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Preamble
The outline given below of the current procedure for the examination of complaints
alleging infringements of trade union rights is based on the provisions adopted by
common consent by the Governing Body of the International Labour Office and the
Economic and Social Council of the United Nations in January and February 1950, and also
on the decisions taken by the Governing Body at its 117th Session (November 1951), 123rd
Session (November 1953), 132nd Session (June 1956), 140th Session (November 1958), 144th
Session (March 1960), 175th Session (May 1969), 184th Session (November 1971), 202nd
Session (March 1977), 209th Session (May-June 1979) and 283rd Session (March 2002) with
respect to the internal procedure for the preliminary examination of complaints, and
lastly on certain decisions adopted by the Committee on Freedom of Association itself.
(Endnote 1)
Background
- 1. In January 1950 the Governing Body, following negotiations
with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, set up a
Fact-Finding and Conciliation Commission on Freedom of Association,
composed of independent persons, and defined the terms of reference of
the Commission and the general lines of its procedure. It also decided
to communicate to the Economic and Social Council a certain number of
suggestions with a view to formulating a procedure for making the
services of the Commission available to the United Nations.
- 2. The Economic and Social Council, at its Tenth Session, on
17 February 1950, noted the decision of the Governing Body and adopted a
resolution in which it formally approved this decision, considering that
it corresponded to the intent of the Council's resolution of 2 August
1949 and that it was likely to prove a most effective way of
safeguarding trade union rights. It decided to accept, on behalf of the
United Nations, the services of the ILO and the Fact-Finding and
Conciliation Commission and laid down a procedure, which was
supplemented in 1953.
Complaints received by the United Nations
- 3. All allegations regarding infringements of trade union
rights received by the United Nations from governments or trade union or
employers' organizations against ILO member States will be forwarded by
the Economic and Social Council to the Governing Body of the
International Labour Office, which will consider the question of their
referral to the Fact-Finding and Conciliation Commission.
- 4. Similar allegations received by the United Nations
regarding any Member of the United Nations which is not a Member of the
ILO will be transmitted to the Commission through the Governing Body of
the ILO when the Secretary-General of the United Nations, acting on
behalf of the Economic and Social Council, has received the consent of
the government concerned, and if the Economic and Social Council
considers these allegations suitable for transmission. If the government's
consent is not forthcoming, the Economic and Social Council will give
consideration to the position created by such refusal, with a view to
taking any appropriate alternative action calculated to safeguard the
rights relating to freedom of association involved in the case. If the
Governing Body has before it allegations regarding infringements of
trade union rights that are brought against a Member of the United
Nations which is not a Member of the ILO, it will refer such allegations
in the first instance to the Economic and Social Council.
Bodies competent to examine complaints
- 5. In accordance with a decision originally taken by the
Governing Body, complaints against member States of the ILO were
submitted in the first instance to the Officers of the Governing Body
for preliminary examination. Following discussions at its 116th and
117th Sessions, the Governing Body decided to set up a Committee on
Freedom of Association to carry out this preliminary examination.
- 6. At the present time, therefore, there are three bodies
which are competent to hear complaints alleging infringements of trade
union rights that are lodged with the ILO, viz. the Committee on Freedom
of Association set up by the Governing Body, the Governing Body itself,
and the Fact-Finding and Conciliation Commission on Freedom of
Association.
Composition and functioning of the Committee on Freedom of Association
- 7. This body is a Governing Body organ reflecting the ILO's
own tripartite character. Since its creation in 1951, it has been
composed of nine regular members representing in equal proportion the
Government, Employer and Worker groups of the Governing Body; each
member participates in a personal capacity. Nine substitute members,
also appointed by the Governing Body, were originally called upon to
participate in the meetings only if, for one reason or another, regular
members were not present, so as to maintain the initial
composition.
- 8. The present practice adopted by the Committee in February
1958 and specified in March 2002 gives substitute members the right to
participate in the work of the Committee, whether or not all the regular
members are present. They have therefore acquired the status of deputy
members and must respect the same rules as regular members.
- 9. At its most recent examination of the procedure in March
2002, the Committee expressed the hope that, in view of the rule that
all the members are appointed in their individual capacity, the
nominations of Government members would be made in a personal capacity
so as to ensure a relative permanence of government representation.
- 10. No representative or national of the State against which
a complaint has been made, or person occupying an official position in
the national organization of employers or workers which has made the
complaint, may participate in the Committee's deliberations or even be
present during the hearing of the complaint in question. Similarly, the
documents concerning the case are not supplied to them.
- 11. The Committee always endeavours to reach unanimous
decisions.
Mandate and responsibility of the Committee
- 12. By virtue of its Constitution, the ILO was established in
particular to improve working conditions and to promote freedom of
association in the various countries. Consequently, the matters dealt
with by the Organization in this connection no longer fall within the
exclusive sphere of States and the action taken by the Organization for
the purpose cannot be considered to be interference in internal affairs,
since it falls within the terms of reference that the ILO has received
from its Members with a view to attaining the aims assigned to it.(Endnote 2)
- 13. The function of the International Labour Organization in
regard to freedom of association and the protection of the individual is
to contribute to the effectiveness of the general principles of freedom
of association, as one of the primary safeguards of peace and social
justice.(Endnote 3) Its function is to secure and
promote the right of association of workers and employers. It does not
level charges at, or condemn, governments. In fulfilling its task the
Committee takes the utmost care, through the procedures it has developed
over many years, to avoid dealing with matters which do not fall within
its specific competence.
- 14. The mandate of the Committee consists in determining
whether any given legislation or practice complies with the principles
of freedom of association and collective bargaining laid down in the
relevant Conventions.(Endnote 4)
- 15. It is within the mandate of the Committee to examine
whether, and to what extent, satisfactory evidence is presented to
support allegations; this appreciation goes to the merits of the case
and cannot support a finding of irreceivability. (Endnote
5)
- 16. With a view to avoiding the possibility of
misunderstanding or misinterpretation, the Committee considers it
necessary to make it clear that its task is limited to examining the
allegations submitted to it. Its function is not to formulate general
conclusions concerning the trade union situation in particular countries
on the basis of vague general statements, but simply to evaluate specific
allegations.
- 17. The usual practice of the Committee has been not to make
any distinction between allegations levelled against governments and
those levelled against persons accused of infringing freedom of
association, but to consider whether or not, in each particular case, a
government has ensured within its territory the free exercise of trade
union rights.
- 18. The Committee (after a preliminary examination, and
taking account of any observations made by the governments concerned, if
received within a reasonable period of time) reports to the Governing
Body that a case does not call for further examination if it finds, for
example, that the alleged facts, if proved, would not constitute an
infringement of the exercise of trade union rights, or that the
allegations made are so purely political in character that it is
undesirable to pursue the matter further, or that the allegations made
are too vague to permit a consideration of the case on its merits, or
that the complainant has not offered sufficient evidence to justify
reference of the matter to the Fact-Finding and Conciliation
Commission.
- 19. The Committee may recommend that the Governing Body draw
the attention of the governments concerned to the anomalies which it has
observed and invite them to take appropriate measures to remedy the
situation.
The Committee's competence to examine complaints
- 20. The Committee has considered that it is not within its
competence to reach a decision on violations of ILO Conventions on
working conditions since such allegations do not concern freedom of
association.
- 21. The Committee has recalled that questions concerning
social security legislation fall outside its competence.
- 22. The questions raised related to landownership and tenure
governed by specific national legislation have nothing to do with the
problems of the exercise of trade union rights.
- 23. It is not within the Committee's terms of reference to
give an opinion on the type or characteristics - including the degree of
legislative regulation - of the industrial relations system in any
particular country.(Endnote 6)
- 24. The Committee always takes account of national
circumstances, such as the history of labour relations and the social
and economic context, but the freedom of association principles apply
uniformly and consistently among countries. (Endnote
7)
- 25. Where the government concerned considers that the
questions raised are purely political in character, the Committee has
decided that, even though allegations may be political in origin or
present certain political aspects, they should be examined in substance
if they raise questions directly concerning the exercise of trade union
rights.
- 26. The question of whether issues raised in a complaint
concern penal law or the exercise of trade union rights cannot be
decided unilaterally by the government against which a complaint is
made. It is for the Committee to rule on the matter after examining all
the available information. (Endnote 8)
- 27. When it has had to deal with precise and detailed
allegations regarding draft legislation, the Committee it has taken the
view that the fact that such allegations relate to a text that does not
have the force of law should not in itself prevent it from expressing
its opinion on the merits of the allegations made. It has considered it
desirable that, in such cases, the government and the complainant should
be made aware of the Committee's point of view with regard to the
proposed bill before it is enacted, since it is open to the government,
on whose initiative such a matter depends, to make any amendments
thereto.
- 28. Where national legislation provides for appeal procedures
before the courts or independent tribunals, and these procedures have
not been used for the matters on which the complaint is based, the
Committee takes this into account when examining the complaint.
- 29. When a case is being examined by an independent national
jurisdiction whose procedures offer appropriate guarantees, and the
Committee considers that the decision to be taken could provide
additional information, it will suspend its examination of the case for
a reasonable time to await this decision, provided that the delay thus
encountered does not risk prejudicing the party whose rights have
allegedly been infringed.
- 30. Although the use of internal legal procedures, whatever
the outcome, is undoubtedly a factor to be taken into consideration, the
Committee has always considered that, in view of its responsibilities,
its competence to examine allegations is not subject to the exhaustion
of national procedures.
Receivability of complaints
- 31. Complaints lodged with the ILO, either directly or
through the United Nations, must come either from organizations of
workers or employers or from governments. Allegations are receivable
only if they are submitted by a national organization directly
interested in the matter, by international organizations of employers or
workers having consultative status with the ILO, or other international
organizations of employers or workers where the allegations relate to
matters directly affecting their affiliated organizations. Such
complaints may be presented whether or not the country concerned has
ratified the freedom of association Conventions.
- 32. The Committee has full freedom to decide whether an
organization may be deemed to be an employers' or workers' organization
within the meaning of the ILO Constitution, and it does not consider
itself bound by any national definition of the term.
- 33. The Committee has not regarded any complaint as being
irreceivable simply because the government in question had dissolved, or
proposed to dissolve, the organization on behalf of which the complaint
was made, or because the person or persons making the complaint had
taken refuge abroad.
- 34. The fact that a trade union has not deposited its
by-laws, as may be required by national laws, is not sufficient to make
its complaint irreceivable since the principles of freedom of
association provide precisely that the workers shall be able, without
previous authorization, to establish organizations of their own
choosing.
- 35. The fact that an organization has not been officially
recognized does not justify the rejection of allegations when it is
clear from the complaints that this organization has at least a de facto
existence.
- 36. In cases in which the Committee is called upon to examine
complaints presented by an organization concerning which no precise
information is available, the Director-General is authorized to request
the organization to furnish information on the size of its membership,
its statutes, its national or international affiliations and, in
general, any other information calculated, in any examination of the
receivability of the complaint, to lead to a better appreciation of the
precise nature of the complainant organization.
- 37. The Committee will only take cognizance of complaints
presented by persons who, through fear of reprisals, request that their
names or the origin of the complaints should not be disclosed, if the
Director-General, after examining the complaint in question, informs the
Committee that it contains allegations of some degree of gravity which
have not previously been examined by the Committee. The Committee can
then decide what action, if any, should be taken with regard to such
complaints.
Repetitive nature of complaints
- 38. In any case in which a complaint concerns exactly the
same infringements as those on which the Committee has already given a
decision, the Director-General may, in the first instance, refer the
complaint to the Committee, which will decide whether it is appropriate
to take action on it.
- 39. The Committee has taken the view that it could only
reopen a case which it had already examined in substance and in which it
had submitted final recommendations to the Governing Body if new
evidence is adduced and brought to its notice. Similarly, the Committee
does not re-examine allegations on which it has already given an
opinion: for example, when a complaint refers to a law that it has
already examined and, as such, does not contain new elements. (Endnote 9)
Form of the complaint
- 40. Complaints must be presented in writing, duly signed by a
representative of a body entitled to present them, and they must be as
fully supported as possible by evidence of specific infringements of
trade union rights.
- 41. When the Committee receives, either directly or through
the United Nations, mere copies of communications sent by organizations
to third parties, such communications do not constitute formal
complaints and do not call for action on its part.
- 42. Complaints originating from assemblies or gatherings
which are not bodies having a permanent existence or even bodies
organized as definite entities and with which it is impossible to
correspond, either because they have only a temporary existence or
because the complaints do not contain any addresses of the complainants,
are not receivable.
Rules concerning relations with complainants
- 43. Complaints which do not relate to specific infringements
of trade union rights are referred by the Director-General to the
Committee on Freedom of Association for opinion, and the Committee
decides whether or not any action should be taken on them. In cases of
this kind, the Director-General is not bound to wait until the Committee
meets, but may contact the complainant organization directly to inform
it that the Committee's mandate only permits it to deal with questions
concerning freedom of association and to ask it to specify, in this
connection, the particular points that it wishes to have examined by the
Committee.
- 44. The Director-General, on receiving a new complaint
concerning specific cases of infringement of freedom of association,
either directly from the complainant organization or through the United
Nations, informs the complainant that any information he may wish to
furnish in substantiation of the complaint should be communicated to him
within a period of one month. In the event that supporting information
is sent to the ILO after the expiry of the one month period provided for
in the procedures it will be for the Committee to determine whether this
information constitutes new evidence which the complainant would not
have been in a position to adduce within the appointed period; in the
event that the Committee considers that this is not the case, the
information in question is regarded as irreceivable. On the other hand,
if the complainant does not furnish the necessary information in
substantiation of a complaint (where it does not appear to be
sufficiently substantiated) within a period of one month from the date
of the Director-General's acknowledgement of receipt of the complaint,
it is for the Committee to decide whether any further action in the
matter is appropriate.
- 45. In cases in which a considerable number of copies of an
identical complaint are received from separate organizations, the
Director-General is not required to request each separate complainant to
furnish further information; it is normally sufficient for the
Director-General to address the request to the central organization in
the country to which the bodies presenting the copies of the identical
complaint belong or, where the circumstances make this impracticable, to
the authors of the first copy received, it being understood that this
does not preclude the Director-General from communicating with more than
one of the said bodies if this appears to be warranted by any special
circumstances of the particular case. The Director-General will transmit
to the government concerned the first copy received, but will also
inform the government of the names of the other complainants presenting
the copies of the identical complaints.
- 46. When a complaint has been communicated to the government
concerned and the latter has presented its observations thereon, and
when the statements contained in the complaint and the government's
observations merely cancel one another out but do not contain any valid
evidence, thereby making it impossible for the Committee to reach an
informed opinion, the Committee is authorized to seek further
information in writing from the complainant in regard to questions
concerning the terms of the complaint requiring further elucidation. In
such cases, it has been understood that, on the one hand, the government
concerned, as defendant, would have an opportunity to reply in its turn
to any additional comments the complainants may make, and, on the other
hand, that this method would not be followed automatically in all cases
but only in cases where it appears that such a request to the
complainants would be helpful in establishing the facts.
- 47. Subject to the two conditions mentioned in the preceding
paragraph, the Committee may, moreover, inform the complainants, in
appropriate cases, of the substance of the government's observations and
invite them to submit their comments thereon within a given period of
time. In addition, the Director-General may ascertain whether, in the
light of the observations sent by the government concerned, further
information or comments from the complainants are necessary on matters
relating to the complaint and, if so, may write directly to the
complainants, in the name of the Committee and without waiting for its
next session, requesting the desired information or the comments on the
government's observations by a given date, the government's right to
reply being respected as is pointed out in the preceding paragraph.
- 48. In order to keep the complainant regularly informed of
the principal stages in the procedure, the complainant is notified,
after each session of the Committee, that the complaint has been put
before the Committee and, if the Committee has not reached a conclusion
appearing in its report, that as appropriate examination of the case has
been adjourned in the absence of a reply from the government or the
Committee has asked the government for certain additional
information.
Prescription
- 49. While no formal rules fixing any particular period of
prescription are embodied in the procedure for the examination of
complaints, it may be difficult - if not impossible - for a government to
reply in detail to allegations regarding matters which occurred a long
time ago.
Withdrawal of complaints
- 50. When the Committee has been confronted with a request
submitted to it for the withdrawal of a complaint, it has always
considered that the desire expressed by an organization which has
submitted a complaint to withdraw this complaint constitutes an element
of which full account should be taken, but it is not sufficient in
itself for the Committee to automatically cease to proceed further with
the case. In such cases, the Committee has decided that it alone is
competent to evaluate in full freedom the reasons put forward to explain
the withdrawal of a complaint and to endeavour to establish whether
these appear to be sufficiently plausible so that it may be concluded
that the withdrawal is being made in full independence. In this
connection, the Committee has noted that there might be cases in which
the withdrawal of a complaint by the organization presenting it was the
result not of the fact that the complaint had become without purpose,
but of pressure exercised by the government against the complainants,
the latter being threatened with an aggravation of the situation if they
did not consent to this withdrawal.
Rules for relations with the governments concerned
- 51. By membership of the International Labour Organization,
each member State is bound to respect a certain number of principles,
including the principles of freedom of association which have become
customary rules above the Conventions. (Endnote
10)
- 52. If the original complaint or any further information
received in response to the acknowledgement of the complaint is sufficiently substantiated, the complaint and any such further information
are communicated by the Director-General to the government concerned as
quickly as possible; at the same time the government is requested to
forward to the Director-General, before a given date, fixed in advance
with due regard to the date of the next meeting of the Committee, any
observations which it may care to make. When communicating allegations
to governments, the Director-General draws their attention to the
importance which the Governing Body attaches to receiving the
governments' replies within the specified period, in order that the
Committee may be in a position to examine cases as soon as possible
after the occurrence of the events to which the allegations relate. If
the Director-General has any difficulty in deciding whether a particular
complaint can be regarded as sufficiently substantiated to justify him
in communicating it to the government concerned for its observations, it
is open to him to consult the Committee before taking a decision on the
matter.
- 53. In cases in which the allegations concern specific
enterprises, or in appropriate cases, the letter by which the
allegations are transmitted to the government requests it to obtain the
views of all the organizations and institutions concerned so that it can
provide a reply to the Committee that is as complete as possible.
However, the application of this rule of procedure should not result in
practice in delay in having recourse to urgent appeals made to
governments, nor in the examination of cases.
- 54. A distinction is drawn between urgent cases, which are
addressed on a priority basis, and less urgent cases. Matters involving
human life or personal freedom, or new or changing conditions affecting
the freedom of action of a trade union movement as a whole, cases
arising out of a continuing state of emergency and cases involving the
dissolution of an organization, are treated as cases of urgency.
Priority of treatment is also given to cases on which a report has
already been submitted to the Governing Body.
- 55. In all cases, if the first reply from the government in
question is of too general a character, the Committee requests the
Director-General to obtain all necessary additional information from the
government, on as many occasions as it judges appropriate.
- 56. The Director-General is further empowered to ascertain
without, however, making any appreciation of the substance of a case,
whether the observations of governments on the subject matter of a
complaint or governments' replies to requests for further information are
sufficient to permit the Committee to examine the complaint and, if not,
to write directly to the government concerned, in the name of the
Committee, and without waiting for its next session, to inform it that
it would be desirable if it were to furnish more precise information on
the points raised by the Committee or the complainant.
- 57. The purpose of the whole procedure set up in the ILO for
the examination of allegations of violations of freedom of association
is to promote respect for trade union rights in law and in fact. If the
procedure protects governments against unreasonable accusations,
governments on their side should recognize the importance for their own reputation of
formulating, so as to allow objective examination, detailed replies to
the allegations brought against them. The Committee wishes to stress
that, in all the cases presented to it since it was first set up, it has
always considered that the replies from governments against whom
complaints are made should not be limited to general observations.
- 58. In cases where governments delay in forwarding their
observations on the complaints communicated to them, or the further
information requested of them, the Committee mentions these governments
in a special introductory paragraph to its reports after the lapse of a
reasonable time, which varies according to the degree of urgency of the
case and of the questions involved. This paragraph contains an urgent
appeal to the governments concerned and, as soon as possible afterwards,
special communications are sent to these governments by the
Director-General on behalf of the Committee.
- 59. These governments are warned that at its following
session the Committee may submit a report on the substance of the
matter, even if the information awaited from the governments in question
has still not been received.
- 60. Cases in respect of which governments continue to fail to
cooperate with the Committee, or in which certain difficulties persist,
are mentioned in a special paragraph of the introduction to the
Committee's report. The governments concerned are then immediately
informed that the chairman of the Committee will, on behalf of the
Committee, make contact with their representatives attending the session
of the Governing Body or the International Labour Conference. The
chairman will draw their attention to the particular cases involved and,
where appropriate, to the gravity of the difficulties in question,
discuss with them the reasons for the delay in transmitting the
observations requested by the Committee and examine with them various
means of remedying the situation. The chairman then reports to the
Committee on the results of such contacts.
- 61. In appropriate cases, where replies are not forthcoming,
ILO external offices may approach governments in order to elicit the
information requested of them, either during the examination of the case
or in connection with the action to be taken on the Committee's
recommendations, approved by the Governing Body. With this end in view
the ILO external offices are sent detailed information with regard to
complaints concerning their particular area and are requested to
approach governments which delay in transmitting their replies, in order
to draw their attention to the importance of supplying the observations
or information requested of them.
- 62. In cases where the governments implicated are obviously
unwilling to cooperate, the Committee may recommend, as an exceptional
measure, that wider publicity be given to the allegations, to the
recommendations of the Governing Body and to the negative attitude of
the governments concerned.
- 63. The procedure for the examination of complaints of
alleged infringements of the exercise of trade union rights provides for
the examination of complaints presented against member States of the
ILO. Evidently, it is possible for the consequences of events which gave
rise to the presentation of the initial complaint to continue after the
setting up of a new State which has become a Member of the ILO, but if
such a case should arise, the complainants would be able to have
recourse, in respect of the new State, to the procedure established for
the examination of complaints relating to infringements of the exercise
of trade union rights.
- 64. There exists a link of continuity between successive
governments of the same State and, while a government cannot be held
responsible for events which took place under a former government, it is
clearly responsible for any continuing consequences which these events
may have had since its accession to power.
- 65. Where a change of regime has taken place in a country,
the new government should take all necessary steps to remedy any
continuing effects which the events on which the complaint is based may
have had since its accession to power, even though those events took
place under its predecessor.
Requests for the postponement of the examination of cases
- 66. With regard to requests for the postponement of the
examination of cases by the complainant organization or the government
concerned, the practice followed by the Committee consists of deciding
the question in full freedom when the reasons given for the request have
been evaluated and taking into account the circumstances of the case.
(Endnote 11)
On-the-spot missions
- 67. At various stages in the procedure, an ILO representative
may be sent to the country concerned, for example in the context of
direct contacts, with a view to seeking a solution to the difficulties
encountered, either during the examination of the case or at the stage
of the action to be taken on the recommendations of the Governing Body.
Such contacts, however, can only be established at the invitation of the
governments concerned or at least with their consent. In addition, upon
the receipt of a complaint containing allegations of a particularly
serious nature, and after having received the prior approval of the
chairman of the Committee, the Director-General may appoint a
representative whose mandate would be to carry out preliminary contacts
for the following purposes, viz: to transmit to the competent
authorities in the country the concern to which the events described in
the complaint have given rise; to explain to these authorities the
principles of freedom of association involved; to obtain from the
authorities their initial reaction, as well as any comments and
information with regard to the matters raised in the complaint; to
explain to the authorities the special procedure in cases of alleged
infringements of trade union rights and, in particular, the direct
contact method which may subsequently be requested by the government in
order to facilitate a full appraisal of the situation by the Committee
and the Governing Body; to request and encourage the authorities to
communicate as soon as possible a detailed reply containing the
observations of the government on the complaint. The report of the
representative of the Director-General is submitted to the Committee at
its next meeting for consideration together with all the other
information made available. The ILO representative can be an ILO
official or an independent person appointed by the Director-General. It
goes without saying, however, that the mission of the ILO representative
is above all to ascertain the facts and to seek possible solutions on
the spot. The Committee and the Governing Body remain fully competent to
appraise the situation at the outcome of these direct contacts.
- 68. The representative of the Director-General charged with
an on-the-spot mission will not be able to perform his task properly and
therefore be fully and objectively informed on all aspects of the case
if he is not able to meet freely with all the parties involved. (Endnote 12)
Hearing of the parties
- 69. The Committee will decide, in the appropriate instances
and taking into account all the circumstances of the case, whether it
should hear the parties, or one of them, during its sessions so as to
obtain more complete information on the matter. It may do this
especially:
- (a) in appropriate cases where the complainants and the
governments have submitted contradictory statements on the
substance of the matters at issue, and where the Committee might
consider it useful for the representatives of the parties to
furnish orally more detailed information as requested by the
Committee;
- (b) in cases in which the Committee might consider it useful to
have an exchange of views with the governments in question, on
the one hand, and with the complainants, on the other, on
certain important matters in order to appreciate more fully the
factual situation and the eventual developments in the situation
which might lead to a solution of the problems involved, and to
seek to conciliate on the basis of the principles of freedom of
association;
- (c) in other cases where particular difficulties have arisen in
the examination of the questions involved or in the
implementation of its recommendations, and where the Committee
might consider it appropriate to discuss the matters with the
representative of the government concerned.
Effect given to the Committee's recommendations
- 70. In all cases where it suggests that the Governing Body
should make recommendations to a government, the Committee adds to its
conclusions on such cases a paragraph proposing that the government
concerned be invited to state, after a reasonable period has elapsed and
taking account of the circumstances of the case, what action it has been
able to take on the recommendations made to it.
- 71. A distinction is made between countries which have
ratified one or more Conventions on freedom of association and those
which have not.
- 72. In the first case (ratified Conventions) examination of
the action taken on the recommendations of the Governing Body is
normally entrusted to the Committee of Experts on the Application of
Conventions and Recommendations, whose attention is specifically drawn
in the concluding paragraph of the Committee's reports to discrepancies
between national laws and practice and the terms of the Conventions, or
to the incompatibility of a given situation with the provisions of these
instruments. Clearly, this possibility is not such as to hinder the
Committee from examining, through the procedure outlined below, the
effect given to certain recommendations made by it; this can be of use
taking into account the nature or urgency of certain questions.
- 73. In the second case (non-ratified Conventions), if there
is no reply, or if the reply given is partly or entirely unsatisfactory,
the matter may be followed up periodically, the Committee instructing
the Director-General at suitable intervals, according to the nature of
each case, to remind the government concerned of the matter and to
request it to supply information as to the action taken on the
recommendations approved by the Governing Body. The Committee itself,
from time to time, reports on the situation.
- 74. The Committee may recommend the Governing Body to attempt
to secure the consent of the government concerned to the reference of
the case to the Fact-Finding and Conciliation Commission. The Committee
submits to each session of the Governing Body a progress report on all
cases which the Governing Body has determined warrant further
examination. In every case in which the government against which the
complaint is made has refused to consent to referral to the Fact-Finding
and Conciliation Commission or has not within four months replied to a
request for such consent, the Committee may include in its report to the
Governing Body recommendations as to the appropriate alternative action
which, in the opinion of the Committee, the Governing Body might take.
In certain cases, the Governing Body itself has discussed the measures
to be taken where a government has not consented to a referral to the
Fact-Finding and Conciliation Commission.
End Note
- 1 - Most of the procedural rules referred to in this Annex are contained
under the heading "procedural questions" in the following documents: First Committee
Report, paras. 6 to 32, in Sixth Report of the International Labour Organisation to the
United Nations (Geneva, ILO, 1952), Appendix V; the 6th Report in Seventh Report of the
International Labour Organisation to the United Nations (Geneva, ILO, 1953), Appendix V,
paras. 14 to 21; the 9th Report in Eighth Report of the International Labour
Organisation to the United Nations (Geneva, ILO, 1954), Appendix II, paras. 2 to 40; the
29th and 43rd Reports in the Official Bulletin, Vol. XLIII, 1960, No. 3; the 111th
Report, ibid., Vol. LII, 1969 No. 4, paras. 7 to 20; the 127th Report, ibid., Vol. LV,
1972, Supplement, paras. 9 to 28; the 164th Report, ibid., Vol. LX, 1977, No. 2, paras.
19 to 28; the 193rd Report, ibid., Vol. LXII, 1979, No. 1; and the 327th Report, ibid.,
Vol. LXXXV, 2002, paras. 17 to 26.
- 2 - See Freedom of Association: Digest of decisions and principles of the
Freedom of Association Committee of the Governing Body of the ILO, fifth (revised)
edition, 2006, para. 2.
- 3 - See 2006 Digest, para. 1.
- 4 - See 2006 Digest, para. 6.
- 5 - See 2006 Digest, para. 9.
- 6 - See 287th Report, Case No. 1627, para. 32.
- 7 - See 2006 Digest, para. 10.
- 8 - See 268th Report, Case No. 1500, para. 693.
- 9 - See 297th Report, para. 13.
- 10 - Report of the Fact-Finding and Conciliation Commission on Freedom of
Association concerning the situation in Chile, 1975, para. 466.
- 11 - See 274th Report, Cases Nos. 1455, 1456, 1696 and 1515, para. 10.
- 12 - See 229th Report, Case No. 1097, para. 51.