This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 9, April 1-7, 2007
LABOR WATCH
Southern Tagalog Workers Score DoLE Decisions on Labor Cases
"Promote gainful employment opportunities, develop human resources, protect
workers and promote their welfare and maintain industrial peace.” Thus says the
mandate of the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) posted in its official
website. But
judging from their experience, however, some labor unions in Southern Tagalog
question the DoLE’s sincerity in upholding and protecting their interests. BY
DENNIS ESPADA "Promote gainful employment
opportunities, develop human resources, protect workers and promote their
welfare and maintain industrial peace.” Thus says the mandate of
the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) posted in its official
Arbitrary acts Workers of two Korean-owned
garment factories staged their second protest rally in six months on March 26
within the 276-hectare Cavite Export Processing Zone (CEPZ) in Rosario, Cavite
(25 kms. south of Manila). They have been calling on the implementation of their
first collective bargaining agreement (CBA) for over six months now. Their first
protest rally was staged Sept. 25 last year. The Kaisahan ng mga
Manggagawa sa Phils. Jeon (KMPJ or Unity of Workers in Phils. Jeon) and
Nagkakaisang Manggagawa sa Chong Won (NMCW or United Workers in Chong Won)
condemned the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) as well as the DoLE not
only for the latter’s “inaction and tolerance” on “atrocities and gross
violation of labor rights committed against them” but also for canceling the
unions’ registration. Lately, they filed separate
petitions before the Bureau of Labor Relations (BLR) to review the decision of
DoLE-Region IV director Ricardo Martinez Sr. who granted petitions to cancel the
registration last Feb. 5 and 6. The labor department reportedly claimed the
protesters no longer represent the majority of the unions since their respective
managements terminated them from work. The Workers’ Assistance
Center Inc. (WAC), a non-government institution engaged in organizing workers
within the CEPZ and other export processing zones in
Luzon, disputed DoLE’s decision. “This was grossly
questionable because the workers on strike should have not been terminated in
the first place when the strike is on,” WAC said in a statement. “It is illegal
under labor laws.” KMPJ and NMCW said that
they suffered a wave of food blockades and harassments, along with “brutal”
dispersals of picket lines in September 2006 and January this year. The striking
workers said that their “attackers” – the PEZA police and Jantro security guards
– have likewise charged them with libel and other “criminal offenses” for
defending their rights. They fear the DoLE’s resolution would result in more
violence against them. “The union leaders and
workers on strike have argued that those who filed petitions to cancel their
registrations are either non-union members, occupying supervisory positions, and
are strongly believed to be used by the management in an effort to bust the
legitimate unions, and to discourage and legally persecute them from lawfully
asserting their labor rights,” WAC said. Various websites and blogs
publicized the labor dispute and they helped fuel a global campaign to pressure
internationally-known clothing brands not to tolerate unfair labor practices. A
49-page report by the Workers’ Rights Consortium (WRC) revealed the situation in
Chong Won Fashion, Inc., which led universities in the U.S. to stop ordering
clothes from it. In sync with big
business In Sta. Rosa City, Laguna
(38 kms. south of Manila), over a hundred rank-and-file employees of Nissan
Motor Philippines Inc. (NMPI) are persistently gathering at the factory gates in
Sitio Aratan, Barangay Pulong, Santa Cruz, wearing their uniforms and hoping to
get back to work. They have been doing this
in compliance with the Supreme Court (SC) decision on June 21, 2006 ordering the
reinstatement of 144 dismissed workers and payment of their back wages. The SC
affirmed similar decisions by DoLE and the Court of Appeals (CA) on December 5,
2001 and February 2, 2003, respectively. But despite the SC decree’s
being “self-executory” in favor of the workers, no less than the DoLE wants it
altered. According to its eight-page
writ of execution dated March 14, 2007 and signed by DoLE Undersecretary
Luzviminda Padilla, “only 27 workers are due for reinstatement” while 25 of them
shall obtain back wages starting on the date the SC issued its final ruling. The
writ takes effect after 10 working days upon receipt by all parties concerned. The Bagong Nagkakaisang
Lakas sa NMPI (BANAL or New United Strength of Workers in NMPI) said that they
received the writ on March 15 which was personally delivered at the workers’
picket line by a DoLE representative. Upon reading it, BANAL’s
vice president Rodel Diolata said, “This is far-fetched…a clear violation of the
highest court’s decision,” he said. During negotiations in
January, NMPI’s Vice-President for Corporate Planning Val de Leon insisted that
the management would only settle the separation pay of 25 workers. The Japanese automotive
assembler ceased its plant operations and issued a forced leave to its employees
from March 19 until April 10, Diolata said. “In a synchronized and conspicuous
move...Nissan management and DoLE know their depravity against the workers which
is why they are evading workers’ immediate protests and actions,” he said.
Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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