Rail Union and Intl Organisations Launch Thai Govt Complaint
Rail Union and International Organisations Launch Thai Government Complaint
The International
Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF), its affiliated union
the State Railway Workers’ Union of Thailand (SRUT), the
Thai State Enterprises Workers’ Relations Confederation
(SERC), and the International Trade Union Confederation
(ITUC) have joined together to make a complaint against the
Thai government to the International Labour Organization
(ILO).
The complaint to the ILO’s Committee on
Freedom of Association alleges that the Kingdom of Thailand
is in gross violation of the international norms on trade
union rights set out in ILO conventions 87 and 98 and that
this has been highlighted by its having allowed the State
Railways of Thailand (SRT) to victimise trade union members
for exposing serious safety breaches on the country’s rail
network.
The case centers on the dismissal of 13
union leaders and branch officials who took part in an
occupational health and safety initiative in October 2009 to
publicise the serious rail safety failings which led to two
derailments and one fatal accident in four days that month.
The accident killed seven and injured many others. The
driver had had one rest day in the previous 30 days. The
driver’s ‘deadman’s handle’ system was not working,
and, unbelievably, only 20 per cent of locomotives were even
equipped with such a fundamental piece of equipment,
according to the union. The initiative involved 1200 SRUT
members who refused to drive trains with faulty or missing
deadman’s handles.
As well as dismissing the
union leaders for their part in raising the hazards faced on
the crumbling rail system, the SRT took the SRUT to court to
try to impose punitive damages. Despite international
protests and against all legal opinion the dismissals have
been allowed to stand by the Thai courts. Their decision has
led to the complainants taking this latest
action.
ITF inland transport section secretary Mac
Urata commented: “The injustice is manifest – these
trade unionists sacked, their union targeted for massive
damages totalling millions of dollars, and all for exposing
serious safety dangers. The SRT has been able to get away
with its behaviour because of its closeness to government
and the government’s continuing to allow legislation that
stifles the rights of workers in public enterprises. These
injustices are what we are asking the ILO to rule
on.”
For more on the background to the case
please see www.itfglobal.org/campaigns/thai-railway-workers.cfm
ENDS