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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Mahmoud Abbas suspends PA's controversial social security law
Following
protests, Palestinian president halts law requiring employees to pay
seven percent of their salaries to a social security fund
Palestinians have held protests against the controversial law for several weeks (Reuters)

Monday 28 January 2019
Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas has suspended a controversial social security
law that sparked widespread protests and strikes from workers and
businesses across the West Bank in recent weeks.
Abbas
said in a decree on Monday that dialogue would continue over the
disputed parts of the law, which aimed to get private-sector employees
and businesses to contribute to a social security fund that would
finance pension benefits.
Critics
of the law had argued that a seven percent tax to cover the mandatory
social security fees would cripple Palestinian families that are already
struggling to make ends meet in the faltering, Palestinian economy
under Israeli occupation.
The minimum wage in the occupied Palestinian territories is around $400 (1,450 shekels) per month.
"If
the government wants to enforce this social security law, they should
raise the minimum wage," Muhammad Zghayyer, a spokesman for a committee
of activists who organised protests against the law, said after a strike in January.
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Shops
in several West Bank cities shut their doors on 15 January in protest
of the new tax, while activists organised numerous demonstrations
demanding the law be overturned.
"In Palestine, we have low wages and high costs of living," Mohammad Taamram, a chef who works two jobs in the West Bank told MEElast week. "How can we think about social security when we’re just trying to put food on the table?"
The
law, which was signed by Abbas in 2016, had yet to go into effect, but
earlier this month Palestinian companies with more than 200 employees
were required to register to join the Palestinian Social Security
Corporation (PSSC), as dictated by the legislation.
Palestinian
officials had promised to make changes to the law to address some of
the critics' concerns. Majed el-Helo, who oversees the PA's social
security programme, said earlier in January that "major amendments" had
been introduced to the law.
He
told Palestinian news agency Wafa that social security benefits will
extend to the widows of pensioners after their death - no matter how the
person dies, easing concerns by families of individuals killed by
Israel.
He
also said that the PA was working to offer low-interest loans from the
social security programme to companies that meet certain criteria.
Still, the purported reforms did not quell the public protests, leading to Abbas's executive order on Monday.
"Dialogue
continues between the relevant parties to this matter to reach national
consensus on the rules and date for the application of this law,"
Abbas's decree reads.
