Trade unions endorse action plan to defend migrant rights
"The International Trade Union Confederation today reiterated its determination to prioritise the fight for the respect of migrants' rights." http://www.ituc-csi.org/spip.php?article486
INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNION CONFEDERATION (ITUC)
ITUC OnLine
December 15, 2006

Trade unions endorse action plan to defend migrant
rights

Brussels

As International Migrants Day (18 December) approaches,
the International Trade Union Confederation today
reiterated its determination to prioritise the fight
for the respect of migrants' rights.

At a seminar that brought them together for four days
in Brussels, some 60 trade unionists and
representatives of international organisations defined
their priorities and methods for implementing a
concrete action plan with a view to better organising
migrants, defending and promoting their rights and
improving their working conditions. Emphasis was placed
on gender since female migrant workers account for a
significant proportion of migrant labour and are
particularly vulnerable to discrimination.

Focusing on four priorities - protection of rights,
unionisation, sustainable development and awareness-
raising - this realistic action plan sets out the
specific steps to be taken at national, regional and
international level, both within the trade union
movement and in partnership with NGOs and other civil
society players. The first priority - promoting and
protecting the rights of migrant workers - involves: 1)
enhancing legal protection, specifically by more
actively promoting the ratification and application of
ILO instruments (Conventions 97 and 143) and the UN
Convention on Migrants (1990), and 2) fighting
discrimination, racism and xenophobia at all levels,
especially within trade unions.

The second priority focuses on the unionisation of
migrants, specifically by sending trade union
organisers from the countries of origin to destination
countries and developing practical guides for
organising migrants.

"In the context of the overall trade union struggle for
a fairer and more humane globalisation, coordinating
migration and sustainable development is a key priority
for promoting decent work for all workers, including
migrant workers", said Guy Ryder, ITUC General
Secretary. This approach includes unions' determination
to fight the brain-drain - or indeed the permanent loss
of expertise - in countries of origin.

Information and awareness-raising are key tools for
pursuing these objectives at all levels of union work,
as clearly demonstrated by the experiences presented
during the seminar.

In a new ITUC video, an adviser at the Info-Point in
the Estonian capital of Tallin explains that "If
Estonians wishing to emigrate come to see us before
leaving, then they know what kind of wages and working
conditions await them in Finland and which unions they
should join. Well informed people will have fewer
problems once they get there". The Info-Point was set
up with the support of the Finnish trade union
federation SAK(*).

Concluded at the seminar were the partnership
agreements between trade unions in Jordan (GFJTU),
Pakistan (PWF) and Sri Lanka (NWC), between unions in
Mauritius (CGTM) and Senegal (CNTS), between unions in
Costa Rica (CNTRN) and Nicaragua (CST), and between
unions in Malaysia (MTUC) and Indonesia (KSPI). These
partnership agreements are often accompanied by the
creation of information and service centres for
migrants.

-(*) See also the 7-minute video entitled "Estonian
migrants: longer working hours for less money" at
http://www.icftu.org/www/video/estonia_en.wvx

Read also the interview with Sartiwen Binti Sanbardi
(Hong Kong, HKCTU) entitled "Migrant domestic workers
are exploited because they don't know the law" at
http://www.ituc-csi.org/spip.php?article472

Founded on November 1 2006, the ITUC represents 168
million workers in 153 countries and territories and
has 304 national affiliates. http://www.ituc-csi.org
 
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