CNRP picks union law team
Mon, 21 December 2015 ppp
Charles Rollet and Khouth Sophak Chakrya
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| Union officials march toward Phnom Penh’s National Assembly in November to deliver a petition to lawmakers against the controversial trade union draft law. Pha Lina |
The
opposition has selected five of its members to join a bipartisan
committee to examine the draft trade union law, a step the ruling party
has not yet made amid murkiness about when the group will actually meet.
The law has come under fire from independent unions, who charge that it will restrict freedom of association in the Kingdom.
In
response, the government delayed the law’s proposal to the National
Assembly and announced on December 10 the creation of a bipartisan
committee to examine the law.
Son
Chhay, a Cambodia National Rescue Party lawmaker representing Phnom
Penh, said yesterday that he would serve as the head of the opposition
wing of the committee.
The
other four opposition members are Kampong Cham representatives Vann
Narith and Kimsour Phirith, Kratie representative Keo Phirum, and Takeo
representative Ou Chanrith.
Chhay
also said that the CNRP was looking to meet with trade unions, civil
society organisations, and the International Labour Organization
sometime at the end of the month or in early January to discuss concerns
and potential amendments to the controversial piece of legislation.
“We
should have the law to protect trade unions. It should not violate the
Labour Law and should respect the rights of workers,” he said.
Although the committee was originally planned to be created “immediately”, it remains unclear exactly when it will meet.
Ruling
party spokesman Sok Eysan said he did not know of any specific dates
and that the Cambodian People’s Party was still in the process of
selecting its own members.
He
slammed, however, efforts by unions to paint the union law as
restricting union freedoms by making it easier for the government to
de-register them.
“Right
now, all the unions are concerned about the government creating this
law. However, the government is doing it to provide benefits to workers
and employers [to encourage] investment in Cambodia,” he said.
Sar
Mora, president of the Cambodian Food and Service Workers Federation,
one of the independent unions campaigning against the law, said he had
“no idea” why the creation of the group was taking so long.
“I
think maybe it is the political deadlock,” he said, referencing the
CNRP’s boycott of parliamentary voting sessions, which ended last week.
Mora added that unions had yet to hear back from a letter they sent to the CPP asking to meet its lawmakers to discuss the law.

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