8 June 2005
New ICFTU report submitted to the WTO:
¨Serious violations of core labour standards in Ecuador"
BRUSSELS, 8 June 2005, ICFTU Online: A new report by the ICFTU on core labour standards in Ecuador, produced to coincide
with the World Trade Organisation's (WTO) review of Ecuador's trade policy this week, shows serious shortcomings in the
application and enforcement of core labour standards. In particular, the report notes a lack of trade union rights of
workers, discrimination and child labour.
The report highlights that the right to form trade unions is not only subject to legal restrictions (a minimum of 30
workers is required to form a trade union) but that in practice employers also try to prevent the formation of trade
unions and collective bargaining by subcontracting, so that they need not employ more than 30 workers. The end result of
this is reduced protection for workers.
The report further notes particularly serious violations of fundamental workers' rights on banana plantations. Workers'
rights are not respected, trade unions are almost non-existent, child labour is widespread and health and safety
severely lacking.
Ecuador is the largest banana exporter in the world, and its attempt to increase banana exports has driven down labour,
social and environmental standards to be some of the lowest levels in Latin America. Banana production is concentrated
in low-wage, largely non-unionised Ecuador, driving down wages and conditions on plantations throughout Latin America
and especially in Central America.
The reform of the EU banana regime is likely to worsen conditions and wages for workers even further, and a full
evaluation of the economic, social, gender and environmental impacts of different tariffs and supply management
scenarios for EU banana imports is therefore necessary.
Finally child labour is widespread in Ecuador, including in the export sector, on banana plantations and in the flower
industry. Nearly half a million children under 15 are at work. On banana plantations children work long hours, under
dangerous conditions, without proper safety equipment, and are exposed to pesticides, which are sprayed whilst they
work.
Many children are also employed in the flower export industry. Safety and health conditions are deficient and a large
number of children are engaged in fumigating activities, leading to cephalea, tremors, and migraine for a number of
children. Many children under the age of 15 are used as "helpers" or in "training", and thus employed at low cost or
entirely free.
To read the full report: http://www.icftu.org/www/pdf/clsecuador2005.pdf
ENDS