ILO and India
ILO and India
ILO and India
International labour standards are legal instruments drawn up by the ILO's constituents (governments, employers and workers) and setting out basic principles and rights at work. They are either conventions, which are legally binding international treaties that may be ratified by member states, or recommendations, which serve as non-binding guidelines. In many cases, a convention lays down the basic principles to be implemented by ratifying countries, while a related recommendation supplements the convention by providing more detailed guidelines on how it could be applied. Recommendations can also be autonomous, i.e. not linked to any convention. Conventions and recommendations are drawn up by representatives of governments, employers and workers and are adopted at the ILO's annual International Labour Conference. Once a standard is adopted, member states are required under the ILO Constitution to submit them to their competent authority (normally the parliament) for consideration. In the case of conventions, this means consideration for ratification. If it is ratified, a convention generally comes into force for that country one year after the date of ratification. Ratifying countries commit themselves to applying the convention in national law and practice and reporting on its application at regular intervals. The ILO provides technical assistance if necessary. In addition, representation and complaint procedures can be initiated against countries for violations of a convention they have ratified. ILO Conventions and Recommendations carry great importance for working population anywhere. Whenever the convention is ratified by a member country, importance of that particular convention for that country increase immensely. After ratifying the convention, the member state is obliged to send the progress report of its implementation in law & in practice regularly to ILO. Ratifying country has to give place in their National Statute to the convention ratified. In most cases, the convention is, supplemented by the Recommendation which lay down detail general or technical guideline to the convention. Information on progress on implementation of the convention can also be sent by Trade Unions or Employer's organizations. The progress reports received by ILO are examined by the independent expert committee at ILO and its findings are discussed by ILO conference held every year. ILO conventions has so far covered following subjects 1) Freedom of association 2) Prohibition of forced Labour 3) Equality of opportunity &. treatment 4) Human resources & employment 5) Labour Administration 6) Industrial relations 7) Wages 8) Weekly rest & paid leaves. 9) Occupational Safety & health 10) Social Security 11) Employment of Women 12) Employment of children & young persons 13) Migrant Workers 14) Tribal & Indigenous peoples 15) Hours of work.
on ratifying ILO conventions. Following recommendations of this committee Govt. ratified 5 more conventions, totaling 23. The Committee also recommended to ratify convention No. 63 & 99 (Minimum Wage fixing (Agriculture) Machinery Convention. 1951; but till day these have not been ratified by Govt. of India. In a decade after 1958, enthusiasm to ratify the convention seems lost, in 10 year time, till 1968, 5 conventions were ratified and by 1978, 4 more conventions were ratified, totaling 32. After 78, in next 12 years not a single convention was ratified. By 1998, 4 more conventions were ratified. A convention regarding ban on bonded labour, passed by ILO in 1957 was ratified after 43 years on 18/5/2000. Let us see, how many important conventions on different subjects have been ratified so far. Out of 5 conventions on "freedom of association" only one, viz. No. 141 (Rural workers organization) has been ratified. Both conventions on Bonded Labour have been ratified, Equality of opportunity & treatment 2 out of 3, Human Resources & employment 2 out of 5, Labour administration 3 out of 7, Weekly rest & paid Leaves 1 out of 4, Occupational safety & Health 3 out of 15, Social Security 1 out of 3, Employment of workers 2 out of 4 on and 1 out of 6 on Child Labour have been ratified. Not a single convention has been ratified on subjects like migrant workers, Indigenous & tribal people, wages and industrial relations.
Fundamental Conventions :
Following 8 conventions are considered to be fundamental and ILO places great emphasis on ratifying them: Table: 1 Fundamental Conventions: Convention Title & year NO 29 Forced Labour Convention, 1930 100 Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951 Abolition of Forced Labour Convention, 1957 Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention, 1958 Freedom of Association and protection of right to organize, 1948 Right to organize and collective bargaining, 1949 Minimum Age convention, 1973 Worst forms of child labor, 1990 No.of ratifications 175 169 India ratified in 1954 1958
105
172
2000
111
170
1960
87 98 138 182
Govt. of India has ratified only 4 of these fundamental conventions (Nos. 29, No. 105, No. 100 No. 111). These were ratified in year 1954, 2000, 1958 & 1960 respectively. Our neighbors - Pakistan, & Sri Lanka have ratified all 8, Bangladesh and Nepal have
ratified 7 conventions while China has ratified 4 & Myanmar has ratified 2 conventions. Out of total 185 nations are members of ILO, 136 members have ratified all the fundamental conventions. Table: 2 Status of ratification of Fundamental conventions No.of ratifications No ratification 2 conventions 3 conventions 4 conventions 5 conventions 6 conventions 7 conventions All conventions Total No. of countries 005 003 004 005 009 008 018 136 185
But important aspects of this convention are included in Factory Act & E.C. Act. One of the reasons for non-ratification is the ILO constitution which requires the member-nation to accept the convention in toto. In such cases members prefer to include the acceptable portions of the convention into National legal framework but do not ratify the convention. We all know that just by ratifying a convention or make a law. do not automatically change the ground realities.
Name of convention
Number
Status
If ratified by India NO NO NO NO
1. Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 1981 2. Protocol of 2002 to the Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 1981 3. Occupational Health Services Convention, 1985 4.
Promotional Framework for Occupational C 187 Safety and Health Convention, 2006 C 115
Up to date
Yes;17-1175 NO NO
C 139
Up to date Up to date
7. Working Environment (Air Pollution, Noise C 148 and Vibration) Convention, 1977 8. Asbestos Convention, 1986 9. Chemicals Convention, 1990 C 162 C 170
NO NO Yes; 6-0608
10. 10. Prevention of Major Industrial Accidents C 174 Convention, 1993 11. 11. White Lead (Painting) Convention, 1921 C 013
To be NO revised
C 119
C 127
C 136
Up to date
NO
17. 17. Safety and Health in Mines Convention, 1995 18. 18. Safety and Health Convention, 2001 Underground Convention, 1935 in
C 176
Up to date Up to date
NO NO
Agriculture C 184
19. 19.
Work
(Women) C 62
NO
C 45
Yes;26-0338
Convention no, 155, Occupational Safety & Health convention, 1981, applies to all branches of economic activity and to ALL workers. It provides for formulating a National Policy on occupational safety, occupational health & working environment, in light of national conditions & practice. It provides detail actions to be taken by the ratifying state. It provides for the measures to be taken right at the design stage of the technology and provide workers with necessary protective gears. It also provides worker to refuse work which has imminent or serious danger on ones life, without undue consequences (Art.-13). It Provides for publishing annual data. In Gujarat, since last more than 25 years, the state Govt. has stopped publishing annual report by Chief Inspector of Factories (Now known as Director, Industrial Safety & Health). It also provide for "Inclusion of Question of occupational Safety & health and the working environment at all levels of education & training Including higher technical, medical & professional education...." (Article 14). It empowers workers or their representatives to bring in experts from outside to make an inquiry (Article 19). Convention 121, Employment Injury Benefits, 1964 provides for the competent authority to define occupational accidents and diseases for which certain compensation benefits shall be provided. These benefits include payment for medical care and rehabilitation services for workers sustaining work related injuries and impairments. They also include income maintenance for the injured workers and their dependents during the period of temporary & permanent disability or in case of death. Sch. - I of the convention 121 provides a list of occupational diseases that are common & well recognized. The list can be amended as per the procedure given in convention. In 1980, the list was amended. But, the list do not include some of the diseases faced by the workers in this age. e.g. effects of closed modem buildings, Hazards
of electronic office equipments, exposure of tobacco to non-smokers, hazard of HIV/AIDS to healthcare workers, effects of shift work, effects of number of chemicals, cancer due to quartz dust, repetitive strain injuries, or stress related diseases etc. In 2002, Recommendation 194 was revised to give a new list of occupational diseases. The new list includes a range of internationally recognized occupational diseases, from illnesses caused by chemical, physical and biological agents to respiratory and skin diseases, musculoskeletal disorders and occupational cancer. Mental and behavioral disorders have been, for the first time, specifically included in the ILO list. The list also has open items in all the sections dealing with the aforementioned diseases. The open items allow for the recognition of the occupational origin of diseases not specified in the list if a link is established between exposure to risk factors arising from work activities and the disorders contracted by the worker. When small countries like Vietnam and Mongolia have ratified convention No. 155, the country which boasts itself to be world's largest democracy need to take a step towards offering legal cover for the workers in hundreds of occupations. ILO instruments on its own may not improve conditions at grassroots in any given socio-economic situation in any country. Many activists criticize ILO as a toothless and that is true. What to expect from these instruments is left to us. I remember slogan floated by the then Prime Minister during emergency was Kathor Prishram ka koi vikalp nahi (No alternate to hard work) like wise there is no alternate to struggle for workers to improve their conditions. ILO can only help give ideas and draft legislations. ILO offers civil society organizations to send them reports on implementation but there is no way with ILO secretariat to press individual member country to ratify any particular instrument. It is left to the forces within country. Workers organization and other civil society organization to create social environment leading to favorable decision. A society governed by capitalist forces lead citizens to think of immediate economic gains most of the times. People tend to decide considering the economic assumptions. I am of the belief that however weak ILO may be it helps give fresh ideas from international community and create atmosphere in favor of instruments being discussed. Our labor organizations and public health organizations need to empower themselves to be able to generate reports on implementation of ratified ILO instruments on one hand and continue present arguments in favor of ratifying instruments which have not been yet ratified. It is slow process and would need lot of volunteers and resources but that is the only peaceful way to attain what we aim for. ILO may not be as helpful to the workers in industrialized countries but it may be helpful to the underdeveloped economies. Again, ratification of may not be sole criterion to judge workers conditions in any particular country. Still, it may give some indication. Number of ILO instruments ratified by USA may be much less than even India or many other countries but national laws may be more ahead than ILO instrument in protecting rights of the working population and conditions of workers may be much better than the workers in countries ratifying more instruments. If national TU movement is stronger it may not wait for ILO instrument. In fact we have examples where ILO has followed laws passed by some countries. Convention 155 is one such example. It was OSH Act in US that was passed in 1970 which was followed by UK in 1974 by enacting Health & Safety at work Act. ILO followed this experience in 1981 to come up with Convention 155. ILO offers common platform to international experience and
expertise which takes international community ahead. Representative employers' and workers' organizations play an essential role in the international labour standards system: they participate in choosing subjects for new ILO standards and in drafting the texts; their votes can determine whether or not the International Labour Conference adopts a newly drafted standard. If a convention is adopted, employers and workers can encourage a government to ratify it. As discussed later in this booklet, if the convention is ratified, governments are required to periodically report to the ILO on how they are applying it in law and practice. Government reports must also be submitted to employers' and workers' organizations, which may comment on them. Employers' and workers' organizations can also supply relevant information directly to the ILO. They can initiate representations for violations of ILO conventions in accordance with procedures under article 24 of the ILO Constitution. Employer and worker delegates to the International Labour Conference can also file complaints against member states under article 26 of the Constitution. If a member state has ratified the Tripartite Consultation (International Labour Standards) Convention, 1976 (No. 144), as more than 110 countries have done to date including India, it is obliged to hold national tripartite consultations on proposed new instruments to be discussed at the Conference, on submissions of instruments to the competent authorities, on reports concerning ratified conventions, on measures related to unratified conventions and recommendations, and on proposals regarding the denunciation of conventions. JAGDISH Patel. Peoples Training & Research Centre 43, Shreenathdham Duplex, Dinesh Mill - Urmi Road, Vadodara-390007. Email: jagdish.jb@gmail.com M-9426486855