A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, June 4, 2012
THE REAL RISK OF LOSING THE US GSP TRADE CONCESSION
Sunday, 03 June 2012
The reality is that the loss of the GSP will have an impact which is
trivial to the point of vanishing on bilateral US - Sri Lanka trade.
Variables such as the exchange rate, cost of labour and other inputs
into the production process, and, infrastructure have a greater impact.
The petition to withdraw the GSP concession has been filed by the
American Federation of Labor & Congress of Industrial Organisations
(AFL-CIO). AFL-CIO first filed the petition to exclude Sri Lanka from
GSP eligible beneficiary countries in 2008. It was updated in 2009 and
supplemented by pre- and post-hearing briefs in 2010. Further
submissions were made in 2011 and 2012. It levels very serious
allegations that work practices in Sri Lanka were and continue to be in
breach of International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions. They
include numerous cases where the government has failed to enforce its
own laws, repeated breaches of internationally recognized worker rights,
a dysfunctional labour inspectorate, and, a hostile Board of Investment
(BOI) that is responsible for administering export processing zones.
In the December 2011 update AFL-CIO cites the following event as further
evidence of ongoing breaches of ILO conventions; “On May 30, 2011,
approximately thousands of workers from several factories in the
Katunayake Free Trade Zone protested the government's proposed private
sector pension proposal, which had been developed without adequate input
from either workers or employers. When police arrived, the
demonstration turned violent, with the police beating demonstrators,
firing tear gas, and finally shooting live ammunition at the unarmed
workers. Various sources put the number of injured demonstrators as high
as 460, five of whom were shot with live ammunition, and one of whom,
Roshen Chanaka, died”. It also highlights the exploitation of workers in
the former warzones stating that “The AFL-CIO is especially concerned
about violations of labor law in the North and East (Tamil majority
areas) as factories begin to open and hopes that the current situation
of uniform wages, as controlled by the Wage Board, continues to apply to
the country as a whole”.
Suffice to say that the Sri Lanka’s government has countered this with
several submissions and a detailed action plan to deal with such
breaches. Sri Lanka’s foreign minister during his most recent raised
this issue again.
However, it is not just in the US where allegations of Sri Lanka being
in breach ILO conventions have made. Trade unions and journalists in the
European Union (EU) have raised this issue as well. A leading British
newspaper, the Independent has alleged that workers “in Sri Lanka
allegedly receive poverty wages and are forced to work excessive
overtime and to meet unrealistic, ever-increasing targets” with
management in factories “threatening to sack” workers if they joined a
trade union.
The PLAYFAIR 2012 campaign run by the British Trade Union Congress has
also highlighted several violations of ILO conventions by Sri Lankan
exporters. And, like the US, the EU too has withdrawn its GSP trade from
countries which it deemed to have violated ILO conventions, e.g.
Belarus and Myanmar.
With Sri Lankan exporters already confronting several headwinds
including a prolonged economic downturn in the EU and a 15 percent fall
in the value of the Euro, such an action would prove catastrophic. With
over 90 percent of Sri Lanka’s exports to the EU benefitting from the
GSP concession, it would effectively shut-off Sri Lanka from its second
largest export market. This should also be viewed in the context of Sri
Lanka’s major export competitors still retaining the GSP+ trade
concession which it lost in 2010.
It is this fear which perhaps explains why the Sri Lankan government has
mounted a zealous defense of its work practices to the Office of the
United States Trade Representative. Ignoring the AFL-CIO petition no
matter how trivial the impact the loss of GSP on bilateral US – Sri
Lanka trade would be to acknowledge that it is in violation ILO
conventions. And, it would have brought it in sight of the crosshairs of
European trade unions seeking to improve work practices in countries
which export to the EU. Of course, it is not just trade unions which
have taken note of this but also human rights organisations which
continue to pressure Sri Lanka on accountability, opposition parties and
diaspora activists as well.