Australia's IR Laws are Among The World's Worst: ILO Complaint ACTU Media Release 05 June 2006
The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has listed Australia's IR laws for an immediate hearing alongside cases from Libya, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Guatemala and other countries that are known as the world's worst violators of labour rights.
Speaking from the ILO's main annual conference in Geneva, Switzerland, ACTU President Sharan Burrow said:
"Australia's IR laws breach fundamental human rights by infringing on the right of working people to join a union and to bargain collectively.
ILO members are very concerned that as an advanced nation, Australia is increasingly out of step with its international obligations and has placed the Howard Government's laws on a list of labour rights violations cases for immediate examination on Tuesday or Wednesday next week.
Workplace Relations Minister Kevin Andrews lobbied hard last year for the Australian Government to gain a seat on the governing body of the ILO and is currently travelling to Geneva to attend the meeting. The Minister is now faced with the humiliating prospect of being carpeted by the ILO for a breach of international labour standards in next week's hearing.
Mr Peter Anderson of the business lobby group ACCI is also a member of the ILO governing body.
Australian Government representatives at the ILO are expected to be questioned about the legal and practical aspects of the Government's adherence to international labour rights conventions in particular, The Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, number 98.
The ILO has previously stated that the Federal Government's Workplace Relations Act does not provide workers with adequate protection against discrimination if they choose to have their employment conditions governed by collective agreements.
International concern with the Australian situation has been heightened by the Howard Government's new IR laws which now make illegal many legitimate union activities.
Under the new laws, union officials and employees can be fined up to $33,000 simply for asking an employer to include in a collective agreement:
- Provision for employees to attend union-provided training, including health and safety training
- Protection from unfair dismissal
- Union involvement in dispute resolution
- Protections against employees being replaced by labour hire or contractors
And Australia's building and construction industry laws are so draconian that workers face six months jail if they refuse to attend a secret interrogation, if they refuse to answer questions even though it may incriminate them, or if they refuse to hand over documents.
"The new IR laws changes further undermine the basic rights of working Australians and shame our nation in the eyes of the rest of the world," Ms Burrow said.
More Information: Howard's Australia: A serial offender at the ILO - download below |