Allegations: The complainants denounce, firstly, the refusal to register a trade
union of banana plantation workers comprising workers from various companies in the sector
and, secondly, anti-union action to prevent the setting up of a company union in that
sector
- 189. The Committee last examined this case (submitted in May 2015) at its
October 2019 meeting, when it presented an interim report to the Governing Body [see
391st Report, approved by the Governing Body at its 337th Session (October 2019), paras
225–252].
- 190. The Trade Union Association of Banana Plantation, Agricultural and
Rural Workers (ASTAC) sent additional allegations in communications dated 31 October
2019, 5 January 2020, 18 and 30 May 2021, 17 March 2022 and 15 March 2023.
- 191. The Government sent its replies in communications dated 4 February
and 30 April 2020, 25 February 2022, 30 August 2023, 10 January and 15 April 2024.
- 192. Ecuador 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 Rural Workers’ Organisations Convention,
1975 (No. 141).
A. Previous examination of the case
A. Previous examination of the case- 193. In its previous examination of the case in October 2019, the
Committee made the following recommendations [see 391st Report, para. 252]:
- (a)
The Committee once again requests the Government to take the necessary measures to
ensure that ASTAC is registered as a trade union organization if the organization so
requests it again and to ensure that, in the meantime, the necessary guarantees and
protections are provided to its members.
- (b) In connection with the
complaints filed by ASTAC on 8 November 2017, and 8 November and 28 March 2018
concerning blacklisting and anti-union acts, the Committee requests the Government
to conduct the respective inquiries, to provide a copy of the findings of the
inquiries and, if it is confirmed that anti-union acts were committed, to take
measures with sufficient dissuasive effect to penalize those responsible.
- (c) As to the allegations concerning anti-union acts perpetrated against
the leaders and members of the 7 February Association of Banana Plantation Workers
and ASTAC, the Committee urges the Government to meet with representatives of both
complainant organizations to examine the allegations of anti-union discrimination in
the banana sector outlined in the complaint.
- (d) The Committee urges the
Government to communicate without delay specific information on the alleged death
threats against the general secretary of the 7 February Association of Banana
Plantation Workers, Mr Luis Ochoa, and to keep it informed in this respect.
- (e) The Committee urges the Government to ensure that the complaint filed
by the secretary general of ASTAC, Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana, on 7 March
2018, is investigated, that the Government takes any action necessary to prevent any
repetition of those acts in the future and to ensure his safety, and that it keeps
the Committee informed in this respect.
- (f) As to the alleged anti-union
effects of the three ministerial agreements issued by the Ministry of Labour
(MDT-2017-0029, MDT-2018-0096 and MDT-2018-0074), the Committee invites the
Government to examine, together with the organizations of employers and workers
concerned, the impact of the reform on the exercise of freedom of association. The
Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
B. Additional information from the complainant
B. Additional information from the complainant- 194. In its communication of 5 January 2020, the complainant alleges
that: (i) the application submitted by ASTAC on 11 January 2019 to register the trade
union of workers at the CALAJUSA company (hereafter the trade union of company 1) was
rejected by the Deputy Minister of Labour and Employment on 8 April 2019; (ii) the
application from the trade union of workers at the Agricultural Company Banana
Plantations of Ecuador (hereafter the trade union of company 2) to register its new
leaders, submitted on 14 August 2018 to the Regional Labour Directorate, received no
response; and (iii) contrary to what is stated by the Government, there is a lack of
dialogue from the Ministry of Labour, which led ASTAC to appeal to the Office of the
President of the Republic, which then referred the matter to the Ministry of Labour, as
a result of which the Minister of Labour assigned the Undersecretary of Labour to deal
with them, although only one 30-minute meeting has been held.
- 195. On the other hand, the complainant reiterates its previous complaint
that the Ministry of Labour’s issuance of three ministerial agreements between April
2017 and May 20918 relating to contractual arrangements applicable to workers in the
banana sector constitutes a serious deterioration in freedom of association, the right
to collective bargaining and the right to fair remuneration and a minimum wage. ASTAC
alleges that those agreements were issued with the argument that banana production in
Ecuador revolves around the popular, solidarity economy, with specific periods for
planting and harvesting that adjust to statutory working hours, when in reality, banana
production is a continual and intensive agro-industrial activity, in which the majority
of cultivated land, where the majority of workers are employed and there are the worst
labour conditions, is held by a small number of large and medium-sized producers.
- 196. The complainant also alleges reprisals against two workers from the
ORODELTI company (hereafter company 3) for requests relating to breastfeeding
entitlements, which led to a reduction in working hours for ASTAC member Ms Maritza
Mendoza and the blacklisting and dismissal of her husband. In addition, the complainant
alleges that the contracting of Mr Juan Mora as a service-provider by the company
COBONAFIN (hereafter company 4), was done with a view to evading labour costs and that
the use of this contractual arrangement restricts his right to freedom of
association.
- 197. In its communications of 18 May 2021, the complainant reports that
the Chamber of Admissions Tribunal of the Constitutional Court had decided to accept the
request for an extraordinary protection order submitted on 22 June 2020 jointly with the
Office of the Ombudsperson (as part of case No. 12-21-EP) in which it reported, among
other things, the obstruction of the establishment of a branch-level trade union in the
banana sector.
- 198. In its communication of 31 May 2021, the complainant reports that,
in a ruling dated 25 May 2021, the Tribunal of the Criminal Chamber of the Pichincha
Provincial Court of Justice instructed the Ministry of Labour to: (i) register ASTAC as
a trade union; (ii) regulate the exercise of the right to freedom of association by
branch of activity; (iii) refrain from restricting or limiting the rights relating to
freedom of association of other organizations applying for registration by branch of
activity, under the same conditions and circumstances as those examined in this case;
and (iv) directly and immediately observe and implement, in its actions and decisions,
ILO Conventions Nos 87, 98, 141 and the Plantations Convention, 1958 (No. 110).
- 199. In its communication of 17 March 2022, the complainant alleges that:
(i) although the Government of Ecuador registered ASTAC as a banana sector trade union
on 11 January 2022 as a result of that ruling, the Government designated that decision
as unique such that it would not lead to the registration of other branch-level trade
unions nor to a legislative change; (ii) the Government, through the Ministry of Labour,
submitted an extraordinary protection order with a view to striking down the
aforementioned ruling, which would not only put ASTAC at risk, but would also deny the
right of all workers who wanted to organize themselves in a branch-level trade union;
and (iii) the lack of standards that recognize industry trade unions represents a
continued violation of the right to freedom of association and weakens ASTAC in a
practical sense, as it seriously inhibits is ability to negotiate necessary improvements
in working conditions in the banana sector.
- 200. On the other hand, the complainant alleges, with regard to the death
threats against Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana which were the subject of a
complaint to the Public Prosecutor’s Office on 23 February 2018, that they have not been
investigated, as urged by the Committee on Freedom of Association, in fact quite the
contrary: (i) he has been the subject of numerous complaints, including the spreading of
false information to create economic panic, invasion of privacy and tax fraud, in
retaliation for his efforts to secure the registration of the ASTAC union; and (ii) the
American Bar Association Center for Human Rights, which supervised the proceedings in
the tax fraud case, concluded that there was cause for concern that officials could be
using the criminal proceedings against Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana to intimidate
and silence him, in violation of his right to a fair trial, as well as his right to
freedom of association and expression.
- 201. In its communication of 15 March 2023, the complainant alleges that:
(i) five months after the registration of ASTAC, on 27 June 2022, the organization’s
extraordinary general assembly was held, during which it was decided to admit 47 workers
to the organization; (ii) the registration application for the leadership of ASTAC,
which had been submitted on 28 October 2022, was denied through official letter No.
MDT-VTE-2022-0948-O which stated that the formal registration requirements had not been
complied with, when in fact it was the Ministry of Labour itself that had neglected to
issue a regulation permitting the regulation of the exercise of freedom of association
for branch-level trade unions; (iii) consequently, an appeal was submitted for violation
of the right to freedom of association and the right to organize of the workers in
question without prior authorization; (iv) although, as a trade union, ASTAC is
recognized by the State, its legal representation remained restricted, which meant that
its current elected leadership was being prevented from exercising its function; and (v)
the struggle for freedom of association and the right to organize at the branch level in
Ecuador rests on just two organizations – ASTAC and the Ecuadorian Digital Platform
Workers’ Front (FRENAPP), which are being denied registration for branch-level unions
and the full exercise of their trade union rights, in clear non-compliance with the
ruling achieved by ASTAC.
C. The Government’s reply
C. The Government’s reply- 202. In its communication of 4 February 2020, in connection with the
complaints filed by ASTAC on 8 November 2017, and 8 November and 28 March 2018
concerning blacklisting and anti-union acts for which the Committee had requested the
Government to conduct the respective inquiries, the Government states that: (i) the
Ministry of Labour guarantees the right to freedom of association by means of labour
inspections, addressing complaints from workers who claim to have been victims of
anti-union acts and the application of sanctions; and (ii) the Standard for the
Eradication of Labour Discrimination (Ministerial Decision No. MDT-2017-0082) provides
for the imposition of fines from 3 to 20 times the statutory minimum wage for acts of
discrimination, such as blacklisting.
- 203. As to the allegations concerning anti-union acts perpetrated against
the leaders and members of the 7 February Association of Banana Plantation Workers and
ASTAC, and the Committee’s request for it to meet with representatives of those
organizations to examine the allegations, the Government states that it had made ongoing
dialogue a policy of State, and on that basis it was prepared to hold the necessary
meetings to bring resolution to the reported acts of union discrimination.
- 204. With regard to the report of alleged death threats against ASTAC’s
general coordinator, Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana, and the complaint alleging
intimidation against the general secretary of the 7 February Association of Banana
Plantation Workers for the fruit company Compañía Frutas Selectas SA (FRUTSESA), Mr Luis
Ochoa, the Government states that the Ministry of Labour has requested information from
the Attorney General’s Office on whether such complaints have been made, as well as on
the status of the investigative process.
- 205. As to the anti-union effects of the three ministerial agreements
issued by the Ministry of Labour between April 2017 and May 2018 (No. MDT-2017-0029
governing labour relations specifically in the agriculture, livestock and
agro-industrial sector; No. MDT-2018-0096 establishing a special employment contract for
part-time activities in the agriculture sector; and No. MDT-2018-0074 establishing a
special employment contract for part-time activities in the banana sector), the
Government states that, within the framework of the ongoing dialogue between workers and
employers, held within the National Labour and Wage Council, an amendment will be
proposed to those agreements in order to comply with the Committee’s recommendation and
to strengthen and adapt those provisions to the needs of the workers.
- 206. With regard to ASTAC’s allegations of obstructions to unionization
in the banana sector, the Government states that there are 30 trade unions of banana
company workers in the country, which disproved the complainant’s allegation that
unionization in the sector was not possible in Ecuador.
- 207. In its communication of 30 April 2020, with regard to the
registration of the leadership of the union of company 2 and the allegation from ASTAC
that this delay was due to the interest in providing proof of non-compliance with the
organization’s statutes by not electing new leaders, the Government reports that, after
the complaints had complied with the Ministry’s observations, the organization’s
leadership was registered for a period of two years, from 18 July 2018 until 18 July
2020.
- 208. In response to ASTAC’s allegation that the Ministry had not
demonstrated a willingness to hold dialogue with its representatives, the Government
states that, via the Ministry of Labour, it has committed to provide the appropriate and
legal attention to petitioners, as long as they comply with the requirements and
procedures legally established in the various existing bodies of standards. The
Government states that Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana has not submitted any other
application for the granting of legal status for ASTAC, nor has he requested to meet
with the Ministry, noting furthermore that the aforementioned Undersecretary of Labour
left the post in January 2019, but that neither the previous nor the current
administration had received any meeting request. The Government adds that, since one is
required, Ministry officials will await such a request, as it does with all the other
meeting requests it receives every day from labour and social organizations around the
country.
- 209. With regard to ASTAC’s questioning of the current contractual
arrangements in the banana sector, the Government states that the Ministry of Labour,
having noted the informal manner of labour relations in the banana sector resulting from
the lack of a contractual arrangement that could adapt to the needs and realities of
that work, drew up a contractual arrangement that would respond to the cyclical
requirements of banana production.
- 210. With regard to the allegations of reprisals against two workers
reported by ASTAC, the Government states that the Ministry of Labour will carry out
inspections to guarantee compliance with the workers’ rights and will request
information from both company 3, in order to obtain a response to the arguments
submitted by the complainants, and from company 4, with regard to the aforementioned
contractual relationship, considering that the provision of services is a legally
established form of contract governed by the Civil Code, and that information will be
communicated to the Office as soon as possible.
- 211. In its communication of 30 August 2023, the Government states the
following: (i) on 17 June 2021, the Ministry of Labour and the State Attorney General’s
Office filed an extraordinary protection order (No. 1760-21-EP), which is still being
reviewed by the Constitutional Court of Ecuador, against the 25 May 2021 ruling that had
instructed the Ministry of Labour to register ASTAC as a branch-level union and that
would regulate the registration of trade unions by branch of activity; (ii) on 10
January 2022, in compliance with the ruling issued on 25 May 2021, the Deputy Minister
of Labour and Employment, by means of official letter No. MDT-VTE-2022-0035-O,
registered the nomination of 31 founding members of ASTAC and, by means of ministerial
agreement No. MDT-2022-001 of 11 January 2022, approved its statute and granted it legal
status; and iii) by means of official letter No. MDT-VTE-2022-0948-O of 17 November
2022, the Deputy Minister of Labour and Employment denied the registration of the ASTAC
leadership because persons outside the organization had participated in the election
process.
- 212. In its communications of 10 January and 15 April 2024, the
Government reports that, by means of official letter No. MDT-VTE-2023-1017-O of 18
December 2023, the Deputy Minister of Labour and Employment informed the representative
of ASTAC that the Executive Board of ASTAC had been registered for a period of two
years, from 18 November 2023 until 18 November 2025.
D. The Committee’s conclusions
D. The Committee’s conclusions- 213. The Committee recalls that, in this case, the complainants
denounceallege, firstly, that the Government is obstructing the registration of a trade
union of banana plantation workers comprising workers from various companies in the
sector and, secondly, anti-union action to prevent the setting up of company unions in
that sector.
- 214. The Committee recalls that, in its previous examinations of the
case, it had requested the Government to take the necessary measure to ensure the
registration of ASTAC as a trade union. The Committee notes that both ASTAC and the
Government report that: (i) in a ruling dated 25 May 2021, the Tribunal of the Criminal
Chamber of the Pichincha Provincial Court of Justice instructed the Ministry of Labour
to register ASTAC as a trade union, to regulate the exercise of the right to freedom of
association by branch of activity, and to refrain from restricting or limiting the
rights relating to freedom of association of other organizations applying for
registration by branch of activity; (ii) as a result of this, the Ministry proceeded to
register ASTAC on 11 January 2022; (iii) however, the Government stated that this ruling
would not lead to the registration of other branch-level unions or to a legislative
change; and (iv) the Ministry of Labour contested that ruling before the Constitutional
Court. The Committee also notes that ASTAC maintains that the lack of standards that
recognize industry trade unions represents a continued violation of the right to freedom
of association and weakens its capacity for action in a practical sense, as it seriously
inhibits is ability to negotiate improvements in working conditions in the banana
sector.
- 215. The Committee notes with interest the registration of ASTAC as a
trade union as a result of the ruling handed down by the Pichincha Provincial Court. At
the same time, the Committee regrets to observe that the country’s legislation still
does not permit the establishment of primary-level trade unions composed of workers from
different enterprises and that the Ministry of Labour contested the aforementioned
ruling before the Constitutional Court. In this regard, the Committee once again recalls
that the free exercise of the right to establish and join unions implies the free
determination of the structure and composition of unions [see Compilation of decisions
of the Committee on Freedom of Association, sixth edition, 2018, para. 502] and that
workers should be free to decide whether they prefer to establish, at the primary level,
a works union or another form of basic organization, such as an industrial or craft
union [see Compilation, para. 504]. The Committee also recalls that, in its previous
examinations of the case, it had observed with concern that many agricultural workers in
Ecuador not only found it impossible to set up company unions owing to the minimum
membership requirement, which conflictsis conflicting with the structure of a sector
where most production units are small, but that they were also seeing their efforts to
overcome that obstacle by grouping together in sectoral organizations being frustrated.
In view of the above, the Committee trusts that the process of contesting the legal
decision that ordered the registration of ASTAC will be resolved as soon as possible in
accordance with the criteria expressed above. The Committee requests the Government to
keep it informed of the corresponding Constitutional Court decision. Recalling that it
had referred the legislative aspects of this case to the Committee of Experts on the
Application of Conventions and Recommendations (CEACR), the Committee also trustsurges
that national legislation will recognize as soon as possible the right of workers to
establish primary-level trade unions composed of workers from different
enterprises.
- 216. The Committee also notes that ASTAC alleges that the registration
application for its leadership submitted on 28 October 2022 was denied by the Ministry
of Labour in violation of the freedom of association. In this regard, the Committee
notes that the Government reports that the registration of the ASTAC leadership,
initially denied due to the participation of persons outside the organization in the
election process, was finally authorized on 18 November 2023 for a period of two years.
Taking into account that the leadership of ASTAC was registered, the Committee will not
pursue the examination of this aspect of the case.
- 217. In addition, the Committee notes ASTAC’s allegation that the
Ministry of Labour denied the request to register the trade union of company 1. The
Committee observes that the Government has not sent its observations about this
allegation but that, at the same time, the complainant has not provided details about
it. The Committee therefore requests both the Government and the complainant to provide
information about the alleged refusal to register the trade union of company 1.
- 218. With regard to the allegations of blacklisting and the commission of
anti-union acts, including allegations of numerous anti-union dismissals in various
companies in the sector about which the Committee had requested the Government to
conduct inquiries, the Committee notes that the Government states that: (i) the Ministry
of Labour guarantees the right to freedom of association by means of labour inspections,
addressing complaints from workers who claim to have been victims of anti-union acts and
the application of sanctions; and (ii) the Standard for the Eradication of Labour
Discrimination provides for the imposition of fines from 3 to 20 times the statutory
minimum wage for acts of discrimination, such as blacklisting. The Committee nonetheless
observes that the Government has not provided specific information about the
investigations carried out or inspections specifically aiming to shed light on the
aforementioned allegations. In this regard, the Committee recalls that all practices
involving the blacklisting of trade union officials or members constitute a serious
threat to the free exercise of trade union rights and, in general, governments should
take stringent measures to combat such practices [see Compilation, para. 1121].
- 219. In addition, the Committee notes the new allegations communicated by
the complainant about reprisals against its members in two companies in the sector. In
this regard, the Committee notes that the Government reports that the Ministry of Labour
will carry out inspections to guarantee compliance with the aforementioned workers’
rights and will request information from the respective companies about these
allegations, which will be communicated to the Office as soon as possible. In light of
the above, the Committee requests the Government to provide specific information without
delay about the actions taken to shed light on the various allegations of blacklisting
and other anti-union acts made in the context of this case. Also recalling that ASTAC
had filed legal action and criminal complaints on 8 November 2017, and 8 November and 28
March 2018 in relation to several of the aforementioned allegations, the Committee
requests the Government to provide information about the resolution of these. Lastly, in
light of its previous recommendations and taking note of the Government’s stated
readiness in this regard, the Committee once again urges the Government and the
complainants to meet with the complainants in order to help resolve the allegations of
anti-union discrimination in the banana sector outlined in this case.
- 220. With regard to the allegations of death threats and intimidation
that led to the filing of criminal complaints by Mr Luis Ochoa, general secretary of the
7 February Association of Banana Plantation Workers and Mr Jorge Washington Acosta
Orellana, ASTAC’s general coordinator, the Committee notes that the Government merely
indicates that it has requested information from the Attorney General’s Office on
whether such complaints have been made, as well as on the status of the investigative
process. Recalling that the exercise of trade union rights is incompatible with violence
or threats of any kind and it is for the authorities to investigate without delay and,
if necessary, penalize any act of this kind [see Compilation, para. 88], the Committee
once again urges the Government to communicate without delay specific information about
the actions taken by the competent authorities to shed light on the alleged death
threats made against Mr Luis Ochoa and Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana and to keep
it informed on the situation of the criminal complaints filed in this regard.
- 221. Lastly, as to the alleged anti-union effects of the three
ministerial agreements issued by the Ministry of Labour (Nos MDT-2017-0029,
MDT-2018-0096 and MDT-2018-0074) relating to contractual arrangements applicable to
workers in the banana sector, the Committee recalls that, in its previous examination of
the case, it had invited the Government to examine, together with the organizations of
employers and workers concerned, the impact of the reforms on the exercise of freedom of
association. The Committee notes that: (i) in a 2020 communication, the Government
indicated that, within the framework of the ongoing dialogue between workers and
employers, held within the National Labour and Wage Council, an amendment would be
proposed to the aforementioned ministerial agreements in order to comply with the
Committee’s recommendation and to strengthen and adapt those provisions to the needs of
the workers; and (ii) it has not received any subsequent information from the Government
on the matter. On the basis of the foregoing, the Committee requests the Government to
examine, together with the organizations of employers and workers concerned, the impact
of ministerial agreements Nos MDT-2017-0029, MDT-2018-0096 and MDT-2018-0074 on the
exercise of trade union activity.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 222. In the light of its foregoing interim conclusions, the Committee
invites the Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The
Committee trusts that the process of contesting the legal decision that ordered the
registration of the Trade Union Association of Banana Plantation, Agricultural and
Rural Workers (ASTAC) will be resolved as soon as possible in accordance with the
criteria expressed in this case. The Committee requests the Government to keep it
informed of the corresponding Constitutional Court decision. Recalling that it had
referred the legislative aspects of this case to the Committee of Experts on the
Application of Conventions and Recommendations, the Committee also trusts urges that
national legislation will recognize as soon as possible the right of workers to
establish primary-level trade unions composed of workers from different
enterprises.
- (b) The Committee requests both the Government and the
complainant to provide information about the alleged refusal to register the trade
union of workers at the CALAJUSA company (company 1).
- (c) The Committee
requests the Government to provide specific information without delay about the
actions taken to shed light on the various allegations of blacklisting and other
anti-union acts made in the context of this case.
- (d) Recalling that ASTAC
had filed legal action and criminal complaints on 8 November 2017, and 8 November
and 28 March 2018 in relation to several of the aforementioned allegations, the
Committee requests the Government to provide information about the resolution of
these.
- (e) In light of its previous recommendations and taking note of the
Government’s stated readiness in this regard, the Committee once again urges the
Government and the complainants to meet with the complainants in order to help
resolve the allegations of anti-union discrimination in the banana sector outlined
in this case.
- (f) The Committee once again urges the Government to
communicate without delay specific information about the actions taken by the
competent authorities to shed light on the alleged death threats made against Mr
Luis Ochoa and Mr Jorge Washington Acosta Orellana and to keep it informed on the
situation of the criminal complaints filed in this regard.
- (g) The Committee
requests the Government to examine, together with the organizations of employers and
workers concerned, the impact of ministerial agreements Nos MDT-2017-0029,
MDT-2018-0096 and MDT-2018-0074 on the exercise of trade union
activity.