The Governmental Trade Union Federation Against Trade Union Freedoms – CTUWS (2011)


The Governmental Trade Union Federation Against Trade Union Freedoms
Opportunists and Sticking to Personal Interests

The Center for Trade Union and Workers Services:
The “governmental Trade Union Federation announced its refusal to the Draft Law on Trade Union Freedoms. This explains how far the leaders of this Federation uphold all the restrictions imposed on trade union freedoms which are provided explicitly in the Trade Unions Law No. 35 for the year 1976 and its amendments No. 12 for the year 1995. It was according to such provisions that the government has dominated the trade union organization and forced the workers to join its membership. The government put on top of this organization a group of its stooges who were not elected by the grassroots. Most of those leaders are beyond the age of retirement and many of them are over 70 years old. They cannot care less about the will and the interests of the workers.
It is worth mentioning that the “draft new law on trade unions” aims to launch trade union freedoms according to the provisions of trade union freedoms and the right to organization as stipulated by the International Labour Conventions No. 87 and No. 98 which the government of Egypt has ratified. This allows the government of Egypt to ask the International Labour Organization to lift the name of Egypt from the List of Individual Cases (the black list). Egypt violated its international obligations and was put on that list because Law No. 35 for the year 1976 and its amendments were in breach of the provisions of these two international conventions. While the leaders of the “governmental” federation announced their refusal of the draft Law on Trade Union Freedoms, they emphasize that they consider their own interests and their positions (which they occupy against the will of the workers) more important than the national interests. It is the same situation that made these leaders stand against the revolution of the Egyptian people since its outbreak on 25th January. And it is the same situation that made Mr. Hussein Megawer the president of the Federation (who is now in jail) take part in the attack against the protestors of Midan el Tahrir in the famous event known as the Battle of the Camel.
Moreover, the leaders of the Federation are getting ready now to travel to Geneva to attend the International Labour Conference. A delegation comprising more than 23 of the leaders of the federation will attend the conference. We do not know how the costs of this delegation will be covered: from the subscriptions of the workers who are calling all the time for their rights while these leaders give them a deaf ear, from the government, or from some of the chairmen of public business companies as was the case in the past?
The leaders of the governmental federation are still following the same approaches of the past. They do not realize that the Egyptian people revolted for freedom. Freedom does not only mean toppling down a tyrant and corrupt ruler. It also means getting rid of all the corrupt institutions on the top of which is the “governmental” trade union federation.
The Center for Trade Union and Workers Services calls upon the government to support the principles of the revolution and accelerate the issuance of the Law on Trade Union Freedoms in order to liberate the will of the Egyptian workers.
May 28, 2011

The Center for Trade Union & Workers’ Services (CTUWS) – Honored the French Republic’s Human Rights Prize- is an Egyptian non-governmental organization established in March 1990 by some labor leaders and activists guided by their experience in the Egyptian labor movement. They vowed to meet the urgent need to form an independent organization that advances and supports the needs of workers in a democratic manner, provide direct support and services to the workers and fill the void created by the “official” trade union organization which failed to achieve its fundamental obligations.
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