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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, September 29, 2016
WORKER RIGHTS VIOLATIONS RAMPANT IN JAFFNA, SRI LANKA
( Jaffna July 2015 : A worker renovating Jaffna Fort poses for a photographs while working ©s.deshapriya)
28/09/2016
The 2009 end of Sri Lanka’s civil war was an opportunity for workers to
return to the security and protections of the formal economy, which had
been destabilized by 26 years of violence. However, a new Solidarity
Center survey finds that peace has yet to bring the hoped-for economic
gains to workers in Jaffna, the capital of Sri Lanka’s Northern
Province. The survey’s findings on working conditions are especially
important because the exploitation of workers is not only a setback for
healthy industrial relations in Sri Lanka’s economy, but has the
potential to aggravate social tensions and interfere with the ongoing
process of peacebuilding.
“The bulk of the workers in Jaffna are in low-paid jobs with
minimal labor standards, social protection and security of tenure,
which are not conducive to creating sustainable livelihoods,” according
to the summary.
“A key element to address conflict is equal treatment under the law,”
says Tim Ryan, Asia regional program director at the Solidarity Center,
who presented the survey’s findings during a recent discussion of the
report at the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) in Washington, D.C.
According to Ryan, the survey seeks to provide economic data on workers
in Northern and Eastern Sri Lanka that go beyond employment statistics.
“Are they finding ways to both protect their rights under the law? Are
laws and standards being equitably enforced?”
Workers Rights Laws Not Enforced
Despite worker-friendly Sri Lankan legislation like the Employees’
Provident Fund (EPF), an employer-funded government social security
that has existed for decades, the Solidarity Center’s survey shows a
majority of workers—76 percent—do not have the labor rights they are
legally guaranteed due to a lack of enforcement. Of that percentage,
only 22 percent of female respondents and 46 percent of male respondents
say they receive what they are owed by the EPF.
The gendered difference in access to social protections is
only one example of a trend persistent throughout the survey’s results,
which suggests that female workers are disproportionately disadvantaged
under the current conditions. A large wage gap exists between male and
female respondents, including between employees doing identical work.
The rate of female unemployment is nearly double that of male
unemployment. And more than 80 percent of female respondents say they
are unaware of their right to overtime benefits, compared with 49
percent of male respondents.
More such initiatives are needed. Although Sri Lanka is a member of the
International Labor Organization (ILO), the survey confirms that more
progress is needed to move the country toward the goals outlined in the
ILO’s agenda for decent work. While ongoing tension and inequalities in
Sri Lankan politics complicate the protection of worker rights through
legislation, workers’ organizations like trade unions can help hold
employers accountable to their employees and bring Sri Lanka in line
with the standards of the international community.
Solidarity Net/ Originally posted on September 7, 2016 / By Lily Frankel
Read the full report here as a PDF:sri-lanka-workers-in-postwar-jaffna-8-16
SRI-LANKA.Workers-in-Postwar-Jaffna.8.16.pdf by Thavam Ratna on Scribd