Allegations: The complainant organization alleges threats and the detention of
trade unionists in the context of a dispute relating to collective bargaining in the
Ministry of Finance and excessive delays in collective bargaining
- 283. The Committee examined this case at its meeting in October 2013 and
presented an interim report to the Governing Body [see 370th Report, paras 401–412,
approved by the Governing Body at its 319th Session (October 2013)].
- 284. The Government sent its observations in a communication dated 19 May
2014.
- 285. El Salvador 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), the Workers’ Representatives Convention, 1971 (No.
135), and the Labour Relations (Public Service) Convention, 1978 (No. 151).
A. Previous examination of the case
A. Previous examination of the case- 286. At its meeting in October 2013, the Committee made the following
recommendations on the matters still pending [see 370th Report, para. 412]:
- – The Committee requests the Government to provide as a matter of
urgency full information on all of the allegations (including the two union
officers’ arrest and detention, their current situation and the police’s alleged
failure to take action on death threats which three union members received from
transport workers) and on the administrative or judicial proceedings initiated in
this regard.
- – The
Committee requests the complainant and the Government to send information about the
current status of the collective bargaining process.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 287. In its communication dated 19 May 2014, the Government states in
relation to the alleged detention of Ms Krissia Meny Guadalupe Flores and Ms Odilia
Dolores Marroquín Cornejo, who, according to the complaint presented, are the Secretary
for Women’s Issues and the Secretary-General of the executive committee of the Union of
Workers of the Ministry of Finance (SITRAMHA), on 30 November 2011, at the El Amatillo
customs office, that the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare has conducted the
relevant consultations, from which it appears that the allegations of the arrest and
detention of the trade unionists are untrue and without any legal basis. The
documentation provided by the National Civil Police indicates that the procedure
followed on 30 November 2011 at the El Amatillo customs office by police officers
consisted of providing protection to the persons referred to above, who were inside the
customs administrator’s office, when a mob of road transport workers tried to enter and
assault them. The police officers took them into custody as a safety measure until a
vehicle from the General Directorate of Customs, which transports customs officials,
arrived to evacuate them. At no time were they detained. The Office of the Public
Prosecutor of the Republic has also indicated that the persons referred to above were
never reported as detainees by the National Civil Police and no complaints against them
are either currently under investigation or have been closed.
- 288. In view of the above, the Government considers that there is no
legitimate basis for the complaint and that the case should be closed.
C. The Committee’s conclusions
C. The Committee’s conclusions- 289. With regard to the allegations concerning: (1) the detention of two
trade union leaders (Ms Krissia Meny Guadalupe Flores and Ms Odilia Dolores Marroquín
Cornejo); (2) the alleged sexual intimidation suffered by the Secretary-General Ms
Krissia Meny Guadalupe Flores; and (3) the refusal to provide protection to two trade
unionists and to a trade union leader (Mr Jorge Augusto Hernández Velásquez), who had
received death threats from some road transport workers; the Committee notes the
Government’s statements to the effect that the trade unionists were not detained, but
were protected from a mob of road transport workers threatening to assault them when
they were in the customs administrator’s office, and were taken to a vehicle used to
transport employees of the General Directorate of Customs in order to evacuate the trade
unionists as a safety measure.
- 290. The Committee notes this information and also that, according to the
Government, no proceedings have been initiated against these trade unionists. Given that
the versions of the complainant and the Government relating to the alleged detentions
are contradictory, the Committee invites the complainant union to provide additional
information.
- 291. The Committee notes with regret that, despite being expressly
requested to do so, the Government has not sent any information about the current status
of the collective bargaining process that began in November 2010 between the complainant
trade union and the Ministry of Finance. In this respect, the Committee recalls that the
Civil Service Tribunal had issued an order initiating arbitration procedures, which were
delayed as a result of the reallocation of the arbitrators appointed by the Ministry of
Finance [see 370th Report, para. 404]. The Committee therefore requests the Government
to keep it informed in this respect.
- 292. The Committee regrets that the Government has not sent its
observations on the death threats against three trade unionists, who were allegedly
threatened by international road transport workers with being burned alive, and to whom
the police allegedly denied police protection [see 370th Report, para. 406]. The
Committee notes in this respect that the complainant organization only indicated the
full name of one of the threatened trade unionists (Mr Jorge Augusto Hernández
Velásquez), but not of the other two. The Committee requests the complainant
organization to provide additional information to the Government and the Committee, and
to indicate the names of the other two trade unionists and whether a criminal complaint
has been lodged with the Office of the Public Prosecutor in respect of the alleged
threats. The Committee also requests the Government to provide full information on these
allegations and, if the allegations are confirmed, to provide protection to the trade
unionists in question.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 293. In the light of its foregoing interim conclusions, the Committee
invites the Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) As the
versions of the complainant organization and the Government relating to the alleged
detention of two trade unionists are contradictory, the Committee invites the
complainant union to provide additional information.
- (b) The Committee
requests the complainant organization to provide additional information to the
Government and the Committee, and to indicate whether it has lodged a criminal
complaint with the Office of the Public Prosecutor in respect of the alleged threats
made by road transport workers to kill three trade unionists, who were denied police
protection, and to indicate the full names of the trade unionists in question (only
the name of Mr Jorge Augusto Hernández Velásquez was mentioned in the allegations).
The Committee requests the Government to provide detailed information on these
allegations and, if the allegations are confirmed, to provide protection to the
trade unionists in question.
- (c) The Committee requests the Government to
keep it informed about the result of the arbitration procedures initiated by the
Civil Service Tribunal regarding collective bargaining between the complainant trade
union and the Ministry of Finance.