Allegations: The complainant organizations allege obstruction to the granting of
trade union leave, unjustified initiation of disciplinary proceedings against trade union
officials, and undermining the representation and collective bargaining rights of the
majority trade union organization in the education sector
- 569. The complaint is contained in communications dated 23 September and
5 October 2022, presented by the Single Union of Peruvian Education Workers (SUTEP) and
Education International (EI), respectively. The General Confederation of Workers of Peru
(CGTP) sent additional information in a communication dated 16 May 2024.
- 570. The Government sent its observations in communications dated 19
January and 3 February 2023.
- 571. Peru has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of the
Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87), the Right to Organise and Collective
Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98), and the Labour Relations (Public Service)
Convention, 1978 (No. 151).
A. The complainants’ allegations
A. The complainants’ allegations- 572. In their various communications, the complainants allege that a
number of practices were carried out by the Ministry of Education (hereinafter “the
MINEDU”) to the detriment of the SUTEP, which is the majority trade union organization
in the education sector. These practices include obstructing the granting of union leave
to its executive committee members, unjustified initiation of disciplinary proceedings
against three of its union officials, as well as undermining their representation and
collective bargaining rights by failure to adhere to the stages and deadlines legally
established for conducting collective bargaining and disregarding its status as the
majority trade union.
- 573. The complainants allege that the MINEDU responded late and only
partially to the request for 2022–23 trade union leave for eight executive committee
members. According to the complainants: (i) the request was submitted in writing on 30
November 2021 and should have been dealt with by the MINEDU by the first week of
February 2022 at the latest, in line with the deadline set it to this effect in
paragraph 5.16.3 of Vice-Ministerial resolution No. 123 2021 MINEDU, which governs,
inter alia, the procedure for granting leave for trade union representation in the
teaching profession; (ii) the MINEDU only approved the request for trade union leave on
9 August 2022, with the issuance of General Secretariat Decision No. 132-2022-MINEDU,
that is almost nine months after submission of the request; (iii) in issuing that
decision, the MINEDU disregarded the concept of “positive administrative silence”
(provided for in the General Administrative Procedure Act) that could be applied to its
request for trade union leave. Under this concept, the request should have been
considered approved as soon as the legal deadline expired, with no need for a MINEDU
decision in that connection; (iv) furthermore, the aforementioned General Secretariat
Decision granted partial trade union leave, that is only from 9 August 2022 to 8 August
2023, without including the leave requested from 27 March to 8 August 2022, thus leaving
the trade union activities carried out during this period without coverage; and (v) an
appeal was filed against General Secretariat Decision No. 132-2022-MINEDU, which has not
yet been dealt with because the MINEDU refuses to refer it to the Civil Service
Tribunal. The complainants point out that, until the change in government in July 2021,
the SUTEP had never seen trade union leave for its officials restricted and that, since
then, the MINEDU has been giving greater prominence to a minority trade union
organization, the National Federation of Education Workers of Peru (hereinafter “the
minority trade union organization”), which was said to have been illegally recognized
shortly before the government took office.
- 574. The complainants also allege that the MINEDU initiated
administrative disciplinary proceedings against the SUTEP General Secretary, the Deputy
General Secretary and the Secretary for Equality and Gender, for allegedly abandoning
their posts between 27 March and 8 August 2022, a period during which General
Secretariat Decision No. 132-2022-MINEDU did not grant trade union leave. This,
according to the complainants, ignores the fact that during this period the union
officials continued to be granted leave to carry out their trade union functions by
applying the aforementioned concept of positive administrative silence to the SUTEP’s
request for trade union leave.
- 575. The complainants also allege that the MINEDU has unlawfully excluded
the SUTEP and another trade union in the education sector from the executive board of
Derrama Magisterial, which is a private organization that has been managing social
security funds for and granting loans to teachers for several decades. The complainants
state that: (i) outside its remit, the MINEDU issued Supreme Decree No. 009-2022-MINEDU
and Ministerial resolution No. 356 2022 MINEDU in order, respectively, to amend the
statutes of Derrama Magisterial and to launch a process to elect the members of its
executive board, as well as other bodies; and (ii) the SUTEP was not consulted about the
election process, which disregards the right of this organization to appoint its own
representatives to Derrama Magisterial (which it had been doing for more than 40 years)
and, lastly, ignores the fact that this is not a government entity. The complainants
consider that the regulatory measures described above were adopted in order to
accommodate the minority trade union organization.
- 576. The complainants also allege that the SUTEP’s right to collective
bargaining was violated. They claim, furthermore, that the MINEDU has unjustifiably and
severely delayed the 2022, 2023 and 2024 collective bargaining processes. They state
that Act No. 31188 of 2021 introduced an annual collective bargaining process and set
rigid stages and deadlines for how it is conducted. They explain that this Act provides
that: workers must first submit their list of dispute grievances between 30 November of
year 1 and the end of January of year 2; then, the government entity concerned must form
the bargaining committee, also by the end of January of year 2; subsequently, the direct
contact stage must begin in February of year 2; and, lastly, the collective bargaining
process must be concluded by 30 June of year 2, in order for the collective agreement
(or arbitration award) to enter into force on 1 January of year 3 (if the collective
agreement (or arbitration award) is concluded after this date, it will only come into
force in year 4).
- 577. The complainants state that: (i) although the SUTEP complied with
submitting its draft collective agreements for 2022, 2023 and 2024 within the legal
deadline referred to in the previous paragraph, the MINEDU formed the bargaining
committees late during all those years (it did so on 16 June in 2022, on 30 May in 2023,
and still had not done so as of 15 March 2024); and (ii) the appointment of the
bargaining committees – by the MINEDU – on dates very close to the deadline by which,
according to the above-mentioned Act, collective bargaining must be completed (30 June
of each year), left no time for the SUTEP to develop its bargaining strategies and in
the end meant it had to quickly accept the financial proposals of the MINEDU in 2022 and
2023 (the EI and the SUTEP also claim that the SUTEP was only able to negotiate a non
remunerative bonus in 2022); (iii) the MINEDU, instead of only reviewing the formal
aspects of the grievances submitted by the SUTEP, issued a number of decisions without
explanation or justification and, further, did not respond to the communications sent to
it by the SUTEP requesting it to set up the bargaining committees for the years in
question as a matter of urgency; and (iv) the failure to comply with the legal deadlines
governing collective bargaining in the state sector is a strategy by the MINEDU to avoid
collective bargaining with the SUTEP, which deprives it of its right to collective
bargaining and prevents it from representing and defending the interests of its
members.
- 578. The complainants also allege that, disregarding the fact that the
SUTEP is the majority trade union in the education sector, the MINEDU set up a permanent
bargaining table in 2022 with the minority trade union organization, through General
Secretariat Decision No. 112 2022 MINEDU, while only setting up a temporary bargaining
table with the SUTEP lasting merely 20 days due to its delay in complying with the
stages and deadlines legally established for conducting collective bargaining for the
year in question, as detailed above.
- 579. Lastly, the CGTP alleges that the MINEDU has systematically failed
to comply with 43 clauses of the 2023–24 collective agreement signed with the SUTEP,
even though, according to existing legislation, all the clauses should have entered into
force on 1 January 2024 at the latest. These clauses refer, inter alia, to the MINEDU’s
commitments regarding the gradual conversion of certain temporary teaching posts to
permanent posts; a review of the respective regulations on the certification of a
representative from the majority trade union to serve on the Administrative Disciplinary
Proceedings Committee; authorization of a management bonus for contractual teachers
under the 2024 budget; and the call in the 2024 Budget Law for an increase in the
monthly remuneration of appointed and contractual teachers and teaching assistants.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 580. In its various communications, the Government provides the MINEDU’s
observations on the allegations in the present case.
- 581. With regard to the allegation of obstructing the granting of trade
union leave, the MINEDU provides information, according to which: (i) pursuant to
paragraph 5.16.3 of Vice-Ministerial resolution No. 123-2021-MINEDU, and as there are
two national trade unions in the education sector, the trade union leave for
representation should be set in proportion to the number of teachers affiliated to each
organization, and one of the steps taken by the MINEDU must be to verify that the
membership data recorded in the digital and physical lists submitted by the trade unions
concerned correlate; (ii) the delay in processing the request for trade union leave
submitted in 2021 by the SUTEP was due to operational difficulties caused by the lack of
correlation and order between the physical and digital membership lists submitted by
this union and to the illegibility of some of the members’ identity documents in the
physical lists; (iii) in March 2022, the MINEDU informed the SUTEP, in a virtual
meeting, about the progress in the processing of its request for trade union leave and
the problems encountered, which persisted despite the SUTEP submitting further
information (additional physical and digital lists) after that meeting; and (iv) in
April 2022, an official letter was sent to the SUTEP stating that positive
administrative silence could not be applied in its request for trade union leave
because, under the General Administrative Procedure Act, this concept only applies to
administrative procedures that are subject to it and does not include the granting of
leave for trade union representation, which has its own requirements and deadlines.
- 582. The MINEDU also reports that, taking into account the problems
encountered in the processing of trade union leave requested by the SUTEP (as well as by
other trade unions), it was decided to issue Vice-Ministerial resolution No.
074-2022-MINEDU, published on 17 June 2022, amending Vice-Ministerial resolution No.
123-2021-MINEDU and incorporating temporary provision 10.4, which exceptionally
invalidated the deadlines set for 2022 in the latter resolution for the procedure for
granting leave for trade union representation. The MINEDU indicates that, in a letter
dated 22 June 2022, it sent the SUTEP the updated schedule of deadlines to be considered
for that year and that on 30 June 2022 a meeting was held with an authorized
representative of the union to show progress made in the collation of the membership
lists and to explain the ongoing operational difficulties that were delaying its
completion; at this meeting, the SUTEP representative recommended a temporary break
(establishing a reference date) in order to deal with the pending request for trade
union licences and then to continue with the list collation. As reported by the MINEDU,
after taking into account, aside from other elements, the recommendation made by the
SUTEP official, it finally issued General Secretariat Decision No. 132-2022-MINEDU,
which granted trade union leave to seven members of the SUTEP executive committee from 9
August 2022 to 8 August 2023; this General Secretariat Decision did not include the
eighth member of the committee – the Deputy General Secretary – as she already had trade
union leave valid between March and December 2022. According to the MINEDU, in August
2022, the SUTEP filed an appeal and precautionary measures against General Secretariat
Decision No. 132-2022-MINEDU (registered under file No. MPD2022 EXT 0163140), which was
referred in the same month to the Civil Service Tribunal and is currently being
processed.
- 583. According to the information provided by the MINEDU, the latter
decided not to grant the request for retroactive trade union leave (for a period prior
to 9 August 2022) made by the SUTEP on 8 August 2022 on the grounds that it did not
specify the date until which this trade union leave should be retroactive and that, in
implementation of the General Administrative Procedure Act, administrative acts cannot
be granted retroactive effect when they infringe the fundamental rights of third
parties, as in this case the students’ fundamental right to education.
- 584. Furthermore, with regard to the allegations concerning the
unjustified initiation of disciplinary proceedings against three SUTEP union officials,
the MINEDU reports that: (i) the General Secretary of the union was acquitted in
December 2022 in the disciplinary proceedings brought against him for alleged
abandonment of his post on the grounds that, although General Secretariat Decision No.
132-2022-MINEDU only granted him trade union leave from 9 August 2022, his status as
general secretary legitimized his absence from work for a period prior to that date so
he could participate in the negotiations of the 2022 list of dispute grievances; (ii) in
September 2022, it was decided to initiate disciplinary proceedings against the union’s
Secretary for Equality and Gender, given that she must prove and/or document the alleged
abandonment of her post before 9 August 2022; and (iii) no disciplinary proceedings were
initiated against the union’s Deputy General Secretary.
- 585. With regard to the alleged undermining of the SUTEP’s right to
representation within Derrama Magisterial, the MINEDU states that: (i) Supreme Decree
No. 009-2022-MINEDU and Ministerial resolution No. 356-2022-MINEDU, respectively,
amended the statutes of Derrama Magisterial and called elections for its executive
board, as well as for other bodies; (ii) these regulations were issued within its remit,
while article 3 of Supreme Decree No. 021-88-ED, approving the statutes of Derrama
Magisterial, empowers it to approve amendments to the statutes and to issue any
additional measures needed for better compliance (a power ratified by the Constitutional
Court in 2006); (iii) in 2022, Derrama Magisterial lodged a constitutional amparo
proceeding (remedy for the protection of constitutional rights) to challenge the
aforementioned regulations (processed under file no. 05338-2022-0-1801-JR-DC-11); (iv)
in the context of these proceedings, the Eleventh Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme
Court of Justice of Lima granted, through Decision No. 2 of 14 November 2022, a
precautionary measure suspending the effects of the aforementioned regulations; and (v)
with this precautionary measure still in force, the election of the new members of the
executive board of Derrama Magisterial (which should have taken place on 16 April 2023)
has yet to happen.
- 586. Regarding the alleged delay in the 2022 collective bargaining
process, the MINEDU states that: (i) this bargaining process was conducted pursuant to
the then recent Public Sector Collective Bargaining Act of 2021, and to ensure its
proper implementation and execution, it was necessary to issue further regulations and
decisions; (ii) between 20 January and 3 June 2022, various regulatory and
administrative actions were taken to negotiate the 2022 list of dispute grievances
submitted by the SUTEP, which were aimed at establishing the competent body within the
MINEDU to evaluate and review the content of the list of dispute grievances and to
determine the level of representativeness that the SUTEP needed to have to be able to
act legitimately in the negotiations; (iii) once these actions were completed, in June
2022, General Secretariat Decision No. 100-2022-MINEDU was issued establishing the
MINEDU representation that would be responsible for negotiating the 2022 list of dispute
grievances; and (iv) once dialogue round tables had been held, on 15 July 2022 the
MINEDU and the SUTEP signed the 2022–23 collective agreement, which the SUTEP neither
challenged nor made any observations thereon. Rather, it signed the agreement, which is
proof of its agreement.
- 587. Lastly, the MINEDU also states that, in the light of its policy of
dispute management in dialogue forums, it was decided through General Secretariat
Decision No. 112-2022-MINEDU to set up, exceptionally and temporarily (until December
2022), a “round table to follow up on agreements and working meetings” with the minority
trade union organization in order to coordinate and manage its requests and demands, to
follow up the agreements signed with it and to implement the agenda items discussed in
the working meetings.
C. The Committee’s conclusions
C. The Committee’s conclusions- 588. The Committee notes that this case concerns a series of allegations
of violations of the rights to freedom of association and collective bargaining
allegedly committed by the Ministry of Education (MINEDU) to the detriment of the Single
Union of Peruvian Education Workers (SUTEP).
- 589. The Committee notes that the complainants’ main allegations are: (i)
the late and partial adoption by the MINEDU of trade union leave for eight SUTEP
officials between 2022 and 2023, disregarding the usual deadlines and the application of
the concept of administrative silence; (ii) the instituting of disciplinary proceedings
against three trade union officials for abandoning their posts without trade union
leave; (iii) the exclusion of SUTEP representatives from the Peruvian national teachers’
social welfare institution (Derrama Magisterial), through undue amendments to its
statutes and the process to elect its executive board; (iv) the violation of the SUTEP’s
right to collective bargaining by the delay in the 2022, 2023 and 2024 bargaining
processes, with failure to adhere to the legally established deadlines and stages; (v)
the setting up by the MINEDU of a permanent bargaining table with the National
Federation of Education Workers of Peru (the minority trade union organization) and only
a temporary bargaining table with the SUTEP, ignoring its status as the majority trade
union; and (vi) the MINEDU’s systematic non-compliance with 43 clauses of the 2023– 24
collective agreement signed with the SUTEP, and which is currently in force.
- 590. The Committee also notes that the Government, for its part,
indicates that: (i) the delays in the process for approving trade union leave are due to
the need to verify the number of members per trade union in the sector so as to be able
to grant leave in proportion to that number, and that a regulation of 17 June 2022
changed the deadlines for the approval of such leave exceptionally for 2022; (ii) of the
two disciplinary proceedings instituted, one ended with the acquittal of the accused and
the other was still pending; (iii) the amendments to the statutes of Derrama Magisterial
were made under article 3 of Supreme Decree No. 021-88-ED, which gives the MINEDU such
power; (iv) the delays in the collective bargaining process were due to the need to
adopt regulatory measures to operate under the recent Public Sector Collective
Bargaining Act of 2021; and (v) the dialogue round table with the minority trade union
organization was set up on an exceptional and temporary basis (until 31 December
2022).
- 591. With regard to the allegations of obstruction and delays in the
granting of trade union leave, the Committee notes that the complainants state that the
Government granted trade union leave for the SUTEP on 9 August 2022, that is nine months
after the union submitted the request and six months after the legally established
deadlines, without the delayed granting of leave having retroactive effect, thus leaving
the period from 27 March to 8 August 2022 without coverage. The Committee notes that the
Government states, on the other hand, that it was necessary to verify the number of
members in each of the two existing trade unions in the sector before granting the leave
on a proportional basis and that difficulties arose in undertaking that count.
- 592. The Committee notes that seven SUTEP officials were granted leave
from 9 August 2022 to 8 August 2023 without this decision having retroactive effect. The
Committee notes that the SUTEP filed an appeal and precautionary measures against the
regulation approving these leaves of absence, which is still pending before the Civil
Service Tribunal. The Committee recalls that, while account should be taken of the
characteristics of the industrial relations system of the country, and while the
granting of such facilities should not impair the efficient operation of the undertaking
concerned, Paragraph 10(1) of the Workers’ Representatives Recommendation, 1971 (No.
143), provides that workers’ representatives in the undertaking should be afforded the
necessary time off from work, without loss of pay or social and fringe benefits, for
carrying out their representation functions, and that, while workers’ representatives
may be required to obtain permission from the management before taking time off, such
permission should not be unreasonably withheld [see Compilation of Decisions of the
Committee on Freedom of Association, sixth edition, 2018, para. 1603]. While taking due
note of the Government’s explanations on the reasons for the delay in granting trade
union leave to SUTEP officials for the period 2022–23, the Committee underlines the
importance of representatives of the main trade unions in the public education sector
having access, without delay and with legal certainty, to trade union leave to carry out
their representation functions. The Committee requests the Government to take all
necessary measures to meet these criteria, and further requests the Government to
provide updated information on the appeal filed with the Civil Service Tribunal against
the regulation approving non retroactively the above mentioned trade union leave.
- 593. With regard to the instituting of disciplinary proceedings for
abandonment of post between 27 March and 8 August 2022 against the SUTEP General
Secretary, Deputy General Secretary and Secretary for Equality and Gender, the Committee
notes the Government’s statement that only two proceedings were instituted, that the
proceedings against the General Secretary have already been concluded, with the
acquittal of the accused, and that, as regards the proceedings against the Secretary for
Equality and Gender, it is up to the official to disprove with evidence her alleged
abandonment of post. The Committee notes that the Government does not deny that the two
disciplinary proceedings relate to the period not covered by the decree granting delayed
trade union leave to SUTEP officials for the period 2022–23. Recalling that it has drawn
attention to the fact that initiating administrative proceedings against union officials
without sufficient grounds might have an intimidating effect on union officials [see
Compilation, para. 1102], the Committee regrets that, given these circumstances,
disciplinary proceedings have been instituted against the SUTEP officials, and requests
the Government to ensure that the criteria set out in the preceding paragraph are fully
taken into account in the decision on the disciplinary proceedings still pending. The
Committee requests the Government to provide information thereon.
- 594. With regard to the allegations concerning the alterations to the
legal deadlines for the collective bargaining process between the MINEDU and the SUTEP
in 2022, 2023 and 2024, which the complainants consider to be a strategy to limit the
SUTEP’s bargaining power, the Committee notes the Government’s reply concerning the 2022
bargaining process. The Committee notes that the Government, while acknowledging the
above-mentioned delay, states that it was caused by the need to adopt, between January
and June 2022, regulatory and administrative measures to implement the new Act No.
31188, the Public Sector Collective Bargaining Act, in force since 3 May 2021. It was
then only from June 2022 that the bargaining tables with the SUTEP could take place,
leading to the signing on 15 July 2022 of the 2022–23 collective agreement, which the
SUTEP neither challenged nor made any observations thereon. While taking due note of
these statements regarding the 2022 bargaining cycle, the Committee regrets to note that
it has not received the Government’s observations concerning the alleged delays in the
2023 and 2024 bargaining cycles. In this respect, the Committee recalls that the
principle that both employers and trade unions should negotiate in good faith and make
efforts to reach an agreement means that any unjustified delay in the holding of
negotiations should be avoided [see Compilation, para. 1330]. In light of the foregoing,
the Committee requests the Government to take active measures to ensure effective
compliance with legal deadlines by public institutions involved in collective bargaining
processes in the public education sector.
- 595. With regard to the allegation that the MINEDU favoured the minority
trade union organization by setting up a bargaining table with it in 2022, the Committee
notes the complainants’ allegation that the table was permanent, whereas the bargaining
table with the SUTEP for the annual negotiations in 2022 lasted, as mentioned above,
only around 20 days. The Committee notes the Government’s reply that the “bargaining
table to follow up on the agreements and working meetings” set up with the minority
trade union organization was temporary, which can be corroborated by article 3 of
General Secretariat Decision No. 112-2022-MINEDU, which provides for the round table’s
period of validity until 31 December 2022. The Committee takes due note of these various
elements. The Committee notes that: (i) what is not in dispute is the fact that the
SUTEP is the most representative union within the public education sector which, under
the legislation in force, entitles it to collective bargaining rights in that sector;
(ii) the Committee has no specific information on the exact issues discussed at the
bargaining table between MINEDU and the minority trade union organization or on the
extent to which the discussions that took place there might or might not have had the
effect of interfering with the SUTEP’s right to collective bargaining or of minimizing
its role as an interlocutor in the sector. The Committee recalls that the granting of
exclusive rights to the most representative organization should not mean that the
existence of other unions to which certain involved workers might wish to belong is
prohibited. Minority organizations should be permitted to carry out their activities and
at least to have the right to speak on behalf of their members and to represent them
[see Compilation, para. 1388]. In view of the above, the Committee invites the
Government to ensure that: (i) the dialogue with the various trade unions that may be
present in the public education sector is clearly established and is compatible with the
regulations on trade union representativeness provided for in collective bargaining
legislation; and (ii) the recognition of the existence of minority trade union
organizations and the dialogue with them does not take place to the detriment of the
most representative organizations in the sector.
- 596. The Committee further notes the allegations regarding the measures
adopted by the Government (Supreme Decree No. 009-2022-MINEDU and Ministerial resolution
No. 356 2022 MINEDU), which amended the statutes of Derrama Magisterial – in particular
the provisions relating to the composition and election of its executive board – and
called elections to that body. The Committee notes that: (i) Derrama Magisterial is a
private entity of trade union origin whose objectives are the provision of social
welfare services (death, disability and retirement), social credit and social and
cultural activities for teachers in public service; (ii) its statutes adopted in 1988
provide that its executive board is composed of four members of the SUTEP and two
members of the Union of Higher Education Teachers of Peru (SIDESP) and one
representative of the MINEDU; (iii) Supreme Decree No. 009-2022-MINEDU provides that the
members of the executive board should all be members elected by all Derrama Magisterial
affiliates. The Committee notes that the complainants allege that no consultations were
held with the SUTEP regarding the amendments, that the amendments disregard the right of
the SUTEP to appoint its representatives to the Derrama Magisterial (which it has been
doing for more than 40 years), and that, lastly, they ignore the fact that this is not a
government entity, but a private entity. The Committee notes that, for its part, the
Government states in its communications of January and February 2023 that: (i) the
regulations in question were issued within the Government’s remit under article 3 of
Supreme Decree No. 021-88-ED, which approves the statutes of Derrama Magisterial, and
empowers it to approve amendments to the statutes; and (ii) Derrama Magisterial lodged a
constitutional amparo proceeding (remedy for the protection of constitutional rights) to
challenge the aforementioned regulations (processed under file no. 05338
2022-0-1801-JR-DC-11), and that in the context of these proceedings, the Eleventh
Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Lima granted a precautionary measure
suspending the effects of the aforementioned regulations.
- 597. While noting that it has not received updated information from the
Government on this issue, the Committee notes that Supreme Decree No. 009-2022-MINEDU
was repealed by Supreme Decree No. 008-2023-MINEDU of 27 April 2023, restoring the 1988
statutes of Derrama Magisterial to full force and effect. The Committee notes that
Supreme Decree No. 008-2023 refers to the need to ensure respect for the right to
association recognized in article 13 of the Political Constitution of Peru. Noting that
Supreme Decree No. 009-2022-MINEDU, challenged by the complainants, has been repealed,
the Committee considers that this allegation does not call for further examination.
- 598. Lastly, the Committee notes with regret that it has not received the
Government’s reply to the allegations of the complainants concerning non-compliance with
the collective agreement 2023–24 signed between the MINEDU and the SUTEP. The Committee
recalls that agreements should be binding on the parties [see Compilation, para. 1334],
and that paragraph 3(1) of the Collective Agreements Recommendation, 1951 (No. 91),
states that “Collective agreements should bind the signatories thereto and those on
whose behalf the agreement is concluded”. In view of the above, the Committee requests
the Government to provide without delay its observations on compliance with the
aforementioned collective agreement.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 599. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The Committee
requests the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that the
representatives of the main trade unions in the public education sector have access
to trade union leave, without delay and with legal certainty, to carry out their
representative functions.
- (b) The Committee requests the Government to
provide updated information on the appeal filed with the Civil Service Tribunal
against General Secretariat Decision No. 132-2022 MINEDU granting non-retroactive
2022–23 trade union leave in favour of SUTEP officials.
- (c) The Committee
requests the Government to ensure that the criteria set out in respect of the
granting of trade union leave are taken fully into account in the decision on the
disciplinary proceedings instituted against the SUTEP Secretary for Equality and
Gender. The Committee requests the Government to provide information
thereon.
- (d) The Committee requests the Government to take active measures
to ensure effective compliance with legal deadlines by institutions involved in
collective bargaining processes in the public education sector.
- (e) The
Committee invites the Government to ensure that: (i) the dialogue with the various
trade unions that may be present in the public education sector is clearly
established and is compatible with the regulations on trade union representativeness
provided for in collective bargaining legislation; and (ii) the existence of
minority trade union organizations is recognized and dialogue with them is not
conducted to the detriment of the most representative organizations in the
sector.
- (f) The Committee requests the Government to send its observations
on the complainants’ allegations of reported non-compliance with the collective
agreement 2023–24.