
- Metropolitan 380
- North 5
- North-east 60
- South-east 85
- Central 144
- South-west 271
- North-west 48
- Petén 2
- Total 995
- _________________________________________________________________
- The unionization rate for 1993, according to ministerial data, was 3 per cent
- of the economically active population employed, with very small variations
- since 1980, as can be seen from the following table. (Endnote 7) However, in
- the opinion of the Ministry, the actual rate was at least 6 per cent, since
- the failure of trade unions to send in periodical data on their membership to
- the Ministry resulted in figures which were well below real levels.
- Economically active population employed, number of registered trade unions,
- number of trade union members and membership percentages
- _________________________________________________________________
- Year EAPE (1) Registered Members Membership
- trade unions (3) percentage
- (2) (4)
- _________________________________________________________________
- 1980 2 135 835 619 62 752 2.9
- 1993 2 954 226 995 86 752 3.0
- (1) SEGEPLAN estimates. (2) Accumulated registration.
- (3) According to figures given in the constituent acts of trade unions, which
- are well below real levels because of the failure of trade unions to send in
- updated data each year.
- (4) Relationship between the number of members and the EAPE.
- _________________________________________________________________
- The mission had reason to believe that in fact the Ministry of Labour had
- tried to reduce the number of stages and time of the procedure for the
- establishment of trade unions. However, some trade union central organizations
- made the criticism that the progress achieved did not benefit equally all the
- trade unions being established and that delays continued to occur. In this
- respect the mission had the opportunity to meet with the officials of a trade
- union, which complained that its application for legal recognition and
- registration in the register in the Ministry had been pending for a long time
- and that it was constantly faced with obstacles on matters of form which it
- believed clearly signalled an attitude of rejection.
- Ministry of Government. The mission was received by the Deputy Minister of
- Security, who had been in office for only a few weeks. Two subjects were dealt
- with during this meeting: the investigation of allegations of violations of
- the human rights of trade unionists and the situation of the Trade Union of
- Employees in that Ministry.
- The Deputy Minister of Security told the mission that the present team of
- executive officials of the Ministry were anxious to develop a policy for the
- effective respect of human rights and to ensure more resolute action by the
- national police in this respect. He reminded the mission that the Minister was
- a member of the law profession with an acknowledged reputation in the country;
- he was a university teacher, former President of the College of Lawyers and
- member of the Constitutional Court.
- As regards the Trade Union of Employees of the Ministry of Government, better
- known internally as the "Police Trade Union" (in formation), the Deputy
- Minister was not familiar with the allegation made to the Committee on Freedom
- of Association, but said that at least at present the officials of that trade
- union were being given proper treatment by the authorities and were exercising
- their trade union functions without problems. He said that the establishment
- of this trade union was a positive development if its activities remained
- within the scope of the law and its statutes.
- Presidential Commission on Human Rights (COPREDEH). The Commission "is an
- institution of the Government established by Government Agreement No. 486-91,
- dated 12 July 1992" according to an official document received by the mission.
- Its establishment was recommended by Professor Christian Tomuschat, an
- independent expert on Guatemala for the United Nations. Its high level members
- include a personal representative of the President of the Republic, who chairs
- the Commission, and the Ministers of Foreign Affairs, Government, National
- Defence, the Chief of the Public Ministry and the Coordinator of the Peace
- Commission.
- The main objectives of COPREDEH are: to coordinate action by the ministries
- and institutions of the executive to ensure the respect and protection of
- human rights and to guarantee communication and cooperation between the
- President of the Republic and the Judicial Department and the Human Rights
- Commission, as regards such rights; to centralize information on denunciations
- of violations of human rights and to promote their investigation through the
- Public Ministry and the Ministry of Government; to establish a mechanism for
- the constant monitoring of investigations of violations of human rights and
- judicial trials, with a view to informing the international community on the
- situation, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; to study and to propose to
- the President of the Republic draft legislation or initiatives on human
- rights; and to promote through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs cooperation and
- international financial and technical assistance and cooperation and the
- exchange of information with the different international bodies.
- COPREDEH is therefore a high level institution for the formulation and
- implementation of presidential policy on human rights. For this reason, during
- the preparatory mission, a request was made to the President of COPREDEH to
- provide information on the allegations pending before the Committee, and to
- have the necessary inquiries carried out. The President of the Commission, who
- had been in office for only a few days, showed great interest in the questions
- which had given rise to the direct contacts mission and readiness in dealing
- with them, for which he had received formal instructions from the President of
- the Republic. After listening to the mission and confirming that the inquiries
- carried out had produced only meagre results, he said that as a result of the
- direct contacts mission and on the express wish to the President of the
- Republic, a liaison committee had been set up by COPREDEH on labour matters in
- the sphere of human rights, which logically included trade union matters. The
- purpose of the committee was to monitor all the cases submitted to the
- Committee on Freedom of Association, and coordinate action by the Ministry of
- Labour, the Office of the Attorney General and the national police. In this
- way, the Minister of Labour would be able to pass on automatically to the
- liaison committee the complaints received.
- High non-governmental authorities. Given the nature of the questions before
- the Committee on Freedom of Association, which concerned the functioning of
- the administration of justice and the standards regulating it and the
- competent activity of the Public Ministry, the Office of the Public Prosecutor
- of the Nation and the Human Rights Commission, the mission was interested in
- meeting with these high authorities and with the Chief Justice of the Supreme
- Court and President of the Judicial Department.
- The Supreme Court of Justice and Judicial Department. The mission paid a
- courtesy visit to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and President of the
- Judicial Department, who received it in the presence of three magistrates of
- the Supreme Court. The mission explained to them the scope of its mandate and
- the points raised by the social interlocutors concerning the deficiencies of
- the labour jurisdiction, the attitude of judges and the legislation on labour
- disputes. The Chief Justice and his magistrate colleagues, after pointing out
- that they had been in office for only four months and would remain in office
- for five years, said that there had been serious budgetary restrictions
- affecting the establishment of courts, although they were carrying out a study
- on ways to set up more conciliation and arbitration courts - which have a
- tripartite structure - through a system of piece-work remuneration, which
- would significantly reduce costs. As regards the attitudes of judges in
- specific cases they said they could do nothing, since judges were autonomous
- and the inspection of courts, which was relatively efficient, guaranteed that
- cases were heard in accordance with the law.
- Attorney General of the Republic. The Public Ministry, headed by the Attorney
- General of the Republic, is an autonomous institution, the principal functions
- of which are to ensure the strict fulfilment of the country's laws. (Endnote
- 8) The conversation with the Attorney General focused on the problem of the
- denunciations of violations of human rights and freedom of association and the
- manner in which such matters were treated by the Public Ministry. The mission
- was informed that up to July 1994 inquiries were carried out under the
- responsibility of the judges, so that the Public Ministry could not comment on
- what had happened until then. Now the new Code of Penal Procedure gave the
- Public Ministry direct responsibility for criminal investigations ex officio
- and in respect of denunciations and disputes. Previously information on trials
- was not centralized and was kept in each court or tribunal. Hence the
- difficulty of replying to the allegations made to the Committee on Freedom of
- Association prior to the reform.
- There was an office of permanent attention where denunciations could be made.
- The office opens a file for each denunciation and allocates the case to a
- specific prosecutor, according to the zone. The family members concerned are
- convened to provide their respective statements. Instructions for the carrying
- out of inquiries are given to staff of the national police and the Office of
- the Attorney General and on the basis of their reports, judicial proceedings
- are initiated, according to the distribution of cases made by the Supreme
- Court of Justice among the different criminal courts. The Prosecutor then
- requests the initiation of criminal proceedings, which may or may not be
- granted by the judge.
- As regards the allegations made in the complaints made to the Committee on
- Freedom of Association, the Attorney General said that there was little
- information in the complaints or at least in the information which he had
- received from the Ministry of Labour. This could also be explained in part by
- the "climate of fear" in the country which discouraged the giving of evidence
- and which was related to events in the 1980s. At the request of the Ministry
- of Labour during the direct contacts mission, some prosecutors went to the
- courts and to the police as well as to the Presidential Commission on Human
- Rights, but had great difficulty in obtaining any results on the
- investigations carried out, except in a few cases. In the same way, they wrote
- to the complainant organizations requesting further information (names, dates,
- places, offices to which they had applied) without achieving any positive
- results to date. Up until 1995 it was impossible for the Office of the
- Attorney General to assume effectively the new functions prescribed by the law
- because of strict budgetary restrictions. Now the situation has changed and
- the Attorney General has undertaken to initiate inquiries on all the
- complaints pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association in the event
- that this has not yet already been done. The Attorney General, taking
- advantage of the presence of the mission, also agreed to meet with
- representatives of the trade union organizations with a view to clarifying the
- complaints, ensuring greater efficiency in the future presentation of any
- other complaints and overcoming the "climate of fear" and lack of trust;
- representatives of the Human Rights Commission and the United Nations Mission
- for the Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA) would also be
- invited to this meeting.
- Meeting between the Public Ministry - MINUGUA - CGTG. The planned meeting
- between the Attorney General and his immediate collaborators and the trade
- union organizations did in fact take place, although the short notice given
- meant that only representatives of the CGTG could attend. The meeting was also
- attended by Ms. Leila Lima, Director of the MINUGUA regional office for the
- central zone. The meeting was a very positive and productive means of
- establishing channels to provide the trade union organizations with better
- access to the Office of the Attorney General to ensure effective means of
- intervention by the latter in the event of complaints and the correction of
- any defects in complaints made. The Attorney General recalled that his mandate
- would continue for a further four years, which would allow his action to have
- a far-reaching effect during which he hoped to cooperate with the trade union
- organizations whose representatives should come to his Office each time they
- felt it necessary to make a denunciation concerning the violation of human
- rights.
- The staff of the Attorney General's Office said that so far the search for
- information on the complaints made in the cases pending before the Committee
- on Freedom of Association had produced only scant results. The Human Rights
- Unit of the Attorney General's Office made inquiries at COPREDEH, the Human
- Rights Commission and the Ministry of Labour. Furthermore, communications were
- addressed to the complainant organizations, requesting them to specify or
- supplement certain information, but no replies had been received to date. They
- pointed out that very often it was impossible to carry out the legal inquiries
- because of defects in the complaints; other times the Attorney General's
- Office was not able to act because the matter in dispute might be of a purely
- labour nature, as for example when a complaint was made that an employer had
- dismissed and removed one or more workers. Furthermore, they recalled that
- although the increase in the number of bodies empowered to receive complaints
- had increased the scope of action of citizens, there was now a degree of
- fragmentation and lack of coordination in the existing services.
- The Attorney General proposed the organization of workshops, or a working
- group, with representatives of the trade union organizations and the
- participation of MINUGUA, to examine specific cases and improve the action of
- the Attorney General's Office when complaints arose.
- For their part the trade union representatives maintained that the proper
- formulation of a complaint did not always guarantee that a serious inquiry
- would be carried out and that the guilty parties would be punished and they
- gave examples of precise denunciations of serious infringements which had gone
- unpunished despite the fact that the complaints included the forenames and
- family names of the victims, places and dates of the events and even the
- possible or suspected authors. They pointed out that at the local level the
- work of the Attorney General's Office was even weaker because of the influence
- exercised by certain persons.
- The trade union representatives expressed their desire for the national
- problems to be resolved. For now, workers and peasants lacked protection and
- were isolated for many reasons, including illiteracy. As regards the meeting,
- they were pleased to know that the Public Ministry had set up a unit for the
- defence of human rights. They hope that its work will be felt at the local
- level and, in general, that more resources will be granted to this work.
- Furthermore, they recognized that the Attorney General's Office had carried
- out its obligations in other cases. They thanked the Attorney General for his
- invitation and welcomed the establishment of a body for dialogue and training.
- The representative of MINUGUA welcomed the willingness of the Attorney General
- to help improve the application of justice. She announced the imminent
- signature of a mutual cooperation agreement with this Office, a state
- institution, the strengthening of which was a matter of great priority.
- MINUGUA was endeavouring to establish means of coordination with the Attorney
- General's Office and with its unit for the defence of human rights to help
- overcome the discredit and lack of confidence affecting national institutions.
- In this connection she believed it was useful to discuss specific negative
- experiences in order to draw lessons and she expressed her willingness to form
- part of the working group proposed by the Attorney General, which coincided
- perfectly with the workplans of the mission. Secondly, aware of the interest
- of the Committee on Freedom of Association in the protection of trade union
- activists or officials under threat, she said that MINUGUA and COPREDEH had in
- fact established a unit for the protection of threatened persons, which had
- already carried out some important work.
- As a result of this exchange of ideas, and taking advantage of the presence of
- the direct contacts mission to establish specific undertakings, the Attorney
- General decided to convene an initial meeting of a working group coordinated
- by the unit for the defence of human rights, with the participation of
- representatives of the various trade union central organizations, the Ministry
- of Labour and MINUGUA, and which would be held on 28 March 1995 in the
- Training Centre of the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic.
- Public Prosecutor of the Nation. The Public Prosecutor carries out a wide
- range of activities under the powers conferred by the Constitution, as adviser
- and consultant of state organs and bodies, the representative of the State and
- the Head of the Public Prosecutor's Office. (Endnote 9) As regards the mandate
- of the mission, the Public Prosecutor of the Nation said that he had dealt
- with denunciations of violations of human rights, collective labour disputes
- and illegal dismissals involving problems of reinstatement, which in some
- cases were complicated by the occupation of enterprises. The Public Prosecutor
- listened with much interest to the reasons which had given rise to the direct
- contacts mission and offered his collaboration, particularly concerning the
- difficult problem of illegal dismissals, which should be examined not only on
- the basis of the specific situations which arose but within a more global
- perspective.
- Human Rights Commissioner. The Constitution makes provision for the post of
- Human Rights Commissioner, inspired by that of the Ombudsman. The Commissioner
- is a Commissioner of the Congress of the Republic for the defence of human
- rights guaranteed by the Constitution. (Endnote 10) The present Commissioner
- who is a professor of constitutional law and an historian, received the
- mission in the presence of the Deputy Commissioner and two advisers. The
- Commission is a state - not government - body of control which enjoys absolute
- autonomy. The mission was informed that previously the work of the Commission
- centred above all on individual rights because of the war. At present it has
- also been able to address labour rights, as can be seen from the activities
- report for 1994. (Endnote 11)
- The experience of the present Commissioner, in his own opinion, was not very
- positive. He was therefore not very optimistic about the development of the
- situation, which he described as dramatic. The country was on the point of an
- uncontrollable social explosion and suffered from a weak system; he referred
- to the deficiency of the Government and Congress, resulting from an election
- in which the majority party obtained 5 per cent of the votes and where the
- abstention rate was extremely high. He pointed out that there was much
- spontaneous discontent although he did not doubt the good faith of many
- officials. Of course there had been enormous progress since 1982, in
- particular in recent years, especially in the civil and political spheres, but
- the transition process still had a long way to go and there were many
- obstacles.
- As regards the alleged lack of investigation of violations of human rights,
- the Commissioner said that the Ministry of Government was competent to
- investigate these complaints, although it did not always do so, and the
- Ministry of Labour did not automatically protect freedom of association.
- Furthermore, there was a lack of institutional coordination and thus the
- Ministry of Labour had been reproached by the Ministry of Government for
- having registered certain trade unions and the Ministry of Economy for the
- fixing of minimum wages. The Commission was competent to request information
- from the Government and did so; now that more attention was being given to
- labour matters, it did not accept bureaucratic excuses when information was
- requested, for example from the Ministry of Labour.
- As regards the specific denunciation concerning the assassination of the
- leader, Manuel de Jesus Alonso, the officials of the Public Prosecutor's
- Office stated that the Governor of Izabal and the Mayor of El Estor, as well
- as the military base of the locality had been the subject of investigations.
- Furthermore, they said that no trade unionists were currently under arrest in
- the country.
- In the opinion of the officials of the Public Prosecutor's Office, the reform
- work on the Labour Code which was begun in 1986 and adopted in 1992 following
- pressure by the Government of the United States was insufficient. The Ministry
- of Labour applied sanctions only through the courts, unlike other ministries
- which had direct powers of sanction. In this respect the remedy would be to
- undertake a new legislative reform to establish administrative sanctions in
- the event of refusal to reinstate a worker who had been illegally dismissed
- and to apply penal sanctions in the event of a recurrence at the labour and
- trade union levels, the labour inspectorate needed to be given powers of
- sanction. On the other hand, even with the legislation in force, perhaps the
- work of the inspectors could be more effective if they were more creative and
- could count on the cooperation of the Attorney General's Office; indeed,
- sometimes officials of the Public Prosecutor's Office acted in collaboration
- with those from the Ministry of Labour.
- United Nations Mission for the Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala
- (MINUGUA). The mission visited the headquarters of the United Nations mission
- in Guatemala, responsible for the verification of compliance with the
- comprehensive agreement of 1994, which was finalizing its establishment at
- that time in the different regions of the country; as well as the headquarters
- of the regional office for the central zone.
- Confirming the information received, MINUGUA was concerned at the increasing
- number of denunciations and the low level of reply; there was an alarming
- number of denunciations of violations of the human rights of trade unionists,
- who are one of the most vulnerable social groups. Freedom of association was
- one of the priorities which the comprehensive agreement established for the
- verification mission; hence the interest given to the direct contacts mission,
- to which it offered its full cooperation.
- Impunity continued to be a major problem. MINUGUA officials also said that the
- establishment of the causes of the violations of human rights could also
- become a major problem. In particular, a chain reaction was often set off by
- labour situations (for example, claims for wage increases or payments) which
- resulted in trade union repression and culminated in acts of violence.
- Furthermore, there was a high rate of common delinquency.
- However, there had been some positive changes and those within or outside the
- Government who were promoting these changes should be given support. MINUGUA
- officials hoped that a better organizational response by the State could be
- achieved gradually, since there was a clear willingness on the part of high
- government authorities.
- MINUGUA reported that it also received denunciations of violations of human
- rights, and that it had some power to investigate these denunciations through
- its institutional contacts with the Presidential Commission on Human Rights
- (COPREDEH), the army and the Attorney General's Office; its mandate also
- included the strengthening of institutions, in which it would work closely
- with the Attorney General's Office, and that an agreement would be signed in
- this regard within the coming days. MINUGUA said that it had been very well
- received in the country and expressed its readiness to cooperate with the ILO.
- The mission expressed its sincere thanks for their hospitality and full
- cooperation to Mr. Leonardo Franco and his distinguished collaborators, in
- particular Mrs. Leila Lima, who emphasized the existence of shared concerns
- with the ILO as well as the scope for mutual support.
- Workers' organizations. The mission met with representatives of the trade
- union central organizations, including some of the main federations not
- affiliated to confederations and all those which had made complaints against
- Guatemala to the Committee on Freedom of Association. These organizations
- welcomed the presence of the mission and recognized the ILO's efforts on
- behalf of freedom of association. Their detailed and constructive remarks
- coincided on fundamental aspects, with some differences. The following
- paragraphs describe various approaches reflecting the different trade union
- positions.
- First approach. A trade union official gave a brief historical panorama in an
- attempt to place in context the subject of the violations of human rights of
- trade unionists, especially as regards threats. He said that the trade union
- movement dated back to 1947. When President Arbenz was overthrown, trade
- unions were accused of being communist and attacked. As a result of foreign
- influence mediatized trade unions were set up which, however, subsequently
- redirected their activities towards the pursuit of trade union democracy. From
- 1975 some trade unions were infiltrated by the guerrilla movement, which had
- begun around 1962. As a result, between 1975 and 1982 a policy of selective
- trade union repression was applied against the authentic leaders of the
- movement. As a means of self-defence, the trade union movement established
- links with human rights and other analogous groups.
- This trade union official believed that at present there were no serious
- threats against trade union activity except when it represented a danger to
- specific economic interests. In this connection he mentioned the case of the
- trade unionist, Eddie Conde Lu, General Secretary of the Electricity and
- Energy Workers' Union, a labour leader in that enterprise for almost ten years
- and Secretary responsible for organization of the Confederation of Trade Union
- Unity of Guatemala (CUSG), who had made denunciations. On 8 September 1994, he
- was kidnapped by the four occupants of patrol vehicle No. 405, who were
- wearing the uniform of the national police. He was viciously attacked and
- freed the next day. Another trade unionist who had filmed compromising
- situations with a video camera was also attacked. In the same way, the
- secretary of a sugar workers' trade union was the victim of a physical attack.
- That being said, the trade union official did not know if the "Jaguar of
- Justice" movement, a kind of armed group mentioned in some of the complaints
- and in the press published during the period of the mission in Guatemala,
- actually existed. Neither did he know if any or all of the threats mentioned
- at present were genuine since there was much confusion. Furthermore, the
- climate of violence had changed significantly. Years ago threats made were
- almost always followed by violent acts, whereas today this was not always the
- case. But there continued to be anti-trade union activities and attitudes
- amongst employers, the Ministry of Labour, courts and security bodies, and
- attempts to prevent changes, which would not come about until there was a
- culture of trade union freedom in the country. In the same way, the Attorney
- General was not interested in labour matters.
- As regards possible action concerning the denunciation of violations of human
- rights, he believed that there were cases where perhaps nothing could be done
- or very little, because of the vague nature of the denunciations which was due
- to a large extent to the current situation of insecurity in which the events
- occurred and the fear of reprisals; but there were cases in which the
- Government must act because precise information had been given, as in the
- already mentioned case of Eddie Conde Lu.
- As regards the establishment of trade unions, this was the only subject in
- which real progress had been achieved. On all other matters the situation had
- deteriorated.
- The trade union official reviewed the various aspects of the problem of the
- illegal dismissals of workers protected by trade union immunity and the
- refusal to reinstate them. On the one hand, one practice common amongst
- employers was to open and close down enterprises, and then reopen them in the
- same place or in a different place, changing the name of the enterprise, thus
- making a mockery of workers' rights; this illegal practice should be dealt
- with by the Government in administrative provisions. Another practice was to
- prevent, through dismissals, or threats (Endnote 12) the trade union from
- achieving the necessary membership to oblige the employer to negotiate, since
- trade unionism without collective bargaining was worth nothing. (Endnote 13)
- Furthermore, labour inspectors did nothing to secure the reinstatement of
- workers who had been illegally dismissed; they were supposed to have the
- worker reinstated within 24 hours or automatically request judicial
- proceedings. In a further violation of the law, there were only two
- conciliation and arbitration courts in the entire Republic; (Endnote 14) the
- establishment of such courts was thwarted by the employers' representatives
- and the attitude of judges which was not favourable to the workers. (Endnote
- 15) All these circumstances in practice render null and void the legal
- requirement to order reinstatement within 24 hours. The President of the
- Judicial Department should be requested to give instructions for courts to
- speed up their work, perhaps coupled with a supervision of the courts, with a
- view to ensuring compliance with the law, if necessary through the imposition
- of penal sanctions (30 days' imprisonment) against employers who do not
- reinstate a worker; and conciliation and arbitration courts should be
- integrated into full labour courts. Finally, there was a need to reform the
- law to give powers of sanction to inspectors and to disseminate existing
- standards.
- As regards the possibilities for tripartite dialogue, he said that he was
- ready to participate in this kind of discussion, although he was sceptical and
- requested guarantees from the ILO since serious violations were occurring in
- the country, such as, anti-trade union dismissals, "yellow" trade unions
- controlled by the employer - or coalitions of workers of the same kind
- (Endnote 16) - solidarism and, apart from the fact that there were few courts,
- justice was tainted and biased. The trade union official welcomed the
- establishment of a tripartite committee, or a body for achieving consensus,
- although its objective should not be to try and change the image of the
- country and avoid trade sanctions, which was the main concern of the
- Government, but to establish a genuine kind of dialogue.
- Second approach. In the opinion of the second group of trade union officials,
- the Government had no defined policy; the Ministry of Labour might promote
- freedom of association, but this would not necessarily occur in other
- departments. Thus, for example, the maquila enterprises were established under
- the scheme of the Caribbean Basin Initiative and the Generalized System of
- Preferences (GSP) and they had helped to mitigate the crisis in employment,
- although they enjoyed considerable freedom in disregarding the law, without
- the Ministry of Labour being able to do anything about it. Then there was the
- problem of the lack of legitimacy of the public authorities, given the large
- number of abstentions in the elections. The legislative branch and the
- judiciary were far apart from one another. Furthermore, the Judicial
- Department had taken action against its own trade union.
- As regards violations of freedom of association, there had been a change in
- methods since 1993. Even so, 25 trade unionists died in 1994, six of them in
- the same central organization. The new Human Rights Commissioner had adopted a
- more open attitude on labour matters, appointed officials in this sphere and
- had thus managed to neutralize the Government. It was not really the most
- appropriate body, and the Commissioner did not have any coercive powers,
- although he had played an important role.
- Perhaps the trade union organizations had not made all the denunciations which
- they ought to have made, because of lack of time and resources, and this would
- explain the smaller number of allegations before the Committee on Freedom of
- Association. When there was a violation of human rights, efforts should be
- concentrated on trying to resolve the problem in the enterprise, in the
- courts, or in the street. His strategy was to take the matter to the Ministry
- of Labour, the Labour and Social Insurance Courts and the Human Rights
- Commission. There was no initial recourse to an international body because the
- process was a long one and not always effective. Furthermore, even in this
- case, recourse could be made to other bodies, such as the United States
- Department of Trade under the GSP, or the United Nations Commission on Human
- Rights. An attempt was made to monitor a complaint lodged with the Committee
- on Freedom of Association, although it had not been possible because of the
- large number of violations, concerning which information had been given to
- officials of the United States Commerce Department. Trade union organizations
- recognized that they lacked training to act in international bodies, in
- particular in the ILO, and in this connection they would welcome training
- courses on international labour standards and the respective procedures.
- Finally, they said that the Government appointed on its own initiative the
- trade union representative before the ILO.
- This trade union sector believed that it had been the victim of systematic
- repression since 18 July 1994, because of its attempts to deal with labour and
- other problems. It suggested that there should be greater coherence between
- the work of the ILO and the United Nations, since although the Comprehensive
- Agreement provided protection for freedom of association and against impunity,
- these rights were being constantly violated.
- As regards the establishment of trade unions, the procedure had indeed been
- reduced but not the time required, which still usually took more than 60 days.
- In its own case the process had been under way for more than one year.
- As regards legislative aspects, trade unions believed that the reforms had
- become a kind of straightjacket, because of the lack of enough conciliation
- and arbitration courts and the attitude of the judges. In general, positive
- law was good but rarely applied; there was thus a need to fill the gaps and
- improve its practical application. Finally, the trade unions expressed
- criticism of the action of the General Labour Inspectorate.
- The trade unions believed that the possibility of a tripartite meeting to
- discuss matters related to the mission was positive and suggested that trade
- union participation in this meeting could include a representative of each of
- the existing coordinating bodies: the UASP and the CNUT.
- Third approach. As regards violations of human rights, it could not be said
- that there was a government policy to this end and the methods have varied,
- although the results were equally negative. The main problem was impunity,
- indifference and the fact that the subject was ignored at all levels. Mention
- was made of the assassination of four trade union leaders: Cesareo Chanchave,
- General Secretary of the Pilots' Trade Union; Manuel de Jesus Alonso, Jesus
- Miranda y Jacinto Sanchez del Cid, cases in which there were precise
- denunciations but where no investigation had been carried out or any concrete
- result achieved. In some of these cases the complainant organization even
- indicated the suspected masterminds, but to no avail. As regards the situation
- of Alonso, they spoke with the President of the Republic, the Ministry of
- Defence, the Attorney General of the Republic and the Human Rights
- Commissioner and only the latter ordered an investigation. The Attorney
- General has been very reluctant to deal with labour cases; even worse, some
- prosecutors had participated in manoeuvres to neutralize trade unions, as had
- occurred at the El Arco, Medellín and Bolivia Farms.
- As regards problems of illegal dismissals and the refusal to reinstate
- workers, this trade union sector stated that each time a problem arose they
- took the matter to the labour inspectorate, but they had never been convened
- by the Ministry to any conciliation meeting to discuss obstacles to the
- reinstatements. On the contrary they had seen the General Labour Inspector
- intervene to neutralize trade unions or approve collective agreements with
- defects, in order to lift any existing summons; other times he had acted with
- delay, as in the case of the Medellín Farm, mentioned earlier. These
- situations had helped make this trade union sector sceptical. It had said that
- it was ready to engage in tripartite dialogue, but was mistrustful because its
- desire for dialogue, expressed on various occasions, had always been
- frustrated. If an experiment of this nature were undertaken, the objective
- should be to achieve concrete results through a strategy enabling a process of
- dialogue and regular meetings to be established. They recalled that on 8 April
- 1993 a tripartite agreement on short, medium and long-term objectives had been
- concluded, although it was a dead letter agreement since it was never followed
- up by other meetings. In the same way, the intersectoral negotiations of 1994
- produced some results, which were then blocked later. The Advisory Council of
- the Ministry of Labour in its turn had held only two meetings and seemed to be
- bogged down in lethargy. In the specific case of coffee, the negotiating
- parties reached a comprehensive and complex agreement but after government
- agreement was restricted only to wage increases, the scope of the text was
- limited and further bargaining discouraged. In the light of these negative
- experiences, if the objective were now to achieve something more effective the
- participation mechanism would have to be improved and include ILO
- participation and monitoring. The process should not be started from scratch
- but take advantage of the mechanisms which already existed. They proposed that
- seminars should be devoted to specific topics which would help the
- interlocutors to get to know one another and overcome mistrust and the culture
- of intolerance.
- Fourth approach. Another trade union sector believed that there had been
- progress in human rights in general and a substantial reduction in the number
- of assassinations and threats, although freedom of association was undermined
- by anti-trade union dismissals and the promotion of solidarism. This sector
- said that it preferred to act through dialogue and negotiation by all legal
- means, especially in the context of the globalization of the economy; it
- resorted to direct action only when there was no other solution. It was a
- partisan of trade union unity, which had been sabotaged by some officials who
- held anachronistic views. It also supported tripartism.
- Organization of employers. The mission was received by the Labour Commission
- of the Coordinating Committee of Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial and
- Financial Associations (CASIF). A particularly frank and constructive meeting
- lasting several hours examined questions concerning human rights, the
- establishment of trade unions and problems of anti-trade union discrimination,
- amongst others.
- Human rights According to the representatives of CACIF, armed conflict had
- affected all aspects of life in Guatemala, especially at the social (situation
- of poverty) and labour levels, since guerrilla factions had infiltrated some
- trade unions. The principal topic in the country today was the conflict, which
- was the main source of human rights violations. Employers were fully aware of
- the human rights violations which affected persons of all sectors of society
- and condemned such violations.
- Up until some 12 or 14 years ago, the climate of repression made any meeting
- and dialogue between employers and the labour sector impossible. Today, the
- situation was very different in qualitative terms. The death squadrons no
- longer existed and dialogue was a common feature of relations between
- employers and workers in various conciliation bodies. In this process of
- evolution, labour relations had become more transparent and trade unions had
- developed. The fruit of this new climate was the labour reform, which was
- adopted by consensus. Employers felt the need to participate, along with
- workers, in the adoption of the major decisions in the country, beginning with
- the peace process.
- Referring specifically to the denunciations, the employers said that
- unfortunately - to a large extent due to the war - there were no resources for
- investigations and this was a matter of concern to them. When peace was
- achieved, impunity would be substantially reduced. The present Government was
- one of transition, with many deficiencies and a lack of human resources. To
- give some idea of the situation, they said that they had not been informed of
- the existence of the mission. They believed that the Government should make an
- effort to reply to the Committee on Freedom of Association. They expressed
- their willingness to help in the discussion and resolution of these problems
- and to further the investigations and ensure that the Government replied to
- the complaints from a body which included the presence of the workers. On the
- other hand, however, they believed that denunciation had been used abusively.
- The establishment of trade unions. The CACIF believed that the establishment
- of workers' trade unions should be as free as the establishment of a limited
- company and they had been clear in the support expressed to the GSP bodies
- that they did not oppose the establishment of trade unions. On the contrary,
- the legal reform adopted by consensus tended to speed up this process.
- Protection against anti-union discrimination. As regards the illegal
- dismissals and the refusal to reinstate workers on trade union grounds, they
- said that there was no widespread employer policy in this respect, since they
- were convinced that peace was a good thing for everyone and that peace could
- not be achieved through signatures, but had to be constructed, as was
- proclaimed in the Organization's slogans. But they recognized that employers
- also needed ILO cooperation and in particular training in these and other
- subjects. They also recognized that the problem was a complex one and they
- would ask their legal advisers to study it carefully. Furthermore, without
- wishing to justify any employer behaviour which might be illegal, they pointed
- out that coexistence with serious trade unions which concentrated on labour
- matters was much easier than when the trade union had a marked political
- objective and acted in a radical manner. Some trade unions promoted the
- closing down of factories or public services. Recourse to strikes was
- regulated by the law, but some trade unions distorted its use as an
- "instrument of dialogue". Most of the strikes occurred in the public sector
- and they did not believe that there had been or was usually any repression for
- this reason.
- In discussing possible instruments to prevent acts of anti-union
- discrimination, the representatives of the CACIF told the mission that for a
- number of years they had been working on the preparation of a code of conduct
- to provide their members with guidance on the minimum level of respect of
- workers' rights to be observed by all employers. Of course, it would only be a
- moral instrument, although they were aware of the importance which it would
- have at the internal level and of its repercussions on the international image
- of the employers' movement.
- The employers believed that the lack of effective protection of the
- non-removability of workers was due to the slowness of justice, a widespread
- and well-known feature which affected everyone in Guatemala. But they were
- optimistic and believed that there would be significant changes in the near
- future, once the peace process had been concluded. Furthermore, the Judicial
- Department had already been restructured and the situation had improved. In
- November 1992 the law was amended to speed up the work of the conciliation and
- arbitration courts and employers and workers had already appointed their
- representatives to these courts. Employers had every interest in the
- improvement of the administration of justice in general and as regards labour
- matters in particular.
- Tripartite experience. As a means of improving the labour relations climate
- and exploring effective solutions to the problems raised, the employer
- representatives were ready to participate in a tripartite meeting promoted by
- the mission, which could serve as a basis for a more regular tripartite
- dialogue and contribute to resolving the problems which had led to the
- complaints before the Committee on Freedom of Association.
- In conclusion, the employer representatives were ready to encourage the
- Government to address the denunciations made and to promote a positive
- attitude on the subjects of the complaints, although they expressed their
- concern with respect to those complaints which seemed to be rash. In the same
- way, they expressed their concern, given the present situation of the country,
- at a possible adverse conclusion by the Committee on Freedom of Association
- and its negative repercussions on international trade. Guatemala was, they
- said, experiencing its most important political event of the century, namely
- the process for resolving the internal armed conflict. But peace would have
- difficult consequences, including an increase in social demand. To meet this
- demand, the country required an increasingly efficient economy and appropriate
- levels of investment, which presupposed the possibility of free trade for its
- products, without any obstacles which might give the country a negative
- international image. Being a small country, Guatemala needed international
- trade.
- Tripartite meeting. At the end of its activities, the mission convened a
- tripartite meeting which was attended by the Minister of Labour, an observer
- representative of COPREDEH, representative of CASIF, representatives of the
- CSUG, the CGTG and the National Federation of State Workers of Guatemala
- (FENASTEG). The leaders of the CTC and UNSITRAGUA had also announced their
- intention of attending the meeting, but were not present. The purpose of the
- meeting was to report on the activities carried out by the mission, and some
- of the results obtained and to examine the possibilities of joint action to
- resolve the problems which had led to the complaints and to prevent future
- problems. The meeting offered an opportunity to review past experience in
- tripartite dialogue and expressed the hope that the establishment of a climate
- of trust would allow new experiences to be explored, within the framework of
- the Tripartite Consultation (International Labour Standards) Convention, 1976
- (No. 144), with the participation of the ILO.
- The representative of the workers' organizations referred to the denunciations
- of violations of human rights and freedom of association. They said that
- although perhaps it was no longer possible to do anything or very little about
- events in the past, at least in the future the Ministry of Labour should
- provide effective protection to workers. They said that each sector should
- undertake to participate in the establishment of a climate of tolerance and
- morality, that the Government should undertake a real examination of workers'
- problems and that workers' organizations would have no objection to
- participating in tripartite dialogue, within the framework of Convention No.
- 144, provided that the agenda was comprehensive and conducted under the
- supervision or monitoring of the ILO. The final purpose of tripartite dialogue
- should not be to change the international image of the country, but to address
- in a meaningful way the problems facing the country.
- The representatives of CACIF reiterated some of the positions which they had
- expressed to the mission and said they were ready to participate in any
- committee or working group established within the framework of Convention No.
- 144.
- The Ministry of Labour reiterated the Government's desire to respect freedom
- of association and to examine as efficiently as possible any denunciations
- made. In order to achieve better results in this respect, with the
- participation of workers' and employers' organizations, the Government was
- ready to set up a tripartite committee, within the framework of Convention No.
- 144, ratified by Guatemala, which could also discuss complaints concerning
- freedom of association, denunciations of human rights violations and other
- subjects of interest. The Minister thanked the mission for the efforts made to
- achieve this proposal, although she said that the situation in the country was
- complex and that a certain atmosphere of mistrust and suspicion was still an
- obstacle to tripartite dialogue. At all events, she said that she would do
- everything possible to set up in the near future a tripartite committee on a
- solid basis and not merely to comply with a formal requirement, and she hoped
- she could count on ILO cooperation in this respect. To this end, she would
- send out the respective convocations in the coming weeks. Within the same
- spirit of dialogue, the Minister announced the convening of the Advisory
- Council of the Ministry of Labour in the near future.
- The mission believed that the tripartite nature of this meeting was of great
- significance in the present situation of Guatemala. On the one hand it was a
- valuable example of the exchange which could occur between the social partners
- and of the way such an exchange could be directed towards the future if it
- were properly oriented and resulted in concrete and positive action. At the
- same time, it highlighted the burden which had been left by adverse situations
- and frustrated dialogue. All the social partners now required positive
- experiences and the workers' organizations needed guarantees that human rights
- and freedom of association would be respected. On these bases, a climate of
- mutual confidence and trust could be created and consolidated. The ILO could
- play a major role in the strengthening of this climate of confidence because
- of the reputation it enjoys amongst the social partners.
- The intense and successive series of meetings with high authorities,
- technicians of the administration, representatives of workers' organizations
- and CACIF and officials of the verification mission of the United Nations
- Mission for the Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA) was an
- extremely positive and valuable experience for the mission in allowing it to
- understand gradually the nature and scope of the problems pending before the
- Committee on Freedom of Association, as well as the capacity for response by
- the Government and non-governmental authorities, in the conditions which the
- country is experiencing. Their testimony, along with the large volume of
- documentation provided to us, will now allow us to examine the different
- aspects of the complaints.
- III. Information on the allegations obtained during the mission
- The allegations made in the six complaints comprise two main spheres: (Endnote
- 17) violations of the basic human rights of trade union officials and
- activists and serious violations of freedom of association in the following
- form:
- (1) Attacks against trade union officials and activists: murders,
- disappearances, kidnappings, acts of physical aggression and threats.
- (2) Obstacles to workers' trade union organizations.
- (3) Acts of anti-union discrimination.
- (4) Violations of collective bargaining.
- The purpose of this second part is to examine the information received on the
- different allegations. However, some preliminary remarks must first be made on
- the present situation in Guatemala, where the political and social process
- under way has some special characteristics.
- The present situation of Guatemala (Endnote 18)
- The long war and the laborious search for firm and lasting peace within a
- climate of violence characterize the present situation in Guatemala at all
- levels. More than 30 years of armed conflict have created a way of life in a
- society where peace is now imminent but where poverty and tensions themselves
- pose a threat of creating a "spontaneous and uncontrolled social explosion".
- (Endnote 19)
- In the dramatic situation which it has experienced, after a series of coup
- d'état, the country has nevertheless made an extraordinary effort to ensure
- the organization of the State and the functioning of its institutions, in a
- process not devoid of paradox. The 1985 Constitution, "promulgated during the
- transition from an extremely harsh authoritarian Government to one of
- democratic principles" is centred on the concern for guaranteeing human
- rights, enshrined in the Preamble itself, and the privileged status given to
- political parties and the establishment of three new institutions: the Supreme
- Electoral Court, the Constitutional Court, and the Human Rights Commission, a
- body which is established for the first time in Latin America, under the
- direct influence of the figure of the Ombudsman. (Endnote 20) It also
- establishes, in separate form, the offices of the Attorney General of the
- Republic and Head of the Public Ministry, and the Public Prosecutor of the
- Republic. The Constitution contains an important list of individual, social
- and political rights, including the right to life, meeting and demonstration,
- association, the right to work, and to a series of minimum social rights which
- must be enshrined in labour legislation, including the right to freedom of
- association of workers and the rights to strike and work stoppages. The
- Constitution establishes the freedom and equality of all human beings, freedom
- of action, the inviolability of a person's home, of correspondence, documents
- and books, and freedom of expression of thought. In the same way, it
- establishes guarantees against illegal arrest and on behalf of the rights of
- prisoners, the right to a defence, the presumption of innocence, the public
- nature of trials and the principle of egality.
- As regards the functioning of institutions, the amount of legitimacy of the
- authorities is a necessary theme in Guatemala and a source of concern, because
- of the very high rate of abstentionism in elections. The constitutional
- reforms were approved on 30 January 1994, in a popular vote, by 70 per cent of
- the voters, but the abstention rate was 85 per cent. In the same way, in the
- parliamentary elections of 14 August 1994, the abstention rate was 80.5 per
- cent. (Endnote 21) The mandate of the President runs only from 5 June 1993 to
- 16 January 1996. There are however a number of surprising aspects. The present
- authorities, far from limiting themselves to only administrative activities,
- are immersed in a process of adopting fundamental decisions, accepted by the
- people, on such matters as the negotiation of a peace settlement, the drafting
- of major legislation, or the intense exercise of administrative activities,
- with major changes in the traditional public administration, and creative work
- in the new state institutions, despite the dangers which face them. "The
- success of the conclusion of the Comprehensive Agreement on human rights, of
- 29 March 1994, was tarnished by the brutal assassination of Licenciado
- Epaminondas Gonzalez Dubon, President of the Constitutional Court, who had
- maintained a firm and resolute response to the coup of 25 May 1993"; at the
- same time, rumours of a coup d'état were circulating in Guatemala and there
- was talk of an attempt to assassinate the President of the Republic on 30 June
- 1994, the date of the national holiday. (Endnote 22) Secondly, although there
- is emphasis on the lack of the electoral legitimacy of the authorities, the
- fact that the constitutional principle has been maintained in the difficult
- circumstances of the transition from an authoritarian regime to a democratic
- regime, particularly in the situation created by the most recent coup d'état
- attempt, is justifiably considered as a major collective achievement. In this
- respect, it is significant that there has been no rupture in Guatemala but
- rather a gradual process, which has nevertheless included some very important
- events.
- As regards the situation of human rights in Guatemala, the independent expert,
- Monica Pinto, identifies five key features: (1) the armed conflict and the
- peace process, which include various important agreements, such as the
- above-mentioned Comprehensive Agreement on human rights, the activity of the
- Assembly of Civil Sectors, the presence of the United Nations Verification
- Mission and the current difficulties in the continuation of negotiations; (2)
- the militarization of Guatemalan society and its repercussions; (3) the
- escalation of social violence in 1994; (4) the situation of extreme widespread
- poverty, with an unjust distribution of wealth; and (5) the indigenous
- majority (approximately 59 per cent of the population) whose claims, according
- to the author, include the constitutional recognition of the existence of four
- peoples in the country: the Mayas, the Xincas, the Garifonas and the Ladinos,
- with appropriate political expressions.
- The Human Rights Commission maintains that the human rights situation is not
- encouraging. As in the previous year, there is a persistent lack of respect
- for the life, dignity, integrity and security of persons. There has been a
- continuation of the sporadic harassment of institutions which protect human
- right, which is tending to create a climate of fear based on uncontrolled
- intimidation. (Endnote 23) Furthermore, the Pinto report, using the report of
- the Human Rights Commissioner, refers to cases of the forced disappearance of
- persons, summary executions, tortures and other forms of cruel, inhuman or
- degrading treatment, threats and political repression, amongst other excesses.
- As regards the threats made against human rights activists, trade unionists,
- journalists, university students and judges, Ms. Pinto points out that "from
- August (1994), notes signed the Jaguar of Justice', began to appear which
- announced the decision to execute different figures". (Endnote 24) The
- violations are serious and coincide with some of those mentioned in the
- complaints. Furthermore, both reports refer to the death of Herman de Leon
- Parejon, a leader of the Trade Union of Workers of Quetzaltenango, mentioned
- in Cases Nos. 1512 and 1539; the report of the Commissioner also refers to the
- death of the trade unionist Noé Pérez Acevedo, killed by a soldier; and the
- Pinto report mentions the case of the trade unionist, Gilberto Moral Caan,
- arrested by the army in Alta Verapaz in April 1994, similarly, during the
- presence of the mission in Guatemala and a few days after, the press reported
- violent events, such as those mentioned in the above-mentioned reports.
- (Endnote 25)
- One of the most dramatic elements of the situation in Guatemala which was
- raised in many conversations and mentioned in important documents is that of
- impunity. The Comprehensive Agreement establishes in point 3 a solemn
- undertaking against impunity, whereby the Government assumes the task of
- promoting legislative reform to classify as offences of special seriousness
- forced or involuntary disappearance, as well as summary or extra-judicial
- executions, and their international recognition as crimes against humanity. In
- his report the Human Rights Commissioner, in referring to the threats, forced
- disappearances, summary executions and tortures, states: "... and it is very
- difficult, and in most cases impossible, to establish the origins of these
- actions (...). Very many cases have not been clarified". (Endnote 26) Ms.
- Pinto also speaks of a situation of "widespread impunity". (Endnote 27)
- However, it is important to take account also of several concurrent aspects
- concerning the violations of human rights. The high state authorities
- responsible for the vigilance of human rights are extremely concerned about
- the frequency and seriousness of the violations, which occur despite their
- efforts to prevent them, and believe that the situation as compared with ten
- years ago is favourable, although progress now has become slow and difficult.
- Secondly, the Human Rights Commission is carrying out a useful and interesting
- organizational work on the compilation of a register of denunciations and
- proceedings carried out, by type of right violated and department, which will
- provide a kind of X-ray of the human rights situation; of course, the figures
- reveal different situations according to the departments, perhaps due to
- differences in the levels of tension and unrest, or deficiencies in
- registration in some departments. Thirdly, the number of denunciations made to
- the Commissioner rose considerably in 1994, which indicates a greater
- awareness of this means of redress and perhaps greater confidence by the
- population, although some of these denunciations (1,806 out of a total of
- 13,431) were not within the competence of the Commission. Furthermore, there
- has been a marked increase in the number of bodies which receive denunciations
- of human rights violations.
- The previous paragraphs give some idea of the very complex situation in
- Guatemala concerning the war and the efforts being made to achieve peace.
- There have been important achievements in the search for a more complete state
- organization, in the context of a transition regime and a climate of poverty;
- and although there is a continued policy to promote human rights, this has not
- prevented many serious violations, many of which remain unpunished. However,
- there is the prospect that state action will become increasingly firm with the
- support, in the human rights field, of the United Nations Mission for the
- Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA). It is in this context
- that the allegations made against Guatemala to the Committee on Freedom of
- Association, especially those concerning violations of the basic rights of
- trade unionists, should be examined.
- Allegations of violence against the basic rights of trade unionists
- The complaints against Guatemala contain allegations on a large number of
- murders, acts of aggression, kidnappings, illegal arrests and death threats
- against more than 150 trade union officials or trade unionists, in addition to
- allegations concerning groups of an unknown number of workers. In reply to
- these allegations, the Government provided reports of the Attorney General of
- the Republic concerning 13 of the persons mentioned in the complaints. A
- possible author is identified in the only case which states that the
- assassination had no relationship with a trade union situation.
- The replies provided by the Public Ministry are as follows. (Endnote 28)
- (a) Murders
- I. (1) Carlos Enrique Cardenas Sagastume: kidnapped on 16 June 1991, on
- leaving the Centre of Military Studies. His body was found in the vehicle of
- Major Cardenas. Case initiated ex officio by COPREDEH. The Ministry of Defence
- stated that inquiries were being carried out, without leads having yet been
- established. The case is before the Criminal Court of the First Instance,
- which did not call upon the Attorney General.
- (10) Dinora Gossep Pérez Valdez: murdered on 29 April 1991, with multiple
- bullet wounds. Case before the Seventh Penal Court of the First Instance, No.
- 986-91, for homicide. There are no leads.
- (11) Oscar Oswaldo Luna Aceituno: murdered outside his home on 26 June 1991 by
- two armed men. Case before the Sixth Penal Investigation Court of the First
- Instance. The last report is dated 23 August 1991. There is no evidence
- permitting the authors of the murder to be identified.
- (12) Federico Tay Osorio: case before the Second Penal Investigation Court of
- the First Instance of the Department of Quiché, Case No. 849-91, concerning
- which the Public Ministry requested on 10 July 1991 that inquiries be carried
- out. No persons have been charged with this murder.
- (13) Federico Tay Vicente: case examined along with that of Mr. Federico Tay
- Osorio.
- (19) German Alfredo de Leon Parajon: kidnapped on 1 July 1994, by persons
- unknown, in the department of Quetzaltenango. Found assassinated on 9 July
- 1994 in a town in Solola. The matter continues to be under investigation by
- the Public Ministry of the Department of Solola.
- - Concerning this case, the Human Rights Commissioner issued a detailed
- statement, on 5 September 1994, in which the dates of the events do not
- coincide with those given by the Public Ministry; the former concludes that
- there was participation by two members of the national police according to
- statements by eyewitnesses, states that the case is before the Court of the
- First Instance of the Department of Solola and that there was a violation of
- human rights for which the State of Guatemala if responsible. (Endnote 29)
- (20) Manuel de Jesus Alonso: on 24 October 1994 entered the emergency
- department of the hospital of the Guatemalan Social Security Institute (IGSS),
- transported from the Colonia de Repegua de Santo Tomas de Castilla in a
- vehicle of the voluntary fire brigade. The case is identified with the No.
- 1823-94-E-2 and was initiated by order of the national police 3156, dated 25
- October 1994, according to the Public Ministry of the Department of Izabal. It
- also indicates the inquiries carried out, which led to the identification of a
- rented vehicle with registration plates A-4634. Mention is also made of the
- Governor of Izabal, Orlando de Jesus Cabrera; the Municipal Mayor of Puerto
- Barrios, David Pineda Acevedo and Carlos Ical, Abelardo Cacao, Romeo Aroldo
- Lima and Doris Bladimiro Lima, but without explaining why (the communication
- is in response to a questionnaire, the text of which would clarify the meaning
- of these references, but which is not included).
- II. (18) René Cabrera Estrada: after receiving threats, he was ultimately
- murdered on 18 August 1994. Evidence suggests that the author was Elmer Lopez
- Ortiz, who apparently had personal problems with the victim.
- (b) Acts of aggression and threats
- II. (14) Mauricio Raxcaco Enriquez: on 19 August 1991 he was beaten and
- threatened by four men dressed in civilian clothes, who were travelling in a
- white vehicle. As a result of the constant threats, Mr. Raxcaco left the
- country in August 1991.
- (c) Threats
- III. (9) Amilcar Mendez: threatened with death on several occasions, by
- telephone, most recently on 24 December 1994, accused of being a member of the
- URNG. Case reported to COPREDEH.
- (14) Armando Sanchez: on 3 January 1995 he was requested to present himself to
- the Attorney General's Office to formalize his denunciation of threats
- received in October 1994 from the "Jaguar of Justice" movement, but has not
- yet appeared.
- (20) José Gil: allegedly threatened in his house with death in May 1994 by
- armed men. COPREDEH was informed of the case in December 1994 and referred the
- matter to the Public Ministry and the Directorate General of the National
- Police.
- (21) Débora Guzman: wife of Mr. Felix Gonzalez y Gonzalez, Secretary of labour
- disputes of the Trade Unions of Workers of the Lunafil factory; she was
- arrested, assaulted and threatened on 6 October 1994, in a street of
- Amatitlan, COPREDEH, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, received the
- denunciation and proceeded to coordinate investigations with the Office of the
- Attorney General of the Republic and the Directorate General of the National
- Police.
- The Government emphasized the difficulty facing the authorities in locating
- the respective files, where they indeed exist, because of the dates of the
- events which resulted in the complaints and the reluctance of the complainants
- to collaborate by indicating the respective dates and providing information.
- The difficulty is even greater as regards denunciations prior to 5 June 1993,
- when President Ramiro de Léon Carpio took office, and which account for the
- majority.
- Similarly, the Attorney General of the Republic pointed out that until July
- 1994 the responsibility for investigating punishable offences was that of the
- judges and that it is only since the introduction of the new Code of Penal
- Procedure that this responsibility has been transferred to the Public
- Ministry, a situation which makes it more difficult for his Office to carry
- out inquiries on events which occurred before that date. Even so, given the
- presence of the mission, a special effort was made to obtain information from
- the courts, COPREDEH, the files of the Attorney General's Office and the
- complainants were asked to cooperate by providing additional details on their
- allegations, as regards, names, places, dates and any other matters. The
- information obtained marked a step forward, but as stated earlier, the
- Attorney General told the mission that a new effort would be made to
- investigate the denunciations which remained pending.
- Given the likelihood that little information would be obtained on the
- allegations in question, the mission examined with different authorities the
- possible ways of strengthening the procedure for investigating new
- denunciations. One of the existing difficulties is that, in accordance with
- the usual procedure, the allegations contained in a complaint are only
- communicated by the ILO to the Ministry of Labour and Social Insurance, which
- of course has no competence in penal matters. The other authorities are not
- informed, and neither are the employers' or workers' organizations, except the
- complainant. It would be desirable in this connection that, when the Ministry
- receives from the ILO the text of the complaint containing allegations on
- punishable acts, it should be communicated to the competent national
- authorities responsible for investigation, i.e. COPREDEH, the Ministry of
- Government and the national police, amongst others, as regards the Government;
- the Human Rights Commissioner, the Attorney General of the Republic and the
- Public Prosecutor of the Republic, as regards non-governmental authorities. To
- this end, as noted earlier, the President of COPREDEH told the mission that he
- had set up a liaison committee which included representatives of some of these
- authorities, to monitor denunciations which might be related to freedom of
- association.
- Secondly, an analysis was made of the possibility of establishing more fluid
- communication between the Public Ministry and the trade union organizations.
- The idea was suggested of a meeting between the Attorney General and the trade
- union organizations, with the participation of the United Nations for the
- Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA), and the Attorney General
- proposed the convening of a meeting of a working group made up of
- representatives of trade union organizations, the unit responsible for the
- defence of human rights and MINUGUA, to examine specific cases and improve the
- work of the Attorney General's Office in the investigation of denunciations.
- The presence of MINUGUA in this work could be very useful, because of its
- willingness and commitment to work towards the strengthening of the Attorney
- General's Office and the priority which it gives to the protection to the
- right of association.
- Thirdly, the possibility was raised within the framework of the Tripartite
- Consultation (International Labour Standards) Convention, 1976 (No. 144), of
- the establishment of a tripartite commission which could, amongst other
- matters, examine complaints made and encourage the investigation of
- denunciations, it being understood that this activity is the sole
- responsibility of the State, and provided that the social partners and the
- Government are in agreement with such a proposal.
- Allegations of violations of freedom of association
- The complaints also contain allegations on: (a) obstacles to trade union
- organization; (b) acts of anti-union discrimination; and (c) violations of
- collective bargaining. The Government has provided ample information on these
- kinds of allegations, the content of which must be examined by the Committee
- on Freedom of Association.
- (a) Obstacles to trade union organizations: concerning their establishment,
- free election of officers and free exercise of activities; and as regards
- their dissolution:
- (1) Trade Union of Workers of the Ministry of Government: the recognition
- process is in the final stage after the trade union fulfilled all the legal
- requirements.
- (2) Trade Union of the National Front of Street Vendors: legal personality was
- granted on 12 August 1993 and registered in the Public Register of Trade
- Unions. Case closed.
- (3) Trade Union of Customs Workers: legal personality was granted on 5 August
- 1993 and registered in the respective register. Case closed.
- (4) Trade Union of Workers of the Guatemalan Red Cross: the body ceased to
- exist due to financial reasons. Thus it is not true that the trade union was
- neutralized or abolished.
- (5) Trade Union of Workers of the Secretariat of Social Welfare: because of
- irregularities in the elections, the new executive members were not
- registered; it was resolved to authorize the last registered executive
- committee to convene new elections which, it appears, have not yet been held.
- (6) Trade Union of Workers of the State Enterprises of Puerto Quetzal: legal
- personality was granted on 30 October 1990 and registered in the respective
- register. Case closed.
- (7) Trade Union of Workers of the General Directorate of Forestry Commission
- (DIGEBOS): legal personality was granted in 1992 and registered in the
- respective register. Case closed.
- (8) Trade Union of Workers of the La Mariposa bottling enterprise: legal
- personality was granted on 28 September 1993 and registered in the respective
- register on 1 October 1993. A collective agreement was signed before the trade
- union obtained its legal personality. Subsequently, a collective agreement on
- working conditions was concluded, the negotiation of which began on 6
- September 1994 by the direct method and ended on 13 October the same year. It
- was approved by the Ministry of Labour on 20 December 1994, and came into
- force as from 14 October 1994 for a period of two years. The approval of the
- Ministry made reservations about two clauses which it considered contrary to
- the workers' interests. A discretionary remedy was lodged which is currently
- pending. There are no denunciations concerning the other allegations, but
- since they concern violations of human rights the Attorney General's Office
- was requested to carry out the respective investigations.
- (9) Workers of the Manufacturera Integridad S.A., Koram S.A., Bocco & Cia.
- Ltda, Disenos Panamericanos, Confecciones Isabel S.A., Transporte Urbano
- Union, Bolivar, EGA, La Fe and La Morena enterprises: no request has been made
- for the registration of trade unions of workers of these enterprises.
- (10) Trade Union of Workers of the Hotel Ritz Continental: the General
- Directorate of Labour found defects in the documents appended to the request
- for the dissolution of the trade union and convened the representatives of the
- latter for their correction. They have not presented themselves and thus no
- action has been taken on the dissolution.
- (b) Acts of anti-union discrimination:
- (1) La Torre farm: dismissal of 29 workers to neutralize their trade union.
- Previous report ratified. Case closed.
- (2) Banco Metropolitan: dismissal of 60 workers who were members of the trade
- union. Previous report ratified. The only record in the General Labour
- Inspectorate concerns the claim for payment of financial compensation made by
- Mr. Abner Jesus Hernandez.
- (3) CAVISA glass factory: violent police repression of striking workers.
- Ratification of previous report. As regards the alleged acts of violent
- repression, it is reported in the General Labour Inspectorate that the
- accusations concerning acts of abuse, violence and sabotage were both
- reciprocal and many, although none of the parties presented evidence. An
- inquiry has been started in the courts of justice to establish whether
- denunciations were made.
- (4) Trade Union of Workers of the Puerto Quetzal State enterprise: refusal to
- reinstate the General Secretary, Mr. Ruben Terry Amézquita. Previous report
- reconfirmed.
- (5) Establishment of solidarist associations to the detriment of the trade
- unions of the Distribuidora del Sur Occidente and Compania Duralita
- enterprises. In the first case there is no indication in the records of the
- General Directorate of Labour of any procedure for the granting of legal
- personality to the trade union in the Sur Occidente enterprise. The trade
- union of workers in Duralita enterprise obtained its legal personality and was
- registered in the Public Register of Trade Unions on 14 January 1980. The
- mandate of the last executive committee expired on 19 September 1990. The
- complainants are requested to specify the exact nature of the infringement of
- their rights and to give details of names and dates.
- (6) Trade Union of Workers of the Forestry Commission: dismissal of 21 members
- who were workers of the trade union. Previous report reconfirmed.
- (7) Trade Union of Workers of the Municipality of Cuyotenango, Department of
- Suchitepéquez, campaign of intimidation against its members. The General
- Labour Inspectorate reports that it has received no denunciation.
- (8) Trade Union of the Municipality of Malacatan: dismissal of 30 employees.
- The General Labour Inspectorate reports that it has received no denunciation.
- (9) Town of Esquipulas: dismissal of 30 employees who promoted the
- establishment of a trade union. The General Labour Inspectorate reports that
- it has received no denunciation.
- (10) Various towns: dismissals. The complainant organizations are requested to
- give more details so that the complaints can be examined.
- (11) Trade union organization in various farms in the country: persecution of
- workers who are members of these organization. The complainant organizations
- are requested to give more details so that the complaints can be examined.
- (12) The La Abundancia farm, owned by the Metropolitan Investment Corporation:
- anti-union dismissal of 29 workers. Following the intervention of the General
- Labour Inspectorate extra-judicial settlement was achieved; the workers
- received land in payment for their work; indeed, after the agreement was
- signed, the workers continued working on the farm for a further 80 days and
- received their wages and other benefits.
- (13) Municipality of Palin: dismissal of 65 workers who were members of the
- trade union of the said municipality. Despite the intervention of the First
- Deputy Minister of Labour and the Deputy Inspector General, there was no
- conciliation. The workers took legal action, which resulted in the
- authorization of these dismissals.
- (14) Bakers' Trade Union: dismissal of the Secretary General and refusal to
- notify his trade union immunity to the employer. This is a trade union
- association whose members work in different enterprises. The records of the
- General Labour Inspectorate contain no report of any denunciation. It should
- be noted that the name of the person concerned is not given.
- (15) Trade Union of Shipping Workers: dismissal of the members of the
- executive committee and more than 20 workers. Confirmation of the previous
- report, with the addition that the General Labour Inspectorate has no record
- of any denunciation concerning the alleged dismissals.
- (16) Trade Union of Workers of the Imperial Food Products S.A. enterprise:
- dismissal of several workers who promoted the establishment of the trade
- union. The General Labour Inspectorate reports that it has no record of a
- denunciation. In a recent routine inspection carried out by both the employers
- and workers it was found that the collective agreement on conditions of work
- has been in force for six years, that there has never been any violation of
- the agreement and that the problems have been resolved by the direct method.
- (Endnote 30)
- (17) Trade Union of Workers of the Corporacion Textil Internacional S.A.
- (CORTEX) enterprise: dismissals, death threats, following a summons served on
- the enterprise. A social and economic dispute is currently before the
- competent court.
- (18) Trade Union of the ESDEE enterprise of Guatemala S.A. (SINTEGSA):
- dismissals, death threats, terminations of contracts, setting up of shock
- units, forging of signatures. The enterprise closed its operations in 1994
- and, following the intervention of the General Labour Inspectorate, wages and
- labour benefits were paid to all workers.
- (19) Trade Union of Disenos y Maquilas S.A. enterprise: illegal dismissals,
- physical assaults on workers, promotion of a trade union sympathetic to the
- enterprise. There are two trade unions in this enterprise: the Trabajadores en
- Disenos y Maquilas S.A. trade union and the Laborantes de Disenos y Maquilas
- S.A. trade union and both are registered in the labour register. The
- complaints cannot be adequately addressed because of the lack of clarity
- concerning the events denounced. The complainants are requested to provide
- more information.
- (20) Trade Union of Municipal Workers of Coban, department of Alta Verapaz:
- dismissal, temporary abduction of the Secretary General. On 20 February 1995,
- following the recommendation of the General Directorate of Labour, the file
- was transferred to the Ministerial Office for the issue of the respective
- resolution granting legal personality to the trade union. The General Labour
- Inspectorate reports that it has no record of any denunciation concerning
- dismissals or the temporary abduction of the Secretary General.
- (21) Trade Union of Workers of the Municipality of Santa Cruz Verapaz:
- dismissal of most of the trade union members and refusal to comply with a
- judicial order for their reinstatement. The legal personality of the trade
- union was recognized and it was registered in the respective register. The
- disputes which arose were resolved with the mediation of the General Labour
- Inspectorate and other public officials. (Endnote 31)
- (22) COCAPSA, San Gregorio, Piedra Parada farm, in the district of Coatepeque,
- Quetzaltenango: unlawful and mass dismissal of 310 workers at the Agronomo
- Pecuaria Company (San Gregorio, Piedra Parada farm), court order for their
- reinstatement and refusal by the enterprise. Following intervention by the
- Public Prosecutor of the Republic, the parties reached a compromise which was
- implemented to the entire satisfaction of the workers under the supervision of
- the General Labour Inspectorate. Case closed. (Endnote 32) In a document
- handed to the mission, UNSITRAGUA recognizes that wages have been paid, but
- reiterates that the enterprise has not carried out the order for the
- reinstatement of the dismissed workers.
- (23) Women workers at the M.J.S.A., and L&L S.A. enterprise: abuses, changes
- in working conditions, moral and physical ill-treatment, illegal dismissals.
- Denunciations were received in the General Labour Inspectorate and several
- infringements of the law were corroborated, resulting in the following
- punitive judgements: M.J.S.A.: Nos. 400-94 and 836-94; L&L S.A.: Nos. 51-94
- and 194-94, all before the Sixth Labour and Social Insurance Court.
- (24) ESDEE de Guatemala S.A.: reprisals against trade union leaders and
- members, illegal closure of the enterprise, refusal to engage in collective
- bargaining, promotion of an organization with staff in positions of trust,
- refusal to allow the trade union leader Pilar Cifuentes Aguilar to enter the
- enterprise and dismissal of the General Secretary of the trade union,
- dismissal of all the workers, acts of physical aggression against the trade
- unionists. See reply above.
- (25) Este Oeste S.A.: destruction of the branch office of the Trade Union of
- Workers of the Textile Industry (STIC) through the mass dismissal of workers,
- the closing down and transfer of the enterprise, partial payment of benefits,
- failure to carry out the pay agreement. The enterprise transferred its
- installations to a place outside the urban perimeter of the city. The workers
- claimed that this was a manoeuvre to destroy its trade union organization.
- However, a transfer of this nature is not prohibited by the law. With the
- intervention of the General Labour Inspectorate an agreement was reached on
- the payment of all wages and benefits to the workers.
- (26) Unicasa S.A. and Welly S.A., both "maquila" enterprises: reprisals
- against the workers through unnecessary suspensions of work, dismissals,
- raising productivity targets, very poor working conditions, with the sole
- object of dismantling the Trade Union of Workers in the Textile Industry. The
- labour situation of workers in the maquila enterprises is subhuman; they are
- treated as mere slaves and are not granted time off to undergo medical
- consultations at the Guatemala Social Security Institute (IGSS). After
- receiving denunciations, the General Labour Inspectorate intervened and after
- corroborating the situation took the following punitive action: Nos. 232-94
- and 169-94 against Unicasa S.A. and 183-94 against Welly S.A., in the Sixth
- Labour and Social Insurance Court.
- (27) Santa Anita farm, owned by Agropecuria Santa Anita S.A., in the district
- of San Miguel Pochuta, department of Chimaltenango: dismissal of 42 members of
- the Trade Union of Workers of this farm, following the irregular cancellation
- of the warnings issued by the Second Court of the First Instance of
- Chimaltenango; the notification of the judicial measure was backdated, which
- prevented the workers from appealing, i.e. they were denied their right to
- defend themselves. On the day of the notification, all the workers were
- dismissed. Their request for reinstatement was declared unreceivable. The
- administrative appeals procedure has been exhausted and the case is now before
- the Second Court of the First Instance of Chimaltenango. In a document dated
- 10 February 1995, the CGTG repeats its allegation and refers to a series of
- labour rights which are not respected on this and other farms.
- (28) The Nueva California farm, owned by Agropecuaria Immobiliaria Miramar
- S.A., in the district of San Miguel Pochuta, department of Chimaltenango:
- fruitless attempt to summon the employer to engage in collective bargaining,
- dismissal of 40 workers who were members of the trade union of workers of the
- Nueva California farm, refusal to reinstate them. Following the receipt of new
- denunciations, the General Labour Inspectorate intervened and issued awards
- Nos. 6 and 18 of the year 1994. Subsequently the case was brought before the
- Second Court of the First Instance in Chimaltenango.
- (29) The El Salto farm, owned by the Plantacion San Carlos S.A., in the
- district of San Miguel Pochuta, department of Chimaltenango: dismissal of 80
- founding members of the trade union of workers of the San Carlos and El Salto
- farms, with an application for reinstatement pending. This is not a case of
- dismissal but of a collective suspension. Following the intervention of the
- General Labour Inspectorate, a pay agreement was signed in October 1994, but
- the question of the job stability of the workers has been placed before the
- competent courts of justice.
- (30) The Bolivia farm, owned by Agropecuaria Bolivia S.A., in the district of
- Chicacao, department of Suchicatepéquez: dismissal of 102 founding members of
- the trade union of workers of this farm, despite their right to non-removal,
- and refusal to reinstate. With the intervention of the General Labour
- Inspectorate an attempt was made to achieve conciliation: the employer offered
- to pay all the labour benefits, buy land for housing and building materials
- and provide transport, but the offer was not accepted by the workers. The
- administrative appeals procedure has thus been exhausted and the way is now
- open to legal proceedings.
- (31) The Los Angeles farm, owned by Agropecuaria Los Angeles S.A.: dismissal
- of 26 workers, despite the existence of a court order for their reinstatement,
- and harsh reprisals (wage reductions of up to 50 per cent, increased number of
- tasks, withholding of pay and non-payment of other benefits) to force workers
- to abandon the farms, thus infringing the right to freedom of association and
- collective bargaining. Following the intervention of the General Labour
- Inspectorate, an agreement on working conditions was signed on 9 October 1994.
- (32) The La Argentina farm, belonging to Don Juan Dietrich Oltmann Niemann
- Enge, in the district of Chicacao, department of Suchitepéquez: failure to pay
- wages, attempt to dismiss 28 workers, whose reinstatement was achieved in
- exchange for an agreement not to claim wages not paid during the period of
- dismissal. The General Labour Inspectorate has no record of any denunciation
- in this respect.
- (33) The Medellin farm, owned by Agropecuaria Abal S.A., in the district of
- Chicacao, department of Suchitepéquez: irregular cancellation of warnings not
- to dismiss workers, mass dismissal of all trade unionists (a total of 60) and
- destruction of the trade union; legal proceedings under way. Following receipt
- of the denunciation, the General Labour Inspectorate intervened in an attempt
- to provide conciliation for the settlement of the dispute, but the parties
- refused, thus concluding the administrative complaints procedure and reserved
- the right to take the matter to the courts. In a document delivered to the
- mission, the CGTG comments on this situation: Carlos Miguel Abascal, the owner
- of the farm, dismissed 29 trade unionists 11 months ago, to whom he owes an
- average of 85,000 quetzalas in respect of outstanding wages, and initiated a
- process to evict the workers, a manoeuvre in which the General Labour
- Inspector has participated.
- (34) Ministry of Urban and Rural Development: of the 830 members of the union,
- there remain only 30 as a result of the mass dismissal of workers under the
- structural adjustment programme, without any respect by the government
- authorities of the right of workers to organize freely, or the warnings issued
- by the labour judge examining a collective dispute of a socio-economic nature
- as a result of which the Ministry had been summoned not to dismiss any worker.
- For budgetary reasons this Ministry was suppressed. All the workers received
- the payment of their wages.
- (35) Municipality of El Estor, department of Izabal: dismissal of 20 workers
- who promoted a trade union, doubts about the due application of the law by the
- Court of Appeals which is examining the case. The trade union was granted
- legal personality on 19 May 1994. The doubts about the due application of
- justice fall within the competence of the Supreme Court, to which the text of
- the complaint has been transmitted.
- (36) National police: transfer of three members of the ad hoc committee for
- the establishment of the trade union, as a measure of reprisal. The General
- Labour Inspectorate has no record of any denunciation in this respect.
- (37) Surveillance of the UITA premises by unknown individuals. A request has
- been made to the Attorney General of the Republic to carry out investigations.
- (38) Trade Union of Workers of the La Mairposa bottling enterprise: harassment
- and persecution of trade unionists, including pressure to force three members
- of the Executive Committee to resign in September 1993. See reply above.
- (39) Peasants of the La Patria Farm Trade Union of Workers: having taken note
- that the trade union and the enterprise had reached an agreement which
- included the reinstatement of the dismissed workers, the Committee had
- requested a copy of this agreement and information on whether the workers had
- actually been reinstated in their workplaces. No reply received.
- (40) El Trapichito and El Naranjo farms: inquiry requested on possible
- anti-union dismissals and if corroborated, the reinstatement of the workers; a
- request was also made to the Government to keep the Committee informed in this
- respect. No reply received.
- (41) Trade Union of Workers of the San Juan de Dios Hospital: information
- requested on the outcome of the judicial proceedings concerning the dismissal
- of several members of the Executive Committee and on the allegation that the
- director of the hospital refused to respect the decision of the Deputy
- Minister of Health concerning the reinstatement of the dismissed trade union
- officials, since it was allegedly made conditional on the imposition of a
- sanction of suspension from work for 30 days without salary and the transfer
- to other health-care centres in the provinces. On this point, on which the
- Government did not reply, and as regards the situation in the above-mentioned
- hospital, see above.
- (c) Violations of collective bargaining:
- (1) The Operadora de Empresa S.A. enterprise, owner of the El Dorado hotel:
- violation of the collective agreement signed by the trade union of this hotel
- and other activities comprising the same economic unit, particularly as
- regards work shifts. After receiving denunciations of these violations, the
- General Labour Inspectorate intervened and issued several warnings. In a
- routine inspection carried out on 22 February 1995, it was observed that the
- alleged change of hours had been discontinued by the enterprise. (Endnote 33)
- (2) Empresa Agroport S.A., a maquila enterprise: illegal closure on 12 April
- 1993 contrary to the agreement concluded with the trade union on 22 March
- 1993, and the subsequent flight of the main owner to the United States. The
- agreement was signed following the intervention of the General Labour
- Inspectorate. However, subsequently, the employer fled the country making it
- impossible to take any action.
- (3) National Committee for the Blind and Deaf Mutes of Guatemala: refusal to
- negotiate a collective agreement with the most representative trade union
- organization, delay tactics lasting 19 months. Negotiation of the collective
- agreement was initiated, however, the employer lodged an appeal with the
- Administrative Disputes Court which in a communication dated 27 May 1994
- requested the original of the file which has not yet been returned.
- (4) Trade Union of the Autonomous Sports Confederation of Guatemala: refusal
- of the labour authority to approve a collective agreement. According to Report
- No. 292-95 of 22 February 1995 respecting the routine inspection in the trade
- union of this confederation, the administrative procedure for the discussion
- of the collective agreement on conditions of work was exhausted and following
- the refusal of the employer, the case is now before the Sixth Labour and
- Social Insurance Court for the setting up of a conciliation board.
- (5) Trade Union of Workers of the Imperial Food Products enterprise: failure
- of the enterprise to respect the collective agreement. See above, the reply
- given.
- (6) La Mariposa bottling enterprise: refusal to engage in collective
- bargaining with the SITRAEMSA trade union and the forging of the signature of
- a collective agreement with an ad hoc committee set up by the enterprise; this
- agreement was registered in the Ministry of Labour on 16 September 1993;
- increase of wages granted only to members of this committee. See above, the
- reply given.
- In accordance with the contents of the previous paragraph, the Government
- replied to the ten allegations concerning obstacles to the establishment of
- trade unions. Of these replies, five point out that the trade union has been
- recognized and its legal personality registered and one that the respective
- procedure is about to be completed; two refer to dissolutions of trade unions
- (in one case because of the disappearance of the employer and in another case
- because the Government discovered defects in the dissolution process); one
- concerns trade union elections; and in one allegation, concerning the workers
- of several enterprises, the reply states that there has been no request for
- the registration of trade unions.
- It is appropriate to bear in mind and analyse the regulation for the
- recognition of legal personality, the approval of statutes and registration of
- trade union organizations, adopted by Government Agreement No. 639-93, of 2
- November 1993.
- The cases pending contain a total of 40 allegations concerning acts of
- anti-union discrimination, most of which refer to dismissals for trade union
- reasons (35 allegations), in public or private establishments. The former
- include a number of municipalities while there is a significant number of
- farms in the latter. The Government replied to 37 allegations and these
- replies include in particular cases of reinstatement or some form of agreement
- (7) and the absence of any denunciations or their imprecise nature (16).
- There are six allegations concerning violations of collective bargaining, and
- the Government replied to five of these. In two cases compliance by the
- employer has been achieved, in one case a collective agreement has been
- negotiated, in another judicial proceedings are under way and in one other
- compliance seems impossible because the employer has fled the country.
- IV. Conclusions and personal reflections
- In conclusion the mission was able to carry out a wide exchange of ideas with
- high government and non-governmental authorities, employers' representatives
- and important workers' organizations, and obtain valuable information which
- was kindly provided. In the same way, it had the opportunity to engage in a
- very fruitful discussion with representatives of the United Mission for the
- Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA). In an audience with the
- President of the Republic, the mission was accompanied by the Director of the
- ILO Office for Central America and Panama.
- Guatemala is experiencing a political and social process characterized by
- internal war and efforts to establish peace; the reform of the Constitution, a
- transition regime and a situation of poverty; a policy for the promotion of
- human rights, despite the existence of many serious violations, most of them
- unpunished; and with the perspective of increasingly resolute state action. In
- this context, one trade union organization believed that the climate of
- violence had changed significantly and that there were no serious threats to
- trade union activity except when the latter posed a danger to certain economic
- interests. According to another trade union organization, there was no defined
- government policy on freedom of association and this explained certain
- contradictions, for example as regards enterprises established under the
- regime of the Caribbean Basin Initiative and the Generalized System of
- Preferences (GSP). A third trade union organization believed that although it
- could not be said that there was a government policy of violating human
- rights, the results were equally negative and the main problem was one of
- impunity and indifference. For their part, the employers believed that the
- armed conflict was the main source of violations of human rights and said that
- they were in favour of freedom of association. In any case, the situation of
- human rights in the trade union world would appear to have evolved in a
- positive way in recent years as regards acts of violence, as can be
- corroborated for example by the small number of allegations over the last two
- years, with the exception of death threats.
- The allegations of violations of the human rights of trade unionists from 1990
- directly concern more than 150 persons, whilst the replies refer only to 12 of
- these, 11 of which do not indicate those responsible for the violations. To
- explain this situation, and despite the fact that some denunciations are vague
- or imprecise, account must be taken of the effects of violence, the recognized
- lack of capacity of the State to investigate punishable acts and the
- repressive policy which existed in the past. It should be emphasized that the
- large majority of crimes against trade unionists have gone unpunished.
- Given the very small amount of information obtained, the Attorney General of
- the Republic told the mission that his Office, and in particular the unit for
- the defence of human rights, would once again investigate the denunciations
- made.
- With regard to the future, and in an attempt to strengthen state activity in
- the event of future denunciations of human rights violations, the following
- initiatives were proposed:
- (1) to disseminate the denunciations, and in particular the complaints
- concerning freedom of association, among the authorities competent to
- investigate them including the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic,
- the Public Prosecutor of the Republic and the Human Rights Commission, through
- the Presidential Commission on Human Rights (PRODOREH), which will include a
- liaison committee specialized in these matters, or any other expeditious and
- sure means;
- (2) to bring the denunciations, and in particular complaints concerning
- freedom of association, to the attention of the tripartite commission created
- under the Tripartite Consultation (International Labour Standards) Convention,
- 1976 (No. 144); and
- (3) to set up a working group with officials of the unit for the defence of
- human rights, the Attorney General's Office and officials of the trade union
- central organizations, with the participation of MINUGUA, to examine specific
- cases of violations of the human rights of trade unionists and to initiate
- inquiries on such violations; this group was convened to an initial meeting on
- 28 March 1995, in the training centre of the Attorney General's Office.
- The measures which might be adopted to strengthen the State's capacity for
- investigation, with the assistance of employers and workers are, however,
- based on the principle of the unavoidable responsibility of the State to
- guarantee the life, integrity, security and tranquillity of those persons who
- have legitimately exercised their right to freedom of association, and to
- protect them against discrimination in their employment on this or any other
- ground. In this sense, serious consideration should be given by the
- authorities to violations of the human rights of workers in public bodies,
- concerning whom that matter of impunity is of special importance, and to
- allegations which indicate the participation of members of the police. The
- officials and activists who have been assassinated, or have disappeared, or
- have been victims of physical assault include workers of the Guatemalan Social
- Security Institute, the University of San Carlos, the municipality of Puerto
- Barrios (department of Izabal), the Ministry of Culture and Sport, the
- psychiatric hospital, the customs authority, the municipality of Coban
- (department of Alta Verapaz), the national police and the municipality of
- Esquipulas (department of Chiquimula).
- The allegations concerning obstacles to the establishment and functioning of
- trade unions were fully answered and, in most cases, the replies were
- positive. Furthermore, the mission learned that significant efforts had been
- made in the Ministry of Labour to speed up the process for granting legal
- personality to trade unions and their registration in the respective register
- - although opinions differ concerning the results obtained - on the basis of
- new regulations, the provisions of which should be analysed.
- Two basic guidelines could serve as a basis for complementing efforts made by
- the Government so far concerning the establishment and functioning of trade
- unions: the presidential wish, clearly expressed, to strengthen trade union
- organizations and two ILO Conventions, the Freedom of Association and
- Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, 1948 (No. 87) and the Right to
- Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
- In this connection it might be appropriate to establish an explicit government
- policy, on a tripartite basis, to promote freedom of association with due
- respect of the law, as a basic guarantee of co-existence, as an indispensable
- ethical element of entrepreneurial activity and as a dramatic expression of
- the wishes of the workers, for which they have sacrificed many lives and
- risked their employment.
- From a standard-setting and technical point of view, there should be an
- examination of legislation and new regulations, as well as ministerial
- instructions, to determine to what extent these texts tend to promote the free
- exercise of the right to trade union membership and trade union activities and
- to what extent they may restrict them, in the name of government intervention.
- The allegations concerning acts of anti-union discrimination have helped
- highlight the existence of complex problems concerning the illegal dismissals
- and refusals to reinstate dismissed workers. Such events which concern labour
- matters often give rise to problems concerning trade unions and matters of
- public order and of a civilian and criminal kind which are of national
- concern. The use made of illegal and often collective dismissals may give rise
- to strong and wasteful legal proceedings or the occupation of enterprises,
- with or without the intervention of the police, or other situations.
- The measures suggested to overcome this situation are of a legislative and
- administrative kind.
- From the legislative point of view, the mission was told that there was a need
- to give powers of sanction to the Labour Inspectorate, without waiting for the
- intervention of a judge; and that at all events there was a need to reform and
- speed up the judicial procedure in the event of dismissals, to ensure the
- immediate reinstatement of a worker or the application of sanctions, as
- provided for in section 380 of the Labour Code; or in the event of a summons
- being served on an employer. Some persons consulted believed, however, that
- the legislation was clear, but that it had been distorted by judicial
- interpretations. In this connection it is worth recalling that the reform of
- the Labour Code in 1992 (Decree No. 69-92 of the Congress of the Republic) had
- as one of its objectives, as indicated in the statement of reasons: "... to
- provide the Labour Code with standards which allow labour and social insurance
- proceedings to be completed within the shortest possible time, to ensure that
- disputes placed before the courts are resolved with the speed which such cases
- require".
- From an administrative point of view, all the sectors agreed on the need to
- increase the number of labour and social insurance courts and that they should
- incorporate courts of conciliation and arbitration on a permanent basis, in
- accordance with the provisions of section 294 of the Labour Code. Furthermore,
- representatives of the workers' organizations and officials of the Human
- Rights Commission said that more effective action could be carried out by the
- Labour Inspectorate, even within the current legal framework.
- Along with legislative and administrative action, it would perhaps be
- appropriate for the Government to give an impetus to the labour relations
- system, following tripartite consensus, through the formulation of a
- systematic policy to prevent acts of anti-union discrimination.
- Anti-union discrimination could be combatted even more effectively with the
- active support of the Attorney General's Office of the Republic, the Office of
- the Public Prosecutor and the Human Rights Commission, each acting within its
- own sphere of competence.
- The allegations of violations of collective bargaining are relatively few and
- the replies show that the situation varies, with positive and negative
- aspects. Probably the main obstacles to collective bargaining are to be found
- in the previous allegations concerning human rights violations and obstacles
- which have been placed in the way of the establishment and functioning of
- trade union organizations.
- Several persons told the mission that there was a need for the standards of
- the Labour Code concerning freedom of association and collective bargaining,
- as well as ILO Conventions Nos. 87 and 98, to be more widely disseminated. In
- this respect, the mission confirmed that the Human Rights Commission is
- carrying out an extraordinary task of publishing works on human rights,
- including simple texts which can be read by everyone. For its part, the
- Ministry of Labour has published some interesting explanatory material on the
- rights of working children and women's rights and has also published, through
- its social communication and public relations unit, regulations on the
- granting of legal personality, the approval of statutes and registration of
- trade union organizations and the regulations on the procedure for the
- negotiation, approval and denunciation of collective agreements on working
- conditions in specific enterprises or production centres (Government
- Agreements Nos. 639-93 of 2 November 1993 and 221-94 of 13 May 1994,
- respectively). It would be desirable for this dissemination to be continued
- and increased, by various means, and supplemented by training measures, to
- ensure that all the members of the population concerned could be made aware of
- their trade union and collective bargaining rights, as well as the legal means
- to enforce them.
- Finally, the week spent in Guatemala, and the conversations with persons from
- many different sectors and in particular with officials of the State and the
- occupational sectors, as well as the courtesy with which the mission was
- treated, are eloquent proof of the respect and esteem which Guatemala has for
- the ILO and the high expectations which it has placed in the Organization
- during the difficult and yet promising situation which the country is
- experiencing.
- Peace, consensus and training are the three key means of promoting freedom of
- association and collective bargaining in Guatemala and overcoming the current
- problems and the three requirements for the ILO.
- The ILO has been actively participating in the peace negotiations. As these
- conversations progress, conditions may be established for the improvement of
- labour relations and a climate for the development of freedom of association.
- However, the President of the Republic himself and the Human Rights
- Commissioner believe that social problems pose a serious threat to the lasting
- peace which the country is trying desperately to achieve.
- At the same time, any effort which can be made to promote the development of
- freedom of association and collective labour relations, on a basis of equality
- and autonomy, will help improve the labour environment, resolve the
- fundamental problems of workers and facilitate, in enterprises, factories,
- farms, municipalities and other public bodies, the establishment and
- consolidation of opportunities for peace, which are absolutely essential to
- the establishment of a general peace. The ILO has a major role to play in this
- enormous effort facing the social partners. Furthermore, the conditions seem
- to exist for a fruitful collaboration between the ILO and MINUGUA, especially
- in the field of basic human rights, within the mandate and responsibility
- enjoyed by each organization, for greater effectiveness in the contribution
- which both are called upon to make in Guatemala.
- The objective is to overcome the lack of trust or reticence to engage in
- dialogue within a framework of respect for the life and safety of persons; to
- become familiar with and to disseminate the profound principles of
- co-existence, solidarity and dignity, and of the standards of freedom of
- association; to take advantage of the many possibilities which the
- organization of trade unions, offers to society; and of the advantages of
- consultation, negotiation and consensus to achieve not only specific
- objectives which are mutually acceptable to employers and workers but also
- common objectives, especially in the context of the challenges posed by
- international competition. It would be desirable in such an endeavour, and
- with account being taken of national initiatives, to give full attention to
- employers' and workers' organizations for cooperation to continue with the
- Ministry of Labour and Social Insurance, in this case with the precise
- objective of promoting adaptation and stimulating productivity in matters
- concerning labour relations.
- Tripartite consultation on international labour standards, including
- compliance with the standards on freedom of association, within the framework
- of Convention No. 144, are an obligation for Guatemala which has ratified this
- Convention. However, from the conversations which the mission held with
- representatives of the different sectors and during the tripartite meeting,
- there appears to be consensus in this respect which is seen as an objective
- which can be achieved by all parties concerned. Several persons said that the
- convening of the mission facilitated the holding of this tripartite meeting
- and that the presence of the ILO would help keep this tripartite consultation
- process on course in the future.
- In these circumstances, it would be desirable for the Office for Central
- America and Panama to monitor closely and follow up the initial steps taken to
- establish and make operational as soon as possible the committee on tripartite
- consultation. Its assistance could be centred on providing technical
- secretarial support and the holding of meetings; or in cooperation in the
- preparation of the agenda and the formulation of a series of increasingly
- complex objectives; or the design of simple mechanisms for the dissemination
- and effective implementation of the agreements reached, even if they were not
- binding; or with respect to several of these aspects, so that the committee
- can gradually achieve its goals and feel satisfaction at making important
- progress. Similarly, this Office could cooperate with the parties concerned in
- the preparation of specific general topics to illustrate the discussion of
- concrete national situations in the tripartite committee, as some persons
- suggested to the mission; or at least in the provision of supporting
- documents. A representative of this Office would certainly be very welcome at
- the inauguration and opening sessions of the tripartite committee.
- To some extent the mission was pleasantly surprised by the agreement of the
- Government, workers and employers concerning the need for training on matters
- related to freedom of association and to collective labour relations. All
- three parties showed some degree of unfamiliarity with the characteristics of
- a direct contacts mission and in particular with what the present mission
- wished to achieve, which can probably be explained not only by certain
- difficulties in the internal dissemination of information but an insufficient
- knowledge of ILO standards and its control and cooperation procedures. Several
- persons expressed their interest in receiving ILO support for their sector or
- in cooperation with other sectors in studying the problem of collective
- dismissals, or the subjects of collective bargaining or the most appropriate
- guidelines for a system of labour relations.
- The general interest expressed in training on trade union matters and labour
- relations should by fully addressed by the ILO Office for Central America and
- Panama and the multidisciplinary team. It is hoped that this interest will
- result in specific measures in the near future.
- As a summary of the three aspects which could guide ILO action in Guatemala,
- with a view to overcoming the problems which gave rise to the complaints and
- within a much broader and more meaningful context, the social partners showed
- considerable interest in the establishment, with ILO cooperation, of a labour
- and social documentation centre and expressed the hope that this documentation
- centre would become a centre for discussion and the exchange of views. It
- would be an excellent tribute to a common endeavour to overcome painful
- problems and construct a better future.
- The social partners are rightly expecting positive and constructive action by
- the ILO for their country concerning the matters contained in the complaints
- against freedom of association. I myself would like to pay tribute to the
- immense task carried out by some of these officials to ensure that the mission
- was held in the best conditions, including all the unnamed staff who quietly
- worked to enable us to achieve the final result. To all I express my deep
- gratitude.
- In particular, I should like to thank Mr. Ian Chambers, Director of the Office
- for Central America and Panama, and some of his collaborators: Mr. Camilo
- Vasquez, Deputy Director, Ms. Martiza Carranza and Ms. Lisbeth Calvo. The
- hospitality provided by Mr. Chambers, his knowledge of the situation in
- Guatemala, his willingness to cooperate with this country and his resolute
- support of the direct contacts mission, which was reflected in many specific
- and timely decisions, gave the mission a sense of invaluable confidence and
- security.
- I should like to thank Mr. Helmut Wittelsburger, director of the
- multidisciplinary team of San José and in particular Ms. Gerardina Gonzales
- and Mr. Agustin Munoz, members of the team, for their availability and
- valuable contributions.
- To the Chief of the Freedom of Association Branch, Mr. Bernard Gernigon and
- Ms. Adriana Pineda, I am deeply grateful for all the documentary support and
- information which they provided for me in the preparation if the mission and
- for their confidence.
- I should like to express special thanks to those who accompanied me on the
- mission, Messrs. Alberto Odero de Dios, of the Freedom of Association Branch,
- and German Lopez Morales, member of the multidisciplinary team of San José.
- Mr. Odero de Dios made a fundamental contribution to this collective work,
- through the preparation of basic documentation and his valuable experience and
- knowledge throughout the mission. Mr. Lopez Morales undertook an important
- preparatory mission and was an excellent collaborator during the direct
- contacts. With both, I had the impression of forming a real team.
- San Antonio de los Altos, 14 March 1995. Enrique MARIN.
- Annex
- List of persons interviewed
- Executive
- His Excellency Mr. Ramiro de Leon Carpio, President of the Republic
- Her Excellency Ms. Gladys Annabella Morfin, Minister of Labour and Social
- Insurance
- Ms. Carmen Lopez Caceres, Deputy Minister of Labour
- Mr. Fernando Rivera, Deputy Minister of Labour
- Mr. Victor Manuel Patres Rojas, Deputy Minister of Security (Ministry of
- Government)
- Mr. Roberto Cruz, Director General of Labour
- Mr. Mariano Santizo Diaz, Director of International Affairs (Ministry of
- Labour)
- Mr. Mario Montenegro, Adviser to the Ministry of Labour
- Ms. Gloria Ramirez de Rodriguez, Assistant Director General of Labour
- Ms. Malvina Beatriz Armas, Official of the Ministry of Labour
- Ms. Ana Mendoza de Rivera, Official of the Ministry of Labour
- Ms. Norma Jimenez de Bonilla, Official of the Ministry of Labour
- Office of the Attorney General of the Republic
- H.E. Mr. Acisclo Valladares, Attorney General of the Republic
- Human Rights Commission
- H.E. Mr. Jorge Mario Garcia Laguardia, Human Rights Commissioner
- Mr. Ricardo Alvarado Ortigoza, Deputy Commissioner
- Mr. Roderico Segura Trujillo, General Coordinator of Advisers
- Mr. Victor Hugo Godoy, Adviser
- Presidential Commission on Human Rights
- H.E. Mr. Vincente Arranz Sanz, President
- Mr. Anibal Mencho Gramajo, Sub-director
- Judiciary
- H.E. Mr. Oscar Barios Castillo, President of the Judicial Department and Chief
- Justice of the Supreme Court
- Mr. Oscar Najaroo Ponce, Magistrate and Fourth Member of the Supreme Court
- Mr. Angel Alfredo Figuero, Sixth Member of the Supreme Court
- Ms. Astrid Jeanette Lemus, Magistrate and Ninth Member of the Supreme Court
- Public Ministry
- H.E. Mr. Ramsés Cuestas Gomez, Public Prosecutor of the Republic and Head of
- the Public Ministry
- Mr. Victor Manuel Rivas, Private Secretary of the Public Prosecutor of the
- Republic
- Mr. Stefan Hartleben, Head of the Human Rights Unit of the Public Ministry
- Mr. Francisco Antonio Monterroso, Office responsible for the Human Rights Unit
- of the Public Ministry
- Coordinating Committee of Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial and financial
- Associations (CACIF)
- Mr. Roberto Ardon, Executive Director of CACIF
- Mr. Adolfo Menendez Castejon, Director of CACIF
- Mr. Humberto Preti, President of the Chamber of Agro Industries
- Mr. Luis Alberto Reyes Mayén, Coordinator of the Committee on Labour Affairs
- Mr. Carlos Arias Masselli, Member of the Committee on Labour Affairs
- Ms. Fanny de Estrada, Exporters' Association Manager (Chamber of Industries)
- General Central Organization of Workers of Guatemala (CGTG)
- Mr. José E. Pinzon, General Secretary
- Mr. Regoberto Duenas Morales, Secretary responsible for organization
- Mr. Rafael Gonzalez, Secretary reponsible for the informal econony
- Mr. Manuel Pablo Quino, Secretary responsible for organization of FEDECAMPO
- Central Organization of Rural Workers (CTC)
- Mr. Carlos Alvarez, General Secretary
- Confederation of Trade Union Unity of Guatemala (CUSG)
- Mr. Juan Francisco Alfaro, General Secretary
- Mr. Everildo Revolorio Torres, Treasurer
- Mr. Oswaldo Rey, trade union official of STRAZOO
- Mr. Wilfredo Dimas, trade union official of STRAZOO
- Mr. Rogelio Hernandez, trade union official of STRAZOO
- Trade Union of Workers of Guatemala (UNSITRAGUA)
- Mr. Julio Coj, Coordinator of the Committee on International Relations
- Mr. Marco Vinicio Hernandez, Coordinator of the Committee on Training
- Mr. Guillermo Maldonado, Adviser of the Legal Office
- Mr. Oscar Gerardo Alvarez, Sub-coordinator of the Legal Advisory Committee
- Trade Union Federation of Banking and Insurance Employees (FESEBS)
- Mr. Saul Octavio Martinez, General Secretary
- Mr. Reynaldo Gonzales, Secretary responsible for cooperatives
- Mr. Alejandro Aguirre, member of the Advisory Council
- United Nations Mission for the Verification of Human Rights in Guatemala
- (MINUGUA)
- Mr. Leonardo Franco, Head of the mission
- Ms. Leida Lima, Head of the Regional Office of the Central Zone
- Mr. Alejandro Arnusio, official of MINUGUA
- Mr. Hugo Lorenzo, official of MINUGUA