228. The Committee has examined Cases Nos. 1273, 1441, 1494 and 1524 on several occasions, most recently at its meeting of May 1993, when it submitted an interim report (see the Committee's 288th Report, paras. 1-35, approved by the Governing Body at its 256th Session (May 1993)), which drew attention to the Government's persistent negative attitude, shown since February 1991 by its refusal to accept a direct contacts mission to the country and by its failure, in spite of the extreme seriousness of the allegations, to send the information requested by the Committee.
- 228. The Committee has examined Cases Nos. 1273, 1441, 1494 and 1524 on several occasions, most recently at its meeting of May 1993, when it submitted an interim report (see the Committee's 288th Report, paras. 1-35, approved by the Governing Body at its 256th Session (May 1993)), which drew attention to the Government's persistent negative attitude, shown since February 1991 by its refusal to accept a direct contacts mission to the country and by its failure, in spite of the extreme seriousness of the allegations, to send the information requested by the Committee.
- 229. Consequently, at said meeting the Committee once again urged the Government to send the information requested and to accept the mission in question; it also requested the Director-General of the ILO to contact the representatives of the Government of El Salvador at the next session of the International Labour Conference (June 1993), and to urge the Government to respect fully the Committee's recommendations. (See the Committee's 288th Report, paras. 8 and 35(f) and (g).)
- 230. Following contacts at the Conference, the Minister of Labour and Social Welfare agreed to the direct contacts mission.
- 231. In addition, the IFCTU submitted new allegations in the context of Case No. 1441 in a communication of 28 June 1993 (see the attached summary in the direct contacts mission report, para. 13).
- 232. The Director-General of the ILO appointed Professor José Vida Soria, Professor of Labour Law at the University of Grenada, and President of the Committee of Experts of the European Social Charter, to carry out the direct contacts mission, assisted by a member of the Freedom of Association Branch of the ILO. The mission took place from 27 September to 1 October 1993.
- 233. The Committee notes that the mission met with Dr. Juan Sifontes, Minister of Labour and Social Welfare, Dr. Carlos Mauricio Molina, Attorney-General for Human Rights, Dr. Estela Avila, Chief of the International Relations Office of the Ministry of Labour, as well as with representatives of Interoccupational Coordination (UNTS, UNOC, AGEPYM, CGT, FESINCONSTRAM, CTS, etc.) and of the National Association of Private Enterprise (NAPE). It also met with Dr. Augusto Ramirez Ocampo, Chief of the United Nations Observer Mission (ONUSAL) and with several senior officials from ONUSAL. The Committee also notes that the government authorities and the representatives of workers' and employers' organizations collaborated closely with the mission, and that government authorities gave every assistance.
- 234. The Committee has also noted Professor José Vida Soria's mission report (see Annex I), as well as the Government's observations addressed to the Committee and to the mission concerning outstanding allegations.
- 235. El Salvador has ratified neither the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, 1948 (No. 87), nor the Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
- 236. In as much as the direct contacts mission report contained in the Annex summarizes not only the substance of outstanding allegations, but also the Committee's previous conclusions and recommendations, as well as the Government's observations and the new allegations, the Committee proceeds directly to its conclusions and recommendations.
A. A. The Committee's conclusions
A. A. The Committee's conclusions
- The Committee's conclusions
- 237 The Committee notes the report of the direct contacts mission and observes with interest the positive evolution in the trade union situation and in El Salvador's relations with the ILO, especially with the Committee on Freedom of Association: its acceptance of the direct contacts mission, its reply to a substantial number of allegations, the promise of further observations on the remaining allegations, and the creation of a tripartite Forum on Economic and Social Consultation which has already approved the ratification of 14 ILO Conventions (including the Rural Workers' Organizations Convention, 1975 (No. 141), and the Tripartite Consultation (International Labour Standards) Convention, 1976 (No. 144)) and undertaken to submit them to the Legislative Assembly, and which has been made responsible for bringing the country's labour and trade union legislation up to date and into line with ILO standards.
- 238 The Committee notes the mission's observation "that the violation of trade union rights over the past 12 years has been a constant feature of the general climate of violence in the country and has affected everyday life and almost all basic human rights" and that "the social partners and the Government were aware that the veritable war that the country had gone through during the past 12 years was much more than just a question of terrorism and violence". The Committee also notes that, according to the mission report, it is "practically impossible in many cases to distinguish what was a violation of freedom of association and human rights and what was the consequence of the spiral of violence" and that "following the recent peace agreement (January 1993), there is now a real desire on the part of all concerned to put the past behind them".
- 239 The Committee notes with interest that, according to the mission report, no persons are being detained for trade union activities and there have been no further searches of trade union premises; violence against trade unionists has declined substantially - in the last 12 months there have only been isolated acts of violence against trade unionists except in some instances where threats have been made. The Committee further notes the mission report's observation that "industrial relations are now moving decisively towards normality (establishment of trade unions, collective bargaining, strikes, etc.) although the trade union organizations have reported cases of anti-union discrimination to the mission".
- 240 Notwithstanding the current improvements in the situation, the Committee deplores once again the numerous and serious acts of violence to which the trade union movement and their leaders have been subjected in recent years and which have often resulted in loss of life or the violation of the most fundamental human and trade union rights. The Committee calls on the Government to ensure that such events are never repeated.
- 241 Regarding the alleged assassination of trade unionists, the Committee observes that the Government denies the one murder that was alleged to have taken place in 1993 and asserts, on the contrary, that Fredy Torres is taking part in the Forum on Economic and Social Consultation. The Committee notes that, according to the Government, trade unionists Miguel Angel Lazo and Carlos Rodríguez Domínguez died in confrontations with the air force while they were engaged in sabotage and that, in the case of the trade unionists who died in the 31 October 1989 attack on the FENASTRAS headquarters (Rosa Hilda Saravia, Luis Edgardo Vázquez, Vicente Salvador Melgar, Ricardo Humberto Cestoni, José Daniel López Melendez, Julia Tatiana Mendoza and Febe Elizabeth Velázquez), the investigations that have been carried out have failed to identify the guilty parties and the case has therefore been dropped (this is corroborated by the report of the Committee on Truth set up under the Peace Agreements). The Committee notes further that judicial investigations have been initiated into the murder of trade unionists Porfirio Vásquez, Pedro Pérez and Martín Ayala, and that in the latter case the perpetrators have been captured. The Committee once again deplores all the deaths of trade unionists that have occurred and requests the Government to keep it informed of developments in the investigations into the other instances of murder, assault and disappearance of trade unionists in recent years. In the Committee's opinion, the absence of judgements against the guilty parties creates, in practice, a situation of impunity, which reinforces the climate of violence and insecurity, and which is extremely damaging to the exercise of trade union rights.
- 242 While observing with interest that no trade unionists are being held for union activities, the Committee notes that the Government denies that some of the alleged arrests ever took place or justifies them on the grounds that, at the time, the persons concerned were guilty of common law crimes (assault, illegal possession of weapons, etc.). The Committee also observes that the Government denies that the armed forces have threatened certain trade unionists and states specifically that in some cases there has been no official complaint regarding such threats. Although these allegations refer to events prior to January 1993 (Chapultepec Peace Agreement), the Committee deplores the large number of trade unionists who have been arrested in recent years, the threats that have been made and the climate of intimidation in which trade union activity has often taken place and trusts that such occurrences, which prevent the normal exercise of trade union rights, will not be repeated in the future.
- 243 With respect to the alleged acts of anti-union discrimination, the Committee notes that the Government denies the dismissal of trade unionist Blanca Lidia López, that in the case of the ADOC factory it merely states that some workers who had been dismissed accepted compensation (the complainants alleged that the dismissals were due to the establishment of a trade union) and that it does not refer to the dismissal of trade unionists José Abraham Ramírez Guadrón and José Simeón Coto in March 1993. The Committee feels compelled to observe that the mission report mentions that trade union organizations have denounced many instances of anti-union discrimination and comments that to a large extent they reflect shortcomings in the legal system. On this point the Committee draws the attention of the Government to the principle that nobody should be dismissed or suffer discrimination in their employment on account of their trade union activities. The Committee urges the Government, in its forthcoming revision of the Labour Code and in the future Act respecting industrial relations in the public administration (for which the Government has requested ILO technical assistance), to guarantee adequate protection against dismissal and other acts of discrimination for carrying out legitimate trade union activities, such as the establishment of a trade union.
- 244 Finally, with respect to the kidnapping of the six-month-old son of trade unionist Lucas Bernal Mármol on 21 April 1993, the Committee has taken note of the Government's observations of 15 May 1993 in response to the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions' request that the Director-General of the ILO intervene in this matter. The Committee expresses its strong reprobation with respect to this kidnapping as well as its serious concern in observing that, up to 15 May 1993, the investigations conducted by the Criminal Investigation Committee, which point to a number of people with a background of child stealing, have not led to the whereabouts of the child. The Committee calls on the Government to redouble its efforts to find the child and punish the kidnappers.
- 245 Noting that, as regards the ratification of the fundamental ILO Conventions on freedom of association, the outlook for the immediate future is negative, the Committee reminds the Government that the ILO may provide its help in order to provide information on their contents with a view to possible ratifications.
The Committee's recommendations
The Committee's recommendations
- 246. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The Committee notes with interest the improvement in various important aspects of the trade union situation and, especially, the decline in violence to a point, where - according to the mission report - in the last 12 months there have only been isolated acts of violence against trade unionists although threats have been made in certain cases.
- (b) Notwithstanding the current improvements in the situation, the Committee deplores once again the numerous and serious acts of violence to which the trade union movement and their leaders have been subjected in recent years and which have often resulted in loss of life or the violation of the most fundamental human and trade union rights. The Committee calls on the Government to ensure that such events are never repeated. The Committee calls on the Government to keep it informed of developments in the judicial investigations into the various cases of trade unionists being murdered or assaulted, or who disappeared in recent years. In the Committee's opinion, the absence of judgements against the guilty parties creates, in practice, a situation of impunity, which reinforces the climate of violence and insecurity, and which is extremely damaging to the exercise of trade union rights.
- (c) Regarding the arrest of trade unionists and threats made against them in recent years, and while it notes with interest that there are no trade unionists at present under arrest for trade union activities, the Committee deplores the large number of trade unionists who have been arrested in recent years, the threats that have been made and the climate of intimidation in which trade union activity has often taken place; it hopes that such occurrences, which prevent the normal exercise of trade union rights, will not be repeated in the future.
- (d) Bearing in mind the allegations of anti-union discrimination in the cases under examination and that the mission report mentions that trade union organizations have denounced many such instances, the Committee urges the Government, in its forthcoming revision of the Labour Code and in the future Act respecting industrial relations in the public administration (for which the Government has requested ILO technical assistance), to guarantee adequate protection against dismissal and other acts of discrimination for carrying out legitimate trade union activities, such as the establishment of a trade union.
- (e) The Committee expresses its strong reprobation and its serious concern with respect to the kidnapping of the six-month-old son of trade unionist Lucas Bernal Mármol. The Committee insists that the Government make vigorous efforts to find the child and to punish the kidnappers and requests it to keep it informed in this regard.
- (f) The Committee reminds the Government that the ILO may provide its help in order to provide information on the contents of the Conventions on freedom of association with a view to possible ratifications.
REPORT OF PROFESSOR JOSE VIDA SORIA ON THE DIRECT
REPORT OF PROFESSOR JOSE VIDA SORIA ON THE DIRECT- CONTACTS MISSION TO EL SALVADOR FROM 27 SEPTEMBER TO 1
- OCTOBER 1993 IN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE PROCEDURES OF THE
- COMMITTEE ON FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION
- A. Introduction
- At its meeting in May 1993 when it examined outstanding allegations of
- violation of trade union rights in El Salvador (Cases Nos. 1273, 1441, 1449
- and 1524), the Committee on Freedom of Association noted that the Government
- had failed almost completely to comply in the procedure, having sent
- observations on only a very small number of the serious allegations presented,
- and having failed to reply to the Committee's repeated requests since February
- 1991 to agree to a direct contacts mission (see 288th Report, paras. 8 and
- 35). The Committee insisted on the need for the Government to send the
- information requested and to agree to the mission.
- During the 80th Session of the International Labour Conference (June
- 1993), the Minister of Labour and Social Welfare informed the Director-General
- of the ILO that his Government would agree to the direct contacts mission.
- The Director-General appointed me as his representative; I express my
- gratitude for the confidence thus placed in me.
- The mission took place in El Salvador from 27 September to 1 October
- 1993. I was accompanied by Mr. Alberto Odero, a member of the Freedom of
- Association Branch.
- During the course of the mission I met with Dr. Juan Sifontes, Minister
- of Labour and Social Welfare, Dr. Carlos Mauricio Melina, Attorney-General for
- Human Rights, Dr. Estela Avila, Head of the International Relations Office of
- the Ministry of Labour, as well as with representatives of Interoccupational
- Coordination (UNTS, UNOC, AGEPYM, CGT, FES INCONSRAM, CTS, etc.) and of the
- National Association of Private Enterprise (NAPE). I also met with Dr.
- Augusto Ramirez Ocampo, Chief of the United Nations Observer Mission (ONUSAL),
- and with several senior officials from ONUSAL.
- I wish to emphasize that I received every form of assistance from the
- Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare and the International Relations Office
- during the course of the mission, and that all authorities I interviewed, as
- well as the representatives of employers' and workers' organizations, were
- extremely cooperative, and for this I thank them sincerely.
- B. Allegations before the Committee at its May 1993 meeting, the
- Government's partial reply, the Committee's conclusions and recommendations,
- and allegations presented subsequently by the International
- Confederation of Free Trade Unions
- Case No. 1273
- The complainants' allegations which remained outstanding refer to the
- serious death threats against Mrs. Castañeda and Mrs. Sigüenza (members of the
- Coffee Union) in April 1988, the disappearance of trade unionist Alberto Luis
- Alfaro in March 1988, the violent death of trade unionists Jesús Rodas
- Barahona in April 1988 and Julio César Inglés Chinchilla in May 1988, and the
- dynamite attack against the ASTTEL trade union premises in April 1988. The
- Committee had also requested information on the judicial inquiry initiated in
- July 1986 into the murder of trade union leader José Arístides Méndez.
- Cases Nos. 1441 and 1494
- The complainants' allegations referred to the assassination of the
- teacher Vilma Chavez on 22 October 1990; to the arrest on 14 March 1991, by
- members of the police force, of 15 employees, members of the General
- Association of Employees of the Ministry of Finance (AGEMHA), who had gone on
- strike (they included Inmar Rolando Reyes, Melvin Ovidio Portillo and Oscar
- Bonilla Segovia); to the arrest by the police on 15 March, during a strike by
- more than 4,500 workers of AGEMHA in pursuance of wage and labour claims, of
- Ernesto Beltrán, Carlos Salvador Viscarra, Mario Alberto Aviles, Jorge Alberto
- Quijano, Jesús Alvarado, Edgardo Orellano, Jorge Alberto Araujo, Tomás
- Montenegro, Nelson Pineda, Ambrosio N.; the detention of Mrs. Vilma Guzmán of
- the Seamstresses' Union; the arrest of Pedro Matozo, Juan Lico and Adalberto
- Gonzales, grass-roots members of the National Association of Agricultural
- Workers (ANTA); and the detention of 23 members of ANTA in the same canton of
- Río Frío (Ahuachapán) on the San Francisco de Asís hacienda by members of the
- National Guard and Military Unit No. 7. Other allegations which remained
- outstanding were those relating to the searching of and attack against the
- headquarters of FENASTRAS (November 1989), which left nine persons dead and
- many injured; the assassination, on 23 February 1989, of Miguel Angel Lazo
- Quintanilla (a member of ANDES) and Carlos Rodríguez Domínguez (a member of
- FUSS); and the arrest, on 16 March 1989, of the leader of FENASTRAS, Juan
- José Huezo.
- Case No. 1524
- The allegations of the complainant organization (FENASTRAS) which
- remained outstanding at the March 1992 meeting referred to numerous murders
- and disappearances of trade union leaders, arrests and detentions of trade
- unionists and workers (the complainants supplied the names of 331 of them) and
- 56 attacks on trade union headquarters. (See Annexes 1, 2 and 3.)
- New allegations
- In its communications of 17 December 1991 and 19 August 1992, the ICFTU
- alleges within the context of Case No. 1441, that the general climate of
- intimidation and violence continues to prevail in El Salvador, making it
- dangerous or impossible to engage in lawful trade union activities. It
- indicates that the Government is a party to the disinformation campaigns that
- are intended to portray trade unions as allies of the armed opposition and
- thus to make them the object of repression by paramilitary units and the armed
- forces' death squads. Also, the ICFTU calls upon the Committee to renew its
- efforts to obtain acceptance by the Salvadorean authorities of a direct
- contacts mission as soon as possible. Finally, the complainant organization
- indicates that between April 1990 and September 1991 trade union leaders,
- trade unionists and workers were the object of numerous murders,
- disappearances, detentions, physical assaults and death threats (see Annexes 1
- and 2), and that trade union premises and the homes of trade union leaders
- were searched (see Annex 3). The ICFTU also refers to acts of anti-union
- discrimination in the ADOC enterprise (the dismissal of ten trade union
- leaders and 40 workers who sought to set up a trade union), and at ARCA SA
- (police repression of striking workers).
- The Government's partial reply
- In its communication of 26 May 1992, the Government stated that although
- a number of steps had been taken (the dispatch of material to the FBI's
- technical laboratory in the United States of America, statements by witnesses,
- examination of the corpses, etc.) with a view to shedding light on the
- dynamite attack against the headquarters of FENASTRAS in October 1989, and
- taking into account the fact that no group had claimed responsibility for the
- attack, it had been decided to shelve the case in view of the lack of success
- in identifying those responsible.
- The Committee's conclusions and recommendations (May 1993)
- The Committee adopted the following interim conclusions and
- recommendations at its meeting of May 1993 (see 288th Report, paras. 23-27 and
- 29-35):
- The Committee notes, once again, the Government's manifest
- lack of cooperation in observing the Committee's procedure and, specifically,
- the inexplicable failure to send almost any of the information
- repeatedly requested by the Committee so as to enable it to determine the
- veracity of the outstanding allegations. The Committee has made use of urgent
- appeals that have been ignored, and finds itself obliged, in view of the
- time that has elapsed since the allegations were presented, to examine these
- cases once again without having the Government's observations in respect of
- the large majority of the allegations presented by the complainants.
- The Committee once again reminds the Government that the aim of
- the whole procedure is to ensure respect for trade union rights, both in
- law and in practice. The Committee is convinced that whilst this procedure
- protects governments against unreasonable accusations, governments on their
- side should formulate, so as to allow objective examination, factual
- replies to the allegations brought against them (First Report, para. 31,
- approved by the Governing Body in March 1952).
- The Committee deplores and emphasizes the seriousness of the
- outstanding allegations and the new allegations which refer to the
- murder and disappearance of a large number of trade union leaders, as well as
- to death threats, physical attacks, arrest and detention of workers and
- trade unionists, the searching of trade unionists' homes, the searching and
- sacking of trade union premises and acts of anti-union discrimination.
- The Committee takes note of the Government's observations to the
- effect that it has been decided to shelve the case relating to the
- investigation into the criminal act of setting off explosives in the
- headquarters of FENASTRAS in October 1989 which left nine persons dead
- and many injured, a decision which was taken in view of the
- impossibility of identifying the authors of this criminal act and since
- no group had claimed responsibility for it. The Committee considers it
- unacceptable in such circumstances that the investigation has been
- shelved because of the fact that the inquiries undertaken by a special
- (non-judicial) ad hoc commission failed to produce positive results. The
- Committee stresses the obligation on the Government to undertake the
- necessary measures so as to identify and punish those responsible for
- this condemnable attack so that the application of rapid and efficient
- justice serves in the re-establishment of peace.
- As regards the new allegations presented by the ICFTU, the
- Committee takes note of the Government's remarks to the effect that the
- judicial inquiries are currently under way into the murder of Porfirio
- Vásquez and Miguel Angel Martínez. The Committee deplores these murders and
- expresses the hope that the judicial procedures that are under way will
- serve to clarify the facts and lead to the punishment of the guilty parties.
- The Committee requests the Government to inform it of the result of the
- judicial inquiries undertaken.
- The Committee draws attention to the fact that the Government has
- not replied to the remaining outstanding allegations, nor to the large
- majority of the new allegations presented by the ICFTU in Cases Nos.
- 1441 and 1494.
- As regards the large number of violent deaths (43), disappearances
- (17), physical assaults and death threats against trade union leaders and
- trade unionists (see Annexes 1 and 2), the Committee once again deplores
- these acts, which directly undermine the most basic human rights and the
- development of a free and independent trade union movement. The
- Committee draws the Government's attention to the fact that a situation
- which gives rise to a climate of violence such as that which encourages the
- murder, kidnapping or disappearance of trade union leaders and persons
- is totally incompatible with the principles of freedom of association. In
- these circumstances, the Committee requests the Government urgently
- to order a judicial inquiry aimed at shedding light on the murder and
- disappearance of, and the physical assaults and death threats against trade
- union leaders and trade unionists, to punish the guilty parties and to
- avoid a recurrence of such acts. In the Committee's opinion, the absence of
- judgements against the guilty parties creates, in practice, a situation
- of impunity, which reinforces the climate of violence and insecurity,
- and which is extremely damaging to the exercise of trade union activities.
- The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of all
- investigations undertaken.
- As regards the numerous arrests and detentions of trade union
- leaders and trade unionists (390 in all), the Committee draws the Government's
- attention to the fact that the arrest and detention of trade unionists
- on the grounds of trade union activities constitute a serious infringement of
- freedom of association and a serious obstacle to the exercise of trade
- union rights. The Committee once again requests the Government to
- release all those who might have been detained on the grounds of trade union
- activities and to provide information on the situation of all trade
- union members and leaders referred to in these cases, indicating whether they
- are currently detained, on trial or free.
- As regards the 22 instances of searches, carried out with
- violence, of trade union premises and homes of trade unionists, as
- alleged by the complainants (see Annex 3), the Committee considers these acts
- to be inexcusable and points out that any search of trade union premises
- or unionists' homes, without a court order, constitutes an extremely
- serious infringement of freedom of association. It emphasizes that the
- resolution concerning trade union rights and their relation to civil
- liberties adopted by the International Labour Conference at its 54th Session
- (1970), provides that the right to adequate protection of trade union
- property constitutes one of the essential civil liberties for the normal
- exercise of trade union rights. The Committee urges the Government to
- undertake judicial inquiries into the violent searches carried out against
- trade union premises and the homes of trade unionists, with the aim of
- identifying and punishing the guilty parties in an exemplary manner so
- as to avoid a recurrence of such acts. The Committee requests the Government
- to supply it as soon as possible with all the relevant information it
- has at its disposal.
- As regards the new allegations concerning acts of anti-union
- discrimination at the ADOC works (the dismissal of ten trade union leaders and
- 40 wnrkers for attempting to establish a trade union) and at ARCO S.A.
- (police repression of striking workers), the Committee notes that the
- Government has neither supplied its observations on these allegations
- nor put forward reasons to justify this omission, and again requests the
- Government to send its comments in the shortest possible time.
- The Committee draws attention to the Government's persistent
- negative attitude, shown since February 1991 by its refusal to accept a direct
- contacts mission to the country and by its failure, despite the extreme
- seriousness of the allegations, to send the information required by the
- Committee. The Committee deplores the Government's unacceptable
- attitude. It urges it once again to send the information and accept the
- mission in question, and recommends to the Governing Body to give the widest
- publicity to the present report, particularly in El Salvador.
- The Committee requests the Director-General of the ILO to contact
- the representatives of the Government of El Salvador at the next session
- of the International Labour Conference (June 1993), and to urge the Government
- fully to abide by the Committee's recommendations.
- ANNEX 1
- Murdered trade unionists
- Name Date of murder
- 1. Rosa Hilda Saravia de Elías (31.10.89) STITAS and FENASTRAS
- 2. Luis Gerardo Vásquez (31.10.89) member of SIGEBAN
- 3. Vicente Salvador Melgar (31.10.89) member of SETA
- 4. Ricardo Humberto Cestoni (31.10.89) member of SETA
- 5. José Daniel Meléndez (31.10.89) member of SOICSCES
- 6. Julia Tatiana Mendoza Aguirre (31.10.89) member of STITGASC
- 7. Febe Elizabeth Velásquez (31.10.89) member of FENASTRAS
- 8. Miguel Angel Lazo (19.3.89) member of ANDES
- 9. María Cristina Gómez (4.4.89) member of ANDES
- 10. Pablo Obducio Vargas (11.5.89) member of SICAFE
- 11. Carlos Rodríguez Domínguez (4.3.89) member of FUSS
- 12. José Joaquín González (20.6.89) member of COACES
- 13. Gregorio Ascencio Portillo (2.8.89) no information
- 14. Gregorio Nuñez (2.8.89) member of ASID
- 15. Rodolfo Andrés Prieto (12.11.89) General Secretary of SETA
- 16. Simón Massin (12.11.89) member of UNTS
- 17. Juan Antonio Inglés (12.11.89) member of STITAS
- 18. Leonardo Beltrán (12.11.89) member of SIDPA and General
- Secretary of the Cooperative of Municipal Employees of Santa Ana
- 19. Héctor Gómez (12.11.89) member of ANTRAM
- 20. Julia del Carmen Ponce Flores (31.12.89) member of "La Reforma"
- Cooperative, La Magdalena, Santa Ana
- 21. Angel María Flores Aragón (31.12.89) member of "La Reforma"
- Cooperative, La Magdalena, Santa Ana
- New allegations:
- Name Date of murder
- 22. Profirio Vásquez (12.1.91) member of the 4 de Junio
- Cooperative Association
- 23. 12 rural workers (30.6.91) Río Frío, Department of San
- Vicente
- 24. Martín Ayala Ramírez and (8.7.91) both were members of Leticia
- Campos (seriously the Salavadorian Communal injured) Movement (MCS)
- 25. Pedro Pérez, Islao Ortiz (13.7.91) National Association of and two
- members Rural Workers (ANC)
- 26. Miguel Angel Martínez (24.9.91) member of the Building Industry
- Trade Union (SURC)
- 27. Miguel Angel Alvarenga (22.7.92) leader of FENASTRAS and Second
- Secretary (Disputes) of the Trade Union of Workers in the Tourism and
- Gastronomic Industry and Similar and
- Related Activities
- 28. Iván Ramírez (31.7.92) First Secretary (Disputes) of
- FENASTRAS and Labour Adviser of SOICSES
- 29. Nazario de Jesús Gracias (3.3.92) member of the IRA trade union
- ANNEX 2
- Trade unionists who have disappeared
- Name Date
- 1. Mateo Díaz Bernal (24.2.89) member of FECORAO
- 2. Salvador Miranda (24.2.89) member of FECORAO
- 3. Amilcar Pérez (17.3.89) affiliated to SETA
- 4. Nicolás Aviles Urbina (22.9.89) member of ANTA
- 5. Manuel de Jesús (11.11.89) member of FUSS
- Molina Gómez
- 6. Manuel de Jesús Guevara (14.11.89 member of SETA
- 7. Jorge Alberto Sosa (19.1.90) member of SICAFE
- 8. Adán Chacón (19.1.90) member of SICAFE
- 9. Mariano de Jesús Carranza (19.1.90) member of SICAFE
- Menéndez
- 10. Sara Cristina Chan Chan (19.8.89) member of FENASTRAS
- 11. Seven rural workers (8.91) from Soledad Viuda de Alas, Soyapango
- New allegations: Physical assaults and death threats against trade union
- leaders, trade unionists and workers:
- 1. Workers from the Ministry of Public Works were violently attacked by
- army personnel on 20 December 1990;
- 2. Members of the General Association of Employees of the Ministry of
- Finance who had declared a strike were attacked by the police on 20 March
- 1991;
- 3. Norma and Virginia Guirola de Herrera, both workers in the Institute for
- Research and the Training and Development of Women, were threatened and
- ordered by the "Condor Group" to leave their work premises on 8 June 1991;
- 4. Salvadorean participants in the Trade Union Training Seminar organized
- by the Interamerican Regional Organization of Workers of the ICFTU (ORIT) were
- subjected to threats by the "Salvadorean Anti-Communist Front (FAS)" from 17
- to 21 June 1991;
- 5. Amanda Villatorio, Vice-President of the Womens' Committee of ORIT,
- national coordinator of UNOC-CTD and member of the Legislative Assembly, was
- threatened by the FAS on 16 July 1991;
- 6. The rural workers of Soledad Viuda de Alas, Soyapango, were brutally
- beaten by military forces in August 1991;
- 7. MCS leader Mario Chávez and members of the cooperative association of
- the department of La Libertad were threatened by the colonel of the artillery
- brigade during the months of August-September 1991;
- 8. Pedro Regalado Orellana and Fredy Vásquez, both SUTC leaders, were
- threatened by the FAS on 24 September 1991;
- 9. Death threats against Juan José Huezo, Secretary-General of FENASTRAS
- (August 1992).
- New allegations: Detentions:
- Name Date of detention
- 1. Four members of the (30.4.90) Buena Vista Cooperative
- 2. María Isabel García Ayala (1.5.90) member of the Association of
- Independant Workers of los Arenales
- de las Cañas, Tiaca
- 3. Gregoria Antonia Avalos (21.6.90) official of the Teachers' Union
- ANDES
- 4. Rodolfo García Ayala (3.7.90) trade unionist
- 5. Luis Felipe Díaz (22.6.90) President of the Flor de Primavera
- Cooperative Association
- 6. Lucio Sánchez (24.8.90) UCS official
- 7. Juan Antonio Serrano (16.11.90) Secretary (Disputes) of Moltavo the
- Salvadorean Association of Workers in the Institute for the Regulation of
- Supply (ASTIRA)
- 8. Luis Barrios, Manuel Pérez (15.3.91) members of the General and Jorge
- Araujo Menjívar Association of Employees of the Ministry of Finance
- 9. Víctor Méndez López (9.5.91) member of the National Union for the
- Meat Industry (SNIC)
- 10. Ruiz Ascencio (14.9.91) member of SNIC
- 11. 23 rural workers (17.5.91) Department of Auhuachapán
- 12. Luis Arcenio Sorto (8.91) employee of the Institute for the
- Regulation of Supply
- 13. Wuilfredo Hernández Quijano (21.8.91) member of CODYDES
- 14. Miseal Hernández and (8.9.91) members of the cooperative Rodil
- Antonio Pireda of the Department of La Libertad
- ANNEX 3
- Searching of trade union premises
- Trade union premises searched Date of search
- 1. Offices of ASTTEL (11.3.89)
- 2. Premises of UNTS (21.3.89)
- 3. Premises of FENASTRAS (26.3.89)
- 4. Premises of FUSS (26.3.89)
- 5. Premises of UNTS (26.3.89)
- 6. Premises of SIGEBAN (sacked) (12.4.89)
- 7. Premises of FUSS (20.4.89)
- 8. Premises of FESTIAVSCES (20.4.89)
- 9. Premises of CODYDES (20.4.89)
- 10. Premises of ASID (15.5.89)
- 11. Premises of FENASTRAS (25.5.89)
- 12. Premises of FUSS (25.5.89)
- 13. Premises of SOICSCES (sacked) (6.6.89)
- 14. Building of the "El Soto" (5.7.89) Cooperative (sacked)
- 15. Offices of ANTA (13.7.89)
- 16. Offices of FENASTRAS (surrounded (28.7.89) by the national police,
- entrance being refused to an international delegation)
- 17. Offices of ANTMAG (9.9.89)
- 18. Offices of ANTMAG (sacked) (24.9.89)
- New allegations:
- 19. The home of Arturo Magama (1.5.90) UNOC leader
- 20. The home of Luis Felipe Díaz (10.9.91) President of the Flor de
- Primavera Cooperative Association
- 21. Premises of the El Palmital (10.9.91) Cooperative Association
- in Ozathlán
- 22. Premises of the Salvadorean (10.9.91) Women's Movement
- Recent allegations submitted by the ICFTU on 28 June 1993
- In its communication of 28 June 1993 the ICFTU alleges that:
- - on 7 October 1992 Messrs. Juan José Huezo (General Secretary of FENASTRAS)
- and Mark Anner (Legal Counsel of FENASTRAS) were detained by the police for
- three hours and threatened with death at the International Airport of El
- Salvador;
- - on 16 October 1992 Mr. Felipe Vázquez Miranda (Finance Secretary of
- FENASTRAS) was stabbed as he was leaving the Federation's premises;
- - in October 1992 Mrs. Blanca Lidia López (Disputes Secretary of the
- Trade Union of Compañía Florenzi SA de CV) was dismissed owing to her trade
- union activities;
- - on 27 October 1992 unidentified persons attempted to abduct Mrs. Sarahi
- Molina de Huezo (Secretary for Youth and Women's Affairs of FENASTRAS);
- - the police has laid siege to the plants of Chaparrastique, Chanmico,
- La Magdalena and San Francisco, with a view to intimidating the workers and
- getting them to withdraw their demands. Likewise, it alleges that Mr.
- Ovidio Tejada Bruno (General Secretary of the National Sugar Industry Trade
- Union (SINA)) has received death threats;
- - on 21 February 1993 Mr. Fredy Torres (member of the Salvadorean Social
- Security Institute Trade Union) was murdered;
- - on 21 April 1993 the six-month-old son of Mr. Lucas Bernal Mármol
- (official of the Democratic Workers' Trade Union) was kidnapped;
- - on 23 March 1993 Mr. José Abraham Ramírez Guadrón (official of the
- trade union of the Fábrica Minerva SA de CV) was dismissed without being
- notified of the reasons for his dismissal. Subsequently, Mr. José Simeón Coto
- (a member of the executive committee of the aforementioned trade union)
- was also dismissed.
- C. Context and mandate of the mission
- Between 1980 and 1991 the Republic of El Salvador was engulfed in a civil
- war which left several thousands of members of the military and civilians
- dead. The members of both warring parties engaged in an ever-mounting number
- of very serious violations of human rights which led to even more excessive
- actions. The many and extraordinarily complex causes of the conflict
- reflected ideological, political, economic and social tensions which had been
- building up for many years, and ultimately exploded in the last years of the
- Cold War.
- Trade union rights, which were already severely restricted by law, were
- even further curtailed during this period following the declaration of a state
- of siege and the rather close relations between a number of trade union
- organizations and the guerillas. Consequently, much trade union activity was
- clandestine or took place abroad. Violations of basic human rights were also
- directed against many trade unionists. This explains why, between 1988 and
- 1992, national and international trade union orgaizations submitted to the
- Committee on Freedom of Association of the Governing Body of the ILO a number
- of extremely serious complaints, alleging the murder, disappearance, torture
- and assaults against the physical integrity and detention of trade unionists
- and trade union leaders, as well as attacks against trade union premises and
- acts of anti-union discrimination. The purpose of this direct contacts
- mission is to gather general information and precisions on the allegations
- pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association for the period 1988-92,
- to provide the Committee with enough information to enable it to reach
- conclusions in these matters. This report of the direct contacts mission will
- not consider or examine violations of trade union rights by the FMLN, inasmuch
- as the complaints submitted to the Committee on Freedom of Association have
- only been presented against the Government of El Salvador and since, according
- to the Committee's procedure, only complaints against governments alleging the
- violation of trade union rights are admissible.
- It should be recalled that in 1986 similar complaints led to another
- direct contacts mission which was carried out by Professor Andrés Aguilar; his
- report provided the Committee on Freedom of Association with enough
- information to enable it to examine the various allegations and formulate
- conclusions and recommendations (see the Committee's 243rd Report, Cases Nos.
- 953, 973, 1016, 1150, 1168, 1233, 1258, 1269, 1273 and 1281 (El Salvador),
- paras. 366 to 418 (where the direct contacts mission report is contained as an
- annex), approved by the Governing Body at its 232nd Session (March 1986)).
- D. The peace agreements, the report of the Commission on the Truth,
- and the amnesty laws
- Under the auspices of the United Nations and with the invaluable
- collaboration of several persons, between 1989 and 1992 the warring parties
- signed several agreements which culminated in the Peace Agreement of
- Chapultepec of 16 January 1992, which put an end to the conflict. The United
- Nations is entrusted with the task of verifying the implementation of all
- agreements, which cover a number of questions, including certain commitments
- for the effective respect of human rights and trade union rights.
- The Mexico Agreements, signed on 27 April 1991, merit special mention, for
- the parties decided to set up the "Commission on the Truth", which had "the
- task of investigating serious acts of violence that have occurred since 1980
- and whose impact on society urgently demands that the public should know the
- truth as quickly as possible", and of making "legal, political or
- administrative recommendations" on the basis of its investigation, with the
- parties undertaking "to carry out the Commission's recommendations".
- Since the Commission on the Truth examines in its report some of the
- allegations pending before the Committee on Freedom of Association (the attack
- on the headquarters of FENASTRAS on 31 October 1989), and recommends the
- ratification of Conventions Nos. 87 and 98 of the ILO, I have found it useful
- in my report to refer to the relevant paragraphs of the report prepared by the
- Commission on the Truth.
- Concretely, the Commission on the Truth states in its recommendations on
- the "protection of human rights" that "certain decisions should also be taken
- at the international level to reinforce the country's adherence to global and
- regional systems for the protection of human rights. To that end, the
- Commission recommends that El Salvador: ratify the following international
- instruments ... Conventions Nos. 87 and 98 of the International Labour
- Organization ..."
- The report of the Commission on the Truth describes the assault against
- FENASTRAS headquarters on 31 October 1989:
- The National Trade Union Federation of Salvadorean Workers
- (FENASTRAS) is an independent federation formed in 1974 to strengthen trade
- unions and promote the interests of Salvadorean workers. It has 25,000
- individual members and 16 member trade unions. It is the largest industrial
- trade union federation in El Salvador. Its main office is located 200
- metres away from the National Police in San Salvador.
- At approximately 12.30 p.m. on 31 October 1989, a worker who was
- a member of FENASTRAS noticed someone propping a sack against the outside
- wall of the FENASTRAS cafeteria. He smelt gunpowder and ran inside to warn
- his companions. Another witness, a scrap dealer, noticed two young men
- entering FENASTRAS grounds through the door in the access wall. One of
- them was carrying a suitcase in a jute sack. Through the door in the
- wall, he saw one of them "crouch down as if he was setting light to
- something". As he came out, he shouted that they had planted a bomb and
- the two of them ran off northwards.
- Outside, someone yelled "bomb!" and people began running. At that
- moment, the bomb exploded. The building was enveloped in smoke and powder
- and the offices were destroyed. More than 40 people were injured and the
- following were killed: Ricardo Humberto Cestoni, trade unionist; Carmen
- Catalina Hernández Ramos, FENASTRAS cook; José Daniel López Meléndez,
- trade unionist; Julia Tatiana Mendoza Aguirre, trade unionist and
- daughter of a leader of the Frente Democrático Revolucionario (FDR)
- assassinated in 1980; Vicente Salvador Melgar, trade unionist; María
- Magdalena Rosales, student and daughter of a trade union leader; Rosa
- Hilda Saravia de Elias, FENASTRAS cook and trade union member; Luis
- Edgardo Vásquez Márquez, trade unionist; and Febe Elizabeth Velásquez,
- International Secretary of FENASTRAS and a member of the Executive
- Committee of the Unidad Nacional de Trabajadores Salvadoreños (UNTS).
- FENASTRAS members and the main trade unions blamed the armed forces.
- UNTS accused the Ministry of Defence of "summarily executing" the workers in
- retaliation for an FMLN attack on the Armed Forces Joint Staff the
- previous day.
- The Commission on the Truth stated in its conclusions that "there is full
- evidence that the attack on the FENASTRAS offices was carried out using a bomb
- which persons unknown placed outside the building", and that "there is
- substantial evidence that the competent authorities of El Salvador did not
- carry out a full and impartial investigation of the attacks on the offices of
- FENASTRAS".
- Since the Committee on Freedom of Association has requested the opening of
- judicial investigations on the various acts of violence against trade
- unionists and trade union leaders and against trade union premises, I consider
- it necessary to inform the Committee that the following laws of amnesty have
- been approved by the Salvadorean Legislative Assembly: the Amnesty Act for
- National Reconciliation of 28 October 1987; the National Reconciliation Act,
- of 23 January 1992; and the General Amnesty Act for the Consolidation of
- Peace, of 20 May 1993. These laws grant total amnesty, particularly "to
- persons having participated in political crimes or in ordinary offences
- related to political crimes ..." According to the information communicated to
- the Commission, it is very probable that some of the crimes committed against
- trade unionists and which have been the subject of the allegations before the
- Committee, have been covered by the amnesty.
- E. Information provided to the mission by the Government and by
- workers' and employers' organizations
- (a) Information on pending allegations
- Throughout the mission, the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare provided
- the mission with its own files and other documents that it was able to obtain
- on the pending allegations. Following discussions with the mission, the
- Government provided a report which is summarized below:
- The Government of the Republic of El Salvador reaffirms its determination
- to continue with the peace process. The search for peace has in one way or
- another always been present in the life of Salvadoreans; therefore, whenever
- complaints have been made of alleged violations, steps have been taken to
- carry out meticulous investigations and obtain data and information which are
- transmitted to the respective organizations.
- It is for these reasons that the Government emphatically denies that it
- has committed any acts of repression against the trade union movement or
- carried out any searches of trade union premises; on the contrary, the
- establishment of workers' occupational associations is promoted and they are
- assisted in their development, thus encouraging the conclusion of collective
- agreements and contracts.
- As regards the alleged arrests of unionized workers, inquiries are still
- under way to determine whether these arrests are - or were - made as a result
- of common law offences or trade union activities; no trade unionist is being
- held in our prisons simply on account of being a member of any occupational
- association.
- A sum of money was recently stolen from FENASTRAS which published the list
- of the names of the persons allegedly implicated in this robbery who were
- members of FENASTRAS. The case is being heard in the Seventh Criminal Court.
- Irrespective of the fact that the accused are members of FENASTRAS, they will
- have to answer to the charges brought against them. This does not constitute
- trade union persecution.
- It is important to state that our country has embarked upon a democratic
- system based upon participation. On 17 February of this year the sectors
- represented in the Forum on Social and Economic Consultation signed before the
- nation an agreement of principles and commitments. The text of this document
- expressed the common desire to respect, inter alia, the principle of the
- supremacy of the Constitution. In order to guarantee that the Labour Code of
- El Salvador is overhauled in a responsible way and that the technical and
- legal content is of a high level, to bring it into line with the Constitution
- of the Republic and international labour standards - thus endowing the country
- with modern labour legislation - the ILO has been requested to assist in the
- preparation of a document setting out the proposals for a revision of the
- Labour Code in the light of the commitments agreed upon.
- There is consensus in the Forum on Social and Economic Consultation to
- ratify Conventions Nos. 10, 77, 78, 81, 88, 99, 111, 122, 129, 131, 138, 141,
- 142 and 144.
- The objective of the Government is to ensure the well-being of the
- population. It intends upholding a State based on the rule of law, which must
- necessarily be regulated by the legal standards set forth in particular in the
- political Constitution of the Republic as well as in national legislation and
- international treaties signed and ratified by El Salvador.
- The Government makes the following observations on the new allegations
- concerning physical attacks and death threats against trade union leaders,
- trade unionists and workers:
- - Arrest of four members of the Buena Vista Cooperative on 30 April 1990.
- Reply:
- The report sent on 13 July 1992 by the Ministry of Defence and Public
- Safety states that these persons were not arrested by the police in this
- town.
- - Abduction of María Isabel García Ayala, member of the Association of
- Independent Workers of Los Arenales de las Cañas (TIACA).
- Reply:
- A careful review of the files showed that María Isabel García Ayala
- was not detained at the Ministry of Defence.
- - On 21 June 1990, Gregorio Antonio Avalos, an official of the teachers'
- union ANDES, was arrested and detained for a prolonged period.
- Reply:
- The Ministry of Defence and Public Safety stated that Gregorio Antonio
- Avalos Marroquín was arrested for having been caught in the act of
- distributing subversive propaganda and on the suspicion of being a member
- of the commando group Urbano; he was released and handed over to Mrs.
- Anne Kaeiser, a delegate of the International Committee of the Red Cross on 18
- November 1990.
- - Arrest of the trade unionist Rodolfo García Ayala on 3 July 1990.
- Reply:
- On 3 July this person was arrested by the armed forces of San Nicolás
- district, Apopa, San Salvador, on charges of having made serious threats,
- assaulting and inflicting injuries on an unidentified person on 20 June 1990.
- This person was placed before the justice of the peace of Apopa within the
- statutory period.
- - On 22 June 1990, Luis Felipe Díaz, President of the Flor de Primavera
- Cooperative Association, was taken from his house in Ishuatán by members of
- the Civil Defence.
- Reply:
- A careful review of the files shows that Mr. Luis Felipe Díaz was not
- detained at the Ministry of Security.
- - On 24 August 1990, Luis Sánchez, a UCS official, was detained for three
- hours and his house was searched by military staff.
- Reply:
- A review of the files showed that Luis Sánchez was not detained by the
- Ministry of Defence.
- - On 16 November 1990, Juan Antonio Serrano Montalvo, Secretary (Disputes)
- of the Salvadorean Association of Workers in the Institute for the Regulation
- of Supply (ASTIRA) was arrested.
- Reply:
- On 16 November 1991 Juan Antonio Serrano Montalvo was arrested by the
- armed forces in Santa Martha housing estate No. 2, passage 4, block 17,
- opposite house No. 104, on a charge of carrying firearms; he was handed over
- to his brother Marlon Serrano, at 5 p.m. on 18 November 1991, once the
- corresponding report had been drawn up and no evidence found against him.
- - On 12 January 1991, Porfirio Vásquez, a member of the Cooperative
- Association, was murdered in Candelaria de la Frontera, by gunmen hired by
- the landowner Tomás Ramírez Magaña.
- Reply:
- The Court of the First Instance in Chalchuapa ordered the arrest of
- Ramírez Magaña on a charge of usurpation; this order was reversed by the
- Criminal Court of Occidente, which established that Mr. Ramírez neither
- organized nor financed Porfirio Vásquez's murder.
- - On 9 May 1991, Víctor Méndez López, a member of the National Union for
- the Meat Industry (SNIC), was arrested by members of the national police at
- his workplace in the municipal market of San Salvador.
- Reply:
- There is no information on this incident in our files. No complaint
- was lodged on the matter and we therefore do not know if it actually occurred.
- - On 14 September 1991, Ramírez Ascencio was arrested and subjected to
- brutal torture.
- Reply:
- There is no record in our files that Ramírez Ascencio was arrested by
- the armed forces.
- - Martín Ayala Ramírez was murdered and Leticia Campos seriously injured
- on 8 June 1991.
- Reply:
- The inquiries carried out established the identity of the persons involved
- in this case and of the instigators. Marta Abigail Contreras was arrested on
- 3 September 1991 and referred to the competent courts on 7 September 1991;
- in her extrajudicial statement she acknowledged her guilt and gave a number of
- details which implicated José Luis Anaya and Gilberto Antonio Contreras.
- The latter stated that they committed the crime on the night of 7 July 1991;
- after tying the guard to a post and inflicting multiple injuries on Martín
- Ayala's wife, Leticia de Ayala, José Luis Anaya and Gilberto Contreras then
- cut Martín Ayala's throat. After their arrest these persons were brought
- before the magistrate in the Isidro Menéndez Judicial Centre and admitted
- that they had carried out the crime, thus clearing the national police and
- the armed forces of any involvement.
- - On 13 July 1991, Pedro Pérez and Islao Ortéz were murdered by an army
- unit in Cacaopera, Morazán.
- Reply:
- The information available in the files is as follows: according to an
- interview carried out with María Anastasia Pérez, the mother of the victim,
- her son died on 17 August 1991. She heard on the Chaparrastique radio
- station that her son's body had been found on the road from San Miguel to
- La Unión. In her statement, she added that he had been assassinated by his
- employer, although she did not not know his name; at no moment did she
- accuse the armed forces as they had no grounds for committing the crime.
- The inquiry is continuing.
- No information is available on Islao Ortéz.
- - Amanda Villatoro, Vice-President of the Women's Committee of ORIT,
- national coordinator of UNOC-CDT and member of the Legislative Assembly, who
- was threatened by the FAS on 16 July 1991.
- Reply:
- No information is available on this matter in our files. The armed
- forces have denied these accusations.
- - Norma and Virginia Guirola de Herrera, both workers in the Institute
- for Research in the Training and Development of Women, who were threatened and
- ordered by the "Cóndor Group" to leave their work premises on 8 June 1991.
- Reply:
- It has been established that at no time did the armed forces place
- under surveillance or threaten members of this Institute.
- - Salvadorean participants in the Trade Union Training Seminar organized
- by the Inter-American Regional Organization of Workers of the ICFTU (ORIT)
- were subjected to threats by the "Salvadorean Anti-Communist Front (FAS)" from
- 17 to 21 June 1991.
- Reply:
- The inquiries carried out were not able to establish the accuracy of
- these claims.
- - The rural workers of Soledad Viuda de Alas, Soyapango, were brutally
- beaten by military forces in August 1991.
- Reply:
- The inquiries carried out established that at no time did members of
- the security forces of this country mistreat the population of this
- community; on the contrary, the inhabitants were very grateful for this
- transfer, as the armed forces helped those who wanted to move to the new
- housing financed by the "Construcciones Canadá" enterprise, which owns the
- Finca Victoria building.
- - Mario Chávez, leader of the MCS and members of the cooperative association
- of the department of La Libertad were threatened by the colonel of the
- Artillery Brigade during the months of August and September 1991.
- Reply:
- The data are as follows. The fifth section of the Artillery Brigade
- carried out intelligence work in 1990 to counter the activities of Mario
- Chávez, suspected of conducting a campaign to discredit the armed forces; at
- no time were orders given to make threats of any kind against Mario Chávez
- Martinez.
- - Pedro Regalado Orellana and Fredy Vásquez, both SUTC leaders, were
- threatened by the FAS on 24 September 1991 (in a subsequent communication
- the ICFTU reported the murder of the latter leader).
- Reply:
- The Ministry of Defence has no information on the alleged threats by
- the FAS against Pedro Regalado Orellana and Fredy Vásquez.
- - In October 1992, Blanca Lidia López (Disputes Secretary) of the subsection
- of the trade union of the "Florenzi SA de CV" industrial enterprise was
- dismissed for her trade union activities.
- Reply:
- On 6 October 1992 Rosa Aminta Ramírez, in her capacity as authorized
- representative of the Florenzi SA enterprise, requested the dismissal of the
- above-mentioned worker on disciplinary grounds; this request was turned
- down because it had not been drawn up in due legal form.
- As regards the allegations by complainants which remain pending from Cases
- Nos. 1494, 1659, 1524, 1693, 1441 and 1273, the Government also refers to its
- previous statements.
- In the event of the information on the above-mentioned cases not having
- been received, the Secretariat of State is prepared to send the latest
- findings obtained from the inquiries conducted.
- Observations of the Government of El Salvador on Case No. 1494
- Reply of the Government of El Salvador. Following the inquiry carried out
- into the complaint submitted to the ILO by the World Confederation of
- Organizations of the Teaching Profession (WCOTP) for alleged violations of
- freedom of association in El Salvador, following the murder of Miguel Angel
- Lazo Quintanilla, Disputes Secretary of the National Association of Educators
- in El Salvador, the Government states that according to a document received by
- the Secretariat of State on 19 July 1989, General Juan Rafaél Bustillo,
- Commander of the Air Force of El Salvador. Miguel Angel Lazo Quintanilla and
- Carlos Rodríguez Domínguez died as a result of an armed conflict with units of
- the paratroop battalion of the Air Force of El Salvador, when they were
- carrying out acts of sabotage with other armed terrorists and creating panic
- among the population; after the clash, the weapons of these persons were
- confiscated; it is completely false that their bodies bore any signs of
- torture, since they died in combat.
- As regards the case of the teacher Cristina Gómez, her arrest and murder
- were mainly intended to discredit the air force.
- It is important to reiterate that replies have been given to the various
- requests received and that new methods have been applied to obtain information
- from the different services concerned, which have been communicated as soon as
- possible. The information on this case was sent on 14 February 1990.
- Observations of the Government of El Salvador on Case No. 1524
- The allegations of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions
- (ICFTU) and the Single Trade Union Federation of El Salvador (FUSS) which are
- pending refer to a criminal explosion which occurred at the headquarters of
- the National Trade Union Federation of El Salvador (FENASTRAS) on 21 October
- 1989. After referring to its previous reply, the Government states that, with
- a view to obtaining more information that might shed light on this repugnant
- act, the Government was one of the first to condemn the attack and has made
- every effort to gather any information to clarify this case. The most recent
- information provided by the Government Attorney's Office is as follows:
- The Government Attorney's Office opened an inquiry, No. 216-DH-89, through
- the Human Rights Unit, thus intervening in the criminal proceedings being
- carried out in Criminal Court No. 2 of the city under Case No. 359/89; the
- text of the report on the case stipulates as follows:
- Reference 216-DH-89 - Case No. 359/89, Criminal Court No. 2 of San
- Salvador: Mr. Government Attorney: On the basis of criminal law, I refer
- to the inquiry into the deaths of Julia Tatiana Aguirre Mendoza, Rosa Hilda
- Saravia de Elías, Ricardo Humberto Cestoni, José Daniel López Meléndez,
- Vicente Salvador Melgar, Luis Edgardo Vásquez Márquez, Febe Elizabeth
- Velásquez, María Magdalena Rosales Sánchez, Carmen Catalina Hernández
- Ramos and Juan Tejada, from injuries caused by the explosion of a device
- in the National Trade Union Federation of Salvadorean Workers; the
- explosion occurred on 31 October 1989 and the case is known as the
- FENASTRAS case. EXTRAJUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS: These proceedings were
- monitored by the Committee of Inquiry on Criminal Acts which sent a report
- to the Court dated 30 May 1990, stating that the evidence collected in the
- inquiry had been sent to the FBI technical laboratory in the United
- States; however, the laboratory found no explosive residue which would
- have helped to identify the material used because of the time which had
- elapsed between the date of the incident and the date of access to the
- scene of the crime, which had been altered. JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS: The
- judicial proceedings carried out consisted of the identification of the
- bodies and injuries of the survivors and statements by the injured persons
- who were unable to identify those who had placed the explosive device;
- Mrs. María Julia Hernández was summoned to give a statement but was unable
- to give any relevant information. It was therefore not possible to
- determine the names of the participants in this attack and no group
- claimed responsibility for it event. The last part of this document
- includes the report of the appointed prosecutor, which states that he
- received notification on 27 May of the current year of the court's
- decision to close the case, since the committee of inquiry had been unable
- to identify the persons responsible for the crime. It is therefore my
- humble opinion that this unit should also close the case.
- Signed on behalf of this Institution by Carlos Solórzano Trejo, Miguel
- Armando Guerra Quevedo, Saúl Rigoberto Zelaya Castillo, Alvaro Henry
- Campos, José Eduardo Pineda Valenzuela, Ricardo Marcial Zelaya Larreynaga,
- Jorge Carlos Figeac Cisneros, Edwar Sidney Blanco Reyes and Julio César
- Sánchez.
- Signed JULIO CESAR MURCIA SANCHEZ, authorized representative, San
- Salvador, 20 June 1991. Initialled JCN.
- Summary of the inquiry into the attack on 31 October 1989 against the
- FENASTRAS premises, based on the report drawn up by the Committee of Inquiry
- on Criminal Acts
- Background. At 1 p.m. on 31 October 1989, persons unknown caused a device
- to explode in the FENASTRAS premises situated in the 10th Avenue North and
- Delgado Street in this city; detectives from the Committee of Inquiry went to
- the scene of the crime but were unable to inspect the premises because they
- were prevented from doing so by members of FENASTRAS.
- Evidence collected. At 9.25 a.m. on 8 November 1989, detectives and
- explosives experts, along with the Judge of Court No. 2 of the city, carried
- out a visual inspection of the FENASTRAS premises in the presence of
- representatives of the Embassy of the United States and technical explosives
- staff of the FBI; they noted that the explosion had occurred in the corridor
- between the protection wall and the wall of the FENASTRAS premises at a
- distance of one meter from the metallic door of the main entrance, resulting
- in a crater measuring approximately 80 centimetres across and 30 centimetres
- deep. After observing that all the evidence had been destroyed and that only
- samples of dust and pieces of metal from the main door remained, the FBI
- laboratory reported that since the scene of the event had not been left
- intact, it was impossible from the scant evidence available to identify the
- explosive materials used.
- On-the-spot investigation. Persons interviewed at the scene of the attack
- stated that a few minutes before the explosion two unknown persons had been
- seen driving a yellow pick-up truck and that one of them placed the bomb,
- while the other kept guard. The door inside which the explosive was placed
- remained open and unguarded, and at the time of the explosion various members
- of FENASTRAS were inside the premises. It was established that the injured
- persons included Mark Sebastian Anner Tony, of United States nationality, who
- works as an adviser of Febe Elizabeth Velasquez; he was not interviewed as he
- had left the country. It was also established that vehical P-152509, which
- was damaged by the explosion, was the property of Christopher John Norton, a
- North American; at the time of the explosion, he was inside the premises
- conferring with the trade union official, Bernabe Recinos; it would seem that
- he heard comments that a trade unionist had seen someone enter the premises
- and place a packet near the main door, and that this person had subsequently
- left for an unknown destination.
- Gloria Amaya Albarado, the owner of a house opposite the FENASTRAS
- premises, said that she was at home at the time of the explosion but had seen
- no one suspicious placing a bomb.
- Santos García Romero, owner of a footwear business situated in 10th Avenue
- North, No. 116, said that on 31 October 1989, when she was in her business
- premises, she saw a child with the nickname of "Zanate" running along the
- street and crying: "A bomb". She hid herself at the back of her shop until
- after the explosion.
- Tránsito Pérez de Colorado, the owner of a food store opposite the
- FENASTRAS premises, said that she heard an unknown woman saying that something
- was happening because people were running; she started to do the same after
- hearing the explosion in the FENASTRAS premises.
- José Rolano Méndez Amaya, the owner of a shoe-repair shop adjacent to the
- FENASTRAS premises, said that at the time of the events he was not in his
- shop; however his employee, José Candelario Moreno, told him that just before
- the explosion he was standing outside the shop and saw two unknown persons
- running towards the north and he presumed that it was these persons who had
- committed the attack since the bomb exploded when they were still running.
- This account tallied with a statement made by Victor Manuel Ramírez Medina,
- the owner of a scrap-iron business on the south side of the FENASTRAS
- premises, who said that around 12 p.m., on a day the date of which he could
- not remember, he heard the voice of a man who called out: "There is a bomb";
- and this man was running towards the north by the house called Los Coquitos
- accompanied by another man. After the explosion an unknown person came up to
- Ramírez Medina to ask him if he had seen anything and he replied that he had
- seen a man who had mentioned a bomb; the unknown person then threatened to
- take him away if he did not say any more but he insisted that that was all he
- knew, and added that he did not see whether the man who had spoken about the
- bomb had gone out through the door of the FENASTRAS premises.
- Jorge Alexander Ramírez Hernández, a child, said that he had seen a yellow
- pick-up truck near a house but he could not give more details about the
- vehicle.
- Elias Misael Arteaga Alfaro, a child, stated that on the day of the
- explosion, the date of which he could not remember, around 12.15 p.m., he was
- walking along the pavement opposite FENASTRAS when he heard a large blast and
- was thrown towards the centre of the street. His legs felt numb and he could
- see other persons injured, although before the explosion he had seen no one
- running and had heard no one warning of any danger.
- It was not possible to interview members of FENASTRAS - because of the
- terrorist offensive taking place at that time - although contact had been made
- with Sabas de Jesus Vargas Reyes, legal advisor of the Federation.
- Other information: A photocopy was obtained of an anonymous communiqué
- sent to a radio station in this city which indicated that a family called
- Palacios Villatoro had been assassinated in the Hondables de Corinto district
- in the Department of Morazán. The explosive device used to kill them consisted
- of 1 lb of TNT and 7 feet of slow-burning fuse which was placed on the second
- floor of a building - which the anonymous communiqué said was affiliated to
- the UNTS; police carrying out an investigation in the Hondables district
- discovered that terrorists had assassinated a family with the name Villatoro
- in the small village of Altos de Aguacate, although no further details were
- obtained.
- A terrorist being held in a criminal detention centre in the country
- stated, after being questioned, that he had been recruited in December 1985 by
- a terrorist known as William who had entrusted him with the mission of
- educating the masses; at the end of 1988 he was called upon to join the camp
- of El Sillón de Chalatenango hill, where a meeting was held on 17 February
- 1989 attended by the terrorist commanders Dimas Rodriguez, el Choco, German
- and Mary to examine a number of points concerning the offensive being planned
- for 11 November. He heard that it had been decided to make Febe Elizabeth
- Velasquez a martyr in order to win the support of the people and that the
- attack would be held on 8 November 1989 - although he did not know the reasons
- why the date had been brought forward. The death of Febe Elizabeth had been
- ordered by the general command of the FMLN because she was misappropriating
- funds belonging to the organization; the Commander Dimas entrusted the
- terrorist known as Alberto with carrying out the attack, because he had access
- to FENASTRAS and was known to Febe Elizabeth; the media reported that on 29
- December 1989 Carlos Salvador Carcamo Centeno, known as Cacho Roberto, who was
- a commander of the FPL, stated - after his arrest - that the attack against
- FENASTRAS had been committed by the FMLN to incriminate the Government and
- bring about an insurrection. This was reiterated by the terrorist Juan
- Alberto Flores Zepeda, a former member of the executive committee of the UNTS;
- upon his arrest by the rural police, he said that the attack against FENASTRAS
- was part of a strategic plan organized by the FMLN to sabotage the dialogue
- which had just begun and was intended to bring about a popular uprising and
- justify in the eyes of the international community the armed struggle for
- power.
- As regards the yellow pick-up truck which was seen at the place of the
- crime, inquiries were made at the complaints office of the national police;
- the only information available was that a yellow pick-up truck with
- registration plates P-577691 - a 1978 Izusu model belonging to Luis Antonio
- Gomez Ramos - had been stolen and found on 31 of the same month without any
- mention of the place or time the same information was obtained at the
- Department of Traffic, except that the number plates were P-57-769.
- On 19 October 1990, the National Guard arrested the soldier Saul Ernesto
- Arias Ferrufino, who had deserted during a military operation; he admitted,
- during questioning, that he belonged to the Revolutionary Party of Rural
- Workers (PRTC) which is affiliated to FENASTRAS and participated in the attack
- against the Federation, all of which was subsequently refuted in
- interrogations and polygraphic, psychological and psychiatric examinations
- carried out later.
- Observations of the Government of El Salvador on Case No. 1441
- Arrest of Juan José Huezo, a member of FENASTRAS, on 16 March 1989. The
- Judge of the Fourth Penal Court certifies the following:
- The Judge of the Fourth Penal Court of this Judicial District certifies:
- following the criminal proceedings taken against Gerardo Diaz Henriquez,
- Roberto Antonio Morales Guatemala, Juan Antonio Ingles and Juan José
- Huezo, the accused were given a sentence of two years' imprisonment after
- being found guilty of the offence of violating the workplace and one
- year's imprisonment for inflicting second degree injuries on the person of
- Lazaro Tadeo Bernal. On 31 July 1990, Juan José Huezo was released following
- the conditional suspension of the sentence. On 10 June 1992 the
- undersigned, in accordance with section 1 of the Act respecting national
- reconciliation (amnesty) declared that the sentence against Mr. Huezo, as
- well as the first three persons mentioned in this certificate, was hereby
- annulled.
- Pedro Regalado Orellana and Fredy Vásquez, leaders of the SUTC, were
- threatened by the Air Force (FAS) on 24 September 1991 (in a subsequent
- communication the ICFTU reported the murder of the latter).
- Reply:
- No information is available in the Ministry of Defence on the alleged
- threats made by the FAS. It should be noted that death threats are a
- matter of private law and that no complaints have been submitted to date to
- the respective courts.
- The allegation made by the ICFTU concerning the assassination of Fredy
- Vásquez is completely false since Fredy Vásquez is attending the meetings of
- the Forum on Social and Economic Consultation.
- Acts of anti-union discrimination in the ADOC factory (dismissal of trade
- union leaders and 40 workers who tried to set up a trade union).
- Reply:
- On 4 May 1992 the following persons appeared before the General Labour
- Directorate: the workers Oscar Armando Lucha Noyola, William Neftalí
- Valenzuela Saravia, Carlos Marcelino Saldaña Martínez, Mirian Estela Velis
- Guardado, Gloria de Doradeo and Will Mauricio Pérez Guevara, who stated that
- they had received the following amounts of money: C17,548.17; C8,755.26;
- C14,503.49; C24,194.95; C849.92 and that the ADOC SA enterprise was exempt of
- any responsibility in respect of labour payments and benefits; note was taken
- of the resignation of the workers Miguel Angel Mejía Mauricio, David
- Sánchez Pineda and Angela Gladys Hernández Chacón, who stated that they had
- voluntarily left their work and that the enterprise ADOC SA owned them no
- normal or overtime wages or any kind of labour benefits such as holiday
- pay, end-of-year bonus, weekly rest payments, compensatory rest periods or
- public holidays.
- The trade union organizations interviewed generally repeated the
- allegations brought before the Committee; without giving further details,
- they said that the authorities had not shown any interest in investigating the
- assassinations and other allegations properly.
- The interview with employers' representatives did not deal specifically
- with the pending allegations although they emphasized that the climate of
- violence had also affected employers. They mainly mentioned present trends in
- industrial relations.
- (b) Information on the present trade union situation, on new developments
- and on relevant instruments
- As noted earlier, the mission first examined the allegations pending
- before the Committee (its findings are summarized in the preceding section).
- However, it was clear from the beginning that it would not be enough for the
- Committee to restrict itself to this information and that it must have an
- overall view of the present trade union situation and likely developments in
- the immediate future, especially as since most of the allegations refer to
- events that took place several years before.
- The mission was able to gather information on the Forum on Social and
- Economic Consultation in which each of the parties has emphasized those
- matters which it considers to be the most important. In particular, the trade
- unions have advocated the ratification of international labour Conventions and
- the adoption of its draft Labour Code.
- As regards the ratification of international labour instruments, the Forum
- approved the ratification of 14 ILO Conventions, which will be submitted to
- the Legislative Assembly. However, there are serious obstacles as regards the
- ratification of Conventions Nos. 87, 98 and 151 respecting freedom of
- association and collective bargaining which the Government and the employers
- see as incompatible with the Constitution.
- Regarding the revision of the Labour Code, the proposed Bill on industrial
- relations in the public sector and other pieces of labour legislation, the
- Government is already receiving technical assistance from the ILO. As to the
- Labour Code, it appears to be the Government's intention to use the Forum to
- combine the Government's own Bill with the draft proposed by the trade unions
- and to send the text to the Legislative Assembly.
- The trade union organizations told the mission that serious and repeated
- acts of anti-union discrimination and administrative red tape continued to
- hinder the establishment of trade union organizations. They presented the
- mission with a long list of such acts and pointed out that the authorities
- often failed to carry out the proper investigations.
- F. The mission's conclusions
- The mission noted that the violation of trade union rights over the past
- 12 years has been a constant feature of the general climate of violence in the
- country and has affected everyday life and almost all basic human rights. The
- mission realized that the social partners and the Government were aware that
- the veritable war that the country had gone through during the past 12 years
- was much more than just a question of terrorism and violence. It is therefore
- practically impossible in many cases to distinguish what was a violation of
- freedom of association and human rights and what was the consequence of the
- spiral of violence.
- The mission also noted that, following the recent peace agreement (January
- 1993), there is now a real desire on the part of all concerned to put the past
- behind them. The main concern now is not to harp on past events but to
- construct the present and the future, without however forgetting just how
- serious previous developments had been. The mission found a society which is
- trying to forget the past by making use of its freedom of expression, its
- capacity for dialogue and the exercise of its other democratic freedoms.
- Mention should also be made in this respect of the work carried out by the
- United Nations and the United Nations observer mission, ONUSAL.
- Emphasis should likewise be placed on the new sense of dialogue and
- collaboration shown by the Ministry of Labour - a marked change from the past
- - which may be contributing to the consolidation of a new climate of trade
- union relations. The Government indicated to the mission that it would keep
- sending the necessary information concerning the issues raised in the
- complaints.
- The present situation is characterized by several objective facts.
- Firstly, no persons are being detained for trade union activities and there
- have been no further searches of trade union premises; violence against trade
- unionists has declined substantially - in the last 12 months there have been
- no acts of violence against trade unionists except in a few isolated instances
- where threats may have been made. Furthermore, industrial relations are now
- moving decisively towards normality (establishment of trade unions, collective
- bargaining, strikes, etc.), although the trade union organizations have
- reported to the mission cases of anti-union discrimination and of obstacles
- and delays in their establishment (which to a large extent reflect
- shortcomings in the legal system which it is proposed to correct by means of a
- revision of the Labour Code and an Act respecting industrial relations in the
- public sector, for which the ILO technical assistance has been requested);
- there has also been considerable reticence on the part of some employers and
- probably certain deficiencies on the part of the trade unions as well. All
- this may be explained by the lack of any political or social stability over
- the last 12 years.
- Although it is possible to make some forecasts concerning the future of
- industrial and trade union relations in El Salvador, mention should first of
- all be made of the Forum on Social and Economic Consultation. All the
- information obtained by the mission suggest that the Forum is at present at an
- impasse, though there have been compromises. However, no one has spoken out
- against the Forum; on the contrary, all the parties have given it their
- support. Although the Forum's achievements so far are very limited, the mere
- fact of its continuing existence, openly backed by all sectors, is probably
- the clearest indication of a substantial change in labour and trade union
- relations in this country. Without doubt this institution is the best
- guarantee in the immediate future of a genuine dialogue (such as never existed
- before) conducive to normal industrial relations. It must be noted that the
- forthcoming political elections in 1994 may result in the suspension of the
- activities of the Forum from the end of November of this year. The trade
- union organizations are very apprehensive about this, which they think could
- spell the end of the Forum itself. However, the employers' organizations and
- the Ministry have reaffirmed their desire to pursue the dialogue if the Forum
- is suspended.
- As regards the immediate ratification of Conventions Nos. 87, 98 and 151,
- as proposed by the trade union sector, the outlook for the immediate future
- appears to be negative. Their alleged incompatibility with the Constitution
- is an obstacle which, rightly or wrongly, will prevent their immediate
- ratification, although no one has actually denied their usefulness. In the
- view of the mission, judgements which have been made on these and other
- international labour Conventions have not always been based on a proper
- knowledge of the principles established in this respect by the ILO supervisory
- machinery. The Government nevertheless stated that it would try to modernize
- the labour legislation and bring it into conformity with the ILO standards, on
- the occasion of its revision.
- During the mission the idea was mooted that a tripartite seminar be
- organized to explain to the Government and the social partners exactly what
- the consequences would be if relevant Conventions were ratified. This idea
- was received enthusiastically by all sectors.
- In all events, it can be said that a new stage has been initiated in the
- relations between this country and the ILO, as can be seen from the fact that
- the Forum on Consultation approved the ratification of 14 major international
- labour Conventions and undertook to have them submitted to the Legislative
- Assembly, that the direct contacts mission was accepted and that the
- Government provided the mission with extensive information on the allegations
- made.
- Finally, after this description of the past situation and of the future
- outlook, it must be emphasized that they remain to some extent fragile, and
- that the consolidation of progress achieved so far will to a large extent
- depend on support from the international community, and in our case from the
- ILO, and on the efforts of the parties.
- 12 October 1993. José Vida Soria.