EAST TIMOR: UN agency workers go on strike
BY VANYA TANAJA
DILI — Workers at three World Food Program warehouses here took strike
action on January 8 and then went to the headquarters of the WFP the next
day when the agency took no notice of their protest. WFP is a UN agency
in charge of the emergency food relief program.
The 120 workers demanded that they be allowed to work daily, as opposed
to four times a month that they are presently doing. They also demanded
that their work schedule be clarified and that the employer adhere to Indonesian
labour laws, the only labour laws in existence in East Timor at present.
The workers receive 35,000 rupiah (A$7) a day for each day that they
work. They claimed that they never signed a contract to work with WFP.
In the past the lack of a contract has been used by employers as an easy
way to get out of their obligations to their workers.
The WFP workers asked the Socialist Party of Timor (PST) to assist them
in the dispute and representatives from the party have been involved in
negotiations with WFP management and UNTAET.
WFP management maintained that there was insufficient work for the number
of workers it took on. It has proposed that 25 workers be employed as day
labourers and the rest of the workers be completely laid off with a US$100
severance pay. Further, WFP has intimated that the agency would be forced
to discontinue its operations in East Timor, should the industrial action
continue.
Avelino Coelho, general secretary of the PST and member of the National
Council, told Green Left that he would bring the issue before the
34-member National Council to examine WFP's claim that the dispute would
force the agency to pull out of East Timor.
Coelho also questioned the claim by WFP that no other employer in Dili
paid their workers higher than the current wage level of the strikers and
that the wage level had been set by UNTAET. He cited the example of at
least one other agency paying wages of US$5 a day for day labourers. He
also stated that the wage levels set by UNTAET only pertained to civil
servants.