Allegations: The complainant organizations allege that through the misuse of
several national laws, the Government has qualified as unlawful certain activities of the
Korean Construction Workers Union (KCWU), an industrial trade union affiliated to the
KFCITU, and has imposed civil and criminal sanctions on the union while the activities at
issue are aimed at providing jobs to union members in a sector characterized by
intermittence of employment, are common union practices around the world and in line with
International Labour Standards
- 600. The complaint is contained in a communication dated 20 October 2022
from the Korean Federation of Construction Industry Trade Unions (KFCITU), the Korean
Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) and the Building and Woodworkers International
(BWI). In a communication dated 12 September 2023, the complainants sent additional
information.
- 601. The Government provided its observations in communications dated 28
February and 10 September 2024.
- 602. The Republic of Korea has ratified the Freedom of Association and
Protection of the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87), and the Right to Organise
and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
A. The complainants’ allegations
A. The complainants’ allegations- 603. In their communications, the KFCITU, the KCTU, and the BWI allege
that, through the misuse of several national laws, the Government has qualified as
unlawful certain activities of the Korean Construction Workers Union (KCWU), an
industrial trade union affiliated with the KFCITU, and has imposed civil and criminal
sanctions on the union while the activities at issue are common union practices around
the world and in line with ILO Conventions Nos 87 and 98. The complainants allege that
these measures weaken the right of the KCWU to associate, to organize, and to
collectively bargain and have a general chilling effect on union activities in the
Republic of Korea.
- 604. The complainants state that the KCWU has the characteristics of a
craft union composed of trade workers with specific professional skills. Historically,
craft unions representing skilled workers were the first type of unions formed and they
helped members find jobs. Jobs in the construction industry are intermittent and various
types of specialized construction workers are employed on short-term contracts to work
on specific projects. Once a project is completed workers remain unemployed until hired
again for another project. In this context, unions, including the KCWU, focus on
securing more employment opportunities for their members through negotiation with
employers. According to the complainants, construction sites and harbours, where workers
provide loading and unloading services, present a similar pattern of intermittent
employment. Shipping unions in the Republic of Korea are allowed to demand employment
for their members through collective bargaining. It is equally important for the KCWU to
be able to do the same to protect its members’ rights. The complainants further allege
that employers in the construction industry pursue a strategy of denying employment to
union members, therefore, securing employment opportunities through collective
bargaining gains further importance, otherwise workers will leave unions because of
denial of employment to union members, which in turn entails serious difficulties for
unions to survive. The complainants allege that this is the result intended by the
Government and employers in the construction industry.
- 605. The complainants indicate that in late 2021, the Government had
formed the “Task Force for Eradicating Unlawful Activities at Construction Sites” to
further anti-union persecution in three common forms: (i) the Fair Trade Commission
(FTC) has considered members of the KCWU Construction Equipment Division, such as dump
truck drivers and excavator operators who are largely categorized as “persons in special
types of employment” (persons in disguised employment), as business entities and their
unions as trade associations subject to competition law. The complainants state that the
FTC has claimed that unions were engaging in anti-competitive activities such as
price-fixing and has further considered that KCWU’s request for employment constituted
prohibited activity for a “trade association” and is currently investigating 20 cases in
this respect. They allege that FTC investigations have nearly suffocated union
activities; (ii) the Ministry of Employment and Labour (MOEL) has imposed a fine of up
to 60 million Korean won (KRW) against the KCWU for violating the Fair Hiring Act in
four cases related to two construction sites, while six additional sites were under
investigation. In this respect, a total of 103 persons were reported to be prosecuted
and one was arrested; and (iii) the Government has conducted investigations and
prosecuted the KCWU under criminal charges of coercion or threat, merely for making
collective bargaining demands that the employer employ union members. The complainants
affirm this contrasts with the worldwide practice of building industry unions who
negotiate with employers to hire their members to “build union” on a construction
project.
- 606. The complainants allege that the FTC applies the Monopoly Regulation
and Fair Trade Act (FTA) to the Busan Regional Construction Equipment branch of the
KCWU, arguing that its members are business entities engaged in renting construction
equipment and therefore form a trade association as defined in section 2 of the FTA.
They allege that union activities such as collective bargaining, setting certain
conditions in the collective agreement and demanding compliance with the collective
agreement, can be qualified as unlawful collective practises under section 40(1), or
unfair trade practises under section 45(1) of the FTA. The complainants refer to a
specific case – 2021 GUSA 1312 – in which the FTC addressed a corrective order dated
14 January 2021 to the Ulleung Local of the Daegu & Gyeongbuk Regional Construction
Equipment Branch of the KCWU for having set guidelines for wage bargaining with
employers engaging in wage/rental rates negotiations in accordance with those
guidelines, and establishing directives with a view to preventing deterioration of
working conditions due to excessive competition among members. These acts were qualified
as “determining, maintaining or changing prices” in violation of section 19, and
“unfairly limiting price competition” in violation of section 40(1)(1) of the FTA. They
further allege that in three other cases – 2020 BUSA 1323, 2021 BUSA 1173, and 2021 BUSA
1625 – the FTC conducted investigations into certain activities of the Busan Regional
Construction Equipment Branch of the KCWU. The investigator eventually issued an opinion
dated 11 April 2022 listing potential corrective measures applicable to the union which
qualified actions such as protesting against a subcontractor who had unilaterally
terminated hiring contracts with union members, requesting subcontractors to employ its
members, and engaging in a campaign against a subcontractor who had unilaterally cut
rental rates that had been previously agreed, as acts of forcing a third party to reject
transactions with business entities that were not members of a specific trade
association, prohibited under articles 51(1.4) and 45(1.1) of the FTA. In their
September 2023 communication, the complainants allege that on 28 February 2023 the FTC
issued Decision No. 2023-042 on this case, which provided that the union “shall not
again engage in conduct that causes a construction contractor to unfairly refuse to do
business with a construction equipment lessor that is not a member of the Respondent and
to stop or not initiate business with a construction equipment lessor that is not a
member of the Respondent by stopping the operation of construction equipment or on-site
rallies or notifying the construction contractor thereof”. The FTC decision also imposed
penalty surcharges of 100 million won to be paid within 60 days as specified in the
notice of penalty payment.
- 607. The complainants provide the following list of the FTC cases against
organizations affiliated with the KCWU: (i) Ulneung Local of Daegyeong Construction
Equipment Branch (2021Gusa1312); (ii) Busan Construction Equipment Branch (2020Busa1323,
2021Busa1173, 2021Busa1625); (iii) Busan Construction Equipment Branch (2021Busa1275);
(iv) Excavator Operators’ Local of Busan Construction Equipment Branch (2022Gusa0280,
2022Gusa0281); (v) Sky Crane Operators’ Local of Daejeon Construction Equipment Branch
(2022Jeonsa0329); (vi) Ulsan Construction Equipment Branch (2021Busa1078, 2022Busa0517,
2022Busa1753); (vii) Busan Construction Equipment Branch (2021Busa2451, 2022Busa0523,
2022Busa0557, 2022Busa0527, 2022Busa0878) and (viii) Hapcheon Local of Gyeongnam
Construction Equipment Branch (2022Busa0882).
- 608. The complainants state that even persons registered as business
entities in the tax system can be workers under Trade Unions and Labour Relations
Adjustment Act (TULRAA), since pursuant to a series of Supreme Court rulings, the most
important factors in determining whether a person can be recognized as a worker are
economic and organizational dependence. For instance, the Supreme Court has ruled that
actors are workers under the TULRAA because they should be able to negotiate terms and
conditions of labour with the help of unions on an equal footing with broadcasting
businesses. Therefore, according to the complainants, members of the Construction
Equipment Division of the KCWU are similarly “workers” who fall under the scope of the
TULRAA and therefore their trade union rights should be recognized under national law.
According to the complainants, while members of the KCWU Regional Construction Equipment
Branch do not fall under the definition of employees in LSA, they are workers under the
TULRAA and have long been engaged in union activities. Qualification of this Branch as a
business entity under the FTA would entail the denial of their basic labour rights in
particular the rights to collective bargaining and collective action. Ordinary union
activities aimed at compelling members to comply with internally set standards, would
also be qualified as violations of the FTA.
- 609. Regarding the imposition of fines for violation of the Fair Hiring
Act, the complainants allege that the KCWU was fined because of having bargained for
employment opportunities and having staged actions to urge the implementation of a
labour-management agreement. According to the complainants, the Government had qualified
these acts as unlawful pressure and coercion for employment in violation of section
4(2)1 of the Fair hiring procedure act. They refer to the specific case in which the
Daejeon Regional Office of Employment and Labor imposed a fine of 15 million won on
Ik-bong Ahn, President of the Daejeon Chungcheong Regional Tower Crane Branch of the
KCWU, because the union had staged a rally in front of a construction site, protesting
against the unilateral revocation of an agreement with a tower crane rental firm, which
had agreed to hire union members on tower cranes installed at the site. The complainants
allege that the imposition of civil penalties under the Fair Hiring Act for these
activities is a violation of the right to freedom of association, including the right to
take industrial action, and to be free from anti-union discrimination.
- 610. Regarding criminal charges of coercion (section 324 of the Criminal
Act) brought against the KCWU, the complainants indicate that Korean prosecutors and
courts consider that demands of employment of union members are not appropriate
collective bargaining demands, because they don’t relate to working conditions and
infringe the management rights of employers. Furthermore, site-level bargaining and
collective actions such as organization of rallies or reporting violations of the
Occupational Safety and Health Act to put pressure on the employer, are qualified as
threat, which is a component of coercion. The complainants refer to cases brought from
April 2014 to February 2015, by Junkyung Tower Crane Services, a tower crane rental
firm, against several members and officials of the Tower Crane Operators’ Division of
the KCWU. The firm had complained that union officials had committed the crime of
coercion by requesting the employment of union members. The complaints referred to a
rally held by the union to put pressure on the firm to employ union members. These cases
led to the arrest of the president of the Tower Crane Operators’ Division and four other
union officials on 27 November 2015 and the indictment of 15 members of the Division on
8 December 2015. The Seoul High Court issued a guilty verdict regarding coercion on 31
May 2017, considering the following acts as threats, an essential component of coercion:
using verbal pressure from union officials to call for the firm to accept their demands
during negotiations for collective bargaining regarding the employment of union members;
holding rallies; and accusing general contractors, which had a contract with the firm,
of violating the Occupational Safety and Health Act over the period of collective
bargaining. This ruling was upheld by the Supreme Court of Korea on 31 October
2019.
- 611. The complainants affirm that from their standpoint construction
workers concerned by the present case have been misclassified as independent
contractors. They add however that even independent contractors should not be excluded
from the enjoyment of the fundamental labour rights and therefore the FTA must be
amended to ensure that all workers protected under the TULRAA are exempted from its
scope. Furthermore, the complainants allege that through their position that KCWU’s
request for employing union members is illegal, the Korean Government and judicial
authorities have unilaterally determined the scope of negotiable issues in collective
bargaining and therefore have violated Article 4 of Convention No. 98. They emphasize
that the dispute is not about the establishment of a union security system, as the
union’s demand was not to employ only union members, and details such as the amount and
procedures for the employment and the union’s responsibility for skills could be
discussed between labour and management in collective bargaining negotiations.
- 612. The complainants also emphasize that prohibiting trade unions’
setting internal rules of wage bargaining with a view to preventing excessive
competition among workers, infringes the freedom to organize union activities and
formulate programmes guaranteed in Article 3 of Convention No. 87. Finally, the
complainants affirm that the imposition of criminal penalties for the crime of coercion
and imposition of civil penalties under the Fair Hiring Act against the union’s efforts
to uphold its demands through verbal pressure on the employers, holding rallies and
reporting violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, constitute violations of
the right to freedom of association and the right to organize. They allege that the
Government, contrary to its obligation under Article 11 of Convention No. 87 has
developed a plan, with a taskforce, together with the construction industry, to make
trade unionism in the sector illegal by using the law against them.
- 613. In conclusion, the complainants allege that because of the
investigations conducted into union activities by prosecutors and the FTC, as well as
imposition of fines by the Ministry of Employment and Labour, KCWU’s activities and
existence have come under threat. Employers deny union members employment (contracts),
refuse collective bargaining with the union, and disregard collective agreements. As
demands for employment of union members are outlawed, clashes erupt on construction
sites between labour and management, because collective bargaining which can provide an
outlet for tension is blocked. They request that the Korean Government stop the
suppression of the KCWU and ensure the union’s demand for employment is dealt with
autonomous collective bargaining between the management and labour in consideration of
the employment structure and characteristics of construction sites where short-term
employment dominates. The Government should also work on building regulations and
institutions necessary to support autonomous collective bargaining.
- 614. In their communication dated 12 September 2023 the complainants
provide additional information, alleging that between January and 17 August 2023, more
than 1700 members of the KCWU were summoned by the police, 20 raids were conducted on
union facilities including its central office, and 37 persons were detained or
imprisoned. Union members were subjected to investigation and prosecution for having
made demands for hiring union members, bargaining with construction companies, and
receiving paid time off in accordance with the collective agreement. These union
activities received criminal qualifications as intimidation, coercion and extortion. The
authorities focused on outlawing paid time-off provisions as charges of extortion for
use of paid time off were widely used, with 465 members investigated, while 523 members
were charged with intimidation. The complainants emphasize that granting of paid time
off is agreed upon by the employer and the union through the bargaining process and cite
a clause of an agreement which stipulates the following:
- Article 2 (Paid
time-offs)
- 1. For the purpose of maintaining and managing a sound union, the
Company shall exempt the personnel designated by the union from working 48 hours per
month per site within the scope described in the Trade Union and Labor Relations
Adjustment Act, and shall make an employment contract for the personnel and pay
premiums for the four social insurances. However, companies other than the members
of the Seoul-Gyeongi-Incheon Reinforced Concrete Construction Employers’ Association
shall determine conditions separately.
- 2. The Company shall ensure the free
activities of labor unions regarding the use of paid time-offs pursuant to Paragraph
1, and the Company shall not interfere with them.
- 3. The Company shall pay
wages for the paid time-offs pursuant to Paragraph 1 as if they were worked, and
shall not disadvantage the personnel in wages, welfare benefits, special performance
fees, etc. on the ground that they are exempt from working hours.
- The complainants allege in this respect that providing paid time off
for full-time union officials is a legitimate activity under the TULRAA, including when
paid time off is granted on the condition that union members be hired. They state the
authorities assume that demands to hire union members were made to obtain paid time off,
putting the cart before the horse, while the granting of paid time off is agreed upon by
the employer and the union through the bargaining process.
- 615. The complainants allege that the political motivation behind the
prosecution of union members is obvious in view of the smear campaign against
construction trade unions led by President Yoon Seok-yul, ministers and other ruling
party politicians. The KCWU was repeatedly denounced as immoral and during a live
broadcast cabinet meeting on 21 February 2023, the President called construction trade
unions “geon pok”, meaning construction gangsters and compared them to criminal
organizations that use violence for the purpose of profit and gain. The President
instructed competent authorities such as the National Police Agency and the Ministry of
Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MOLIT) to carry out a special crackdown on
construction unions. On 9 March 2023, the MOLIT addressed a memorandum to construction
companies asking them to report unions’ alleged wrongdoings, using derogatory
expressions referring to KCWU officials and suggesting that they should be denounced. As
of 8 December 2022, the National Police Agency had announced the launch of a 200-day
crackdown on organized illegal activities such as extortion and violence at construction
sites. Promotions were promised to individual police officers in this framework,
incentivizing them to conclude that an allegation constitutes a crime, to treat it as a
serious crime, and to arrest the suspect. The complainants indicate that in this
context, Mr Hoe-dong Yang, a union member who was under investigation for extortion and
intimidation, took his own life by self-immolation. The crackdown period was twice
extended and lasted about nine months. At its outcome, not a single case of criminal
behaviour by employers had been identified, while the number of KCWU members had dropped
by more than 10,000 which is more than 15 per cent of its membership.
- 616. To summarize, the complainants point out that as union security
provisions in collective bargaining agreements are outlawed, the only means left to
construction unions for guaranteeing union rights is to secure the hiring of union
members through site-level bargaining. With the prosecution of union officials and
members for engaging in such bargaining, currently the right of construction workers to
organize is devoid of any effective guarantee, while employers have unlimited freedom
not to hire union members. In these circumstances, many members are leaving the union
and irreparable damage to the organizations will follow if no urgent intervention is
made.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 617. In its communication of 28 February 2024, the Government indicates
that the complainants’ allegations are unfounded and emphasizes its commitment to the
implementation of ratified ILO Conventions. The Government refers to national law
provisions guaranteeing the right to association and collective bargaining and indicates
that pursuant to section 29 of the TULRAA, the subjects of collective bargaining
encompass issues pertaining to the determination of working conditions and those related
to the operation of trade unions including their activities and full-time union
officers. In line with the constitution and the TULRAA, the Korean Supreme Court has
ruled that matters that can be disposed of by the employer such as working conditions
and other matters relating to the treatment of employees or the management of collective
labour relations may be the subject of collective bargaining, however, matters subject
to high-level management decisions such as layoffs or mergers are not in principle
subject to collective bargaining. The Government emphasizes that it is inevitable to
restrict subjects of collective bargaining for the following reasons: (i) the wording of
constitutional provisions and the purpose of fundamental labour rights indicate that not
all matters unrelated to working conditions and the improvement of the social and
economic status of workers are covered by the guarantee of the right to collective
bargaining; (ii) fundamental labour rights should be in harmony with other fundamental
rights such as the right to management and the right to equality; (iii) an employer who
refuses or delays collective bargaining without justification can be held criminally
responsible; the demand to be achieved through industrial action should be equal to the
subject of collective bargaining; and TULRAA provides civil and criminal immunity for
legitimate collective bargaining; (iv) not restricting the subject of collective
bargaining may lead to extreme inefficiency and constant labour-management
conflicts.
- 618. The Government rejects the complainants’ assertion that the KCWU’s
demand of employment of union members is a legitimate collective bargaining demand as
the subjects of collective bargaining are to be determined autonomously by the parties.
It emphasizes in this regard that pursuant to the rules of national law described above,
issues related to hiring, which are dealt with before the establishment of employment
contract, do not pertain to working conditions but to the right of personnel management
exclusive to employers and fall within the inherent right of the employer to manage and
exercise constitutionally guaranteed property rights; therefore, they are not subject to
collective bargaining under the TULRAA. The Government cites in this respect the ruling
of the Ulsan District Court (Decision 2017 No. 316, dated 8 June 2017), upheld by the
Supreme Court : “since matters belonging to the essence of the employer’s management
rights, such as the hiring of workers, cannot be the subject of collective bargaining in
principle, even if the union demands that the employer in the construction industry hire
union members, and the employer refuses to do so, the union is not permitted to engage
in industrial action for the purpose of enforcing the demand because it lacks the
legitimacy of the purpose”. The Government adds that prioritized hiring of union members
would violate the constitution and other laws because it amounts to discrimination
against other job applicants and non-members without reasonable ground.
- 619. The Government also rejects the complainants’ comparison between
stevedores’ unions and the KCWU. It highlights the following distinctions between the
KCWU and the Korean Federation of Port and Transport Workers Union (KFPTWU): the KFPTWU
has acquired the permission of the Minister of Employment and Labour to engage in
“labour supply business” while the KCWU has not obtained such a permission or any other
authorization. The Government explains that pursuant to section 33 of the Employment
Security Act, only trade unions who have acquired a specific permission from the
Minister of Employment and Labour can engage in the process of recruitment as a third
party inside the country. The KFPTWU had been granted permission to operate as a labour
supply business, but it had numerous corruption and embezzlement issues, due mainly to
its monopoly in providing labour. These issues persisted despite the Government measures
to counter them, for this reason the Government exercised caution in issuing labour
supply business permits. The Government specifies that the Minister of Labour and
Employment has the discretion to grant labour supply business permissions and they do so
after comprehensive consideration of the suitability of the union, the scope of its
activity, the labour supply situation in the region and occupation, and the stability of
the employment relations. The Government further indicates that the Supreme Court of
Korea has ruled that no labour union can claim the right to supply its members for
loading and unloading work based on a collective agreement, without a specific supply
contract pursuant to a labour supply business permission. The Supreme Court has also
ruled that restricting a labour supply business from concluding a contract with another
labour supply business based on a collective agreement constitutes a violation of the
FTA. The Government finally indicates that there is no evidence that the KCWU has, like
the KFPTWU, exercised the function of a craft union, i.e. labour supplier.
- 620. The Government indicates that it understands that the complainants
allege that the KCWU should be able to demand the hiring of its members through
collective bargaining in the form of a closed shop. The Government refers in this
respect to the General Survey of the Committee of Experts on the Application of
Conventions and Recommendations, which provides that Article 2 of Convention No. 87
leaves it to the practise and regulations of each state to decide whether it is
appropriate to guarantee the right of workers not to join an occupational organization
or, on the other hand, to authorize and where necessary to regulate the use of union
security clauses in practise. The Government indicates that in its legal system, closed
shops violate the constitutional right of workers to organize (choose) and are not a
common practise. It adds however that the proviso of section 81(1) of the TULRAA only
allows for limited use of union shops.
- 621. The Government affirms that the complainants’ allegation concerning
the employers’ tendency to avoid collective bargaining in the construction sector is
unfounded and unrelated to the present case. According to the Government, matters
related to hiring are not subjects of collective bargaining and the present case
concerns the KCWU’s use of unlawful recruitment coercion and the Government’s legitimate
exercise of its administrative authority in response to it, which is completely
unrelated to labour management relations at construction sites, where violations of
working hours and Occupational Safety standards occur and are reported by the union to
the administrative authorities. Most employers engage in legitimate good faith
collective bargaining as required by law. Failure to comply with the union’s request for
collective bargaining constitutes an unfair labour practise on the part of the employer
(section 81(1)(3) of the TULRAA) and is subject to criminal punishment. An institutional
mechanism exists that allows unions to file an unfair labour practise remedy application
with the labour relations Commission and the Government works to ensure that employers
fulfil their obligations in this regard. Finally, the Government indicates that the four
branches of KCWU are freely engaging in collective bargaining under the TULRAA or cost
negotiations with employers: the Civil Engineering and Construction Division has
successfully secured collective agreements with employers, including an agreement on
wages signed on 19 March 2024; the Construction Equipment Division, which is primarily
composed of individual business entities, has engaged in cost negotiations with
employers which continue in 2024 in each regional branch and, the Tower Crane Division,
has signed a collective agreement with an employer on 7 November 2023. and has reached
an agreement on wages with another employer after accepting the mediation proposal of
the National Labour Relations Commission (NLRC) on 1 August 2024. The Electricity
Division of the KCWU has a tradition of biennial negotiations and therefore has not
engaged in collective bargaining in 2024. The Government adds that it provides on-site
guidance, including through meetings with employers’ associations, to ensure that
employers respond appropriately to legitimate bargaining requests by trade unions
including through meetings with employers’ associations.
- 622. The Government indicates that the establishment of the “Taskforce
for Eradicating Unlawful Activities at Construction Sites” was a legitimate and
necessary measure to eradicate unlawful practises by construction unions and establish
fair order at construction sites. According to the Government, the KCWU had engaged in
numerous unlawful activities on construction sites, including obstruction of access to
the site, disrupting construction work, organization of large rallies and
demonstrations, causing disturbance by use of loudspeakers, demanding wages for
full-time union officers, demanding congratulatory or condolatory money and activity
fees, requesting background check for non-union members, and neglecting duties to push
for the recruitment of union members and for the use of machinery and equipment of the
KCWU affiliate. Furthermore, conflicts between KCTU and the Federation of Korean Trade
Unions (FKTU) escalated to violence and disputes over allocating construction jobs to
their members. Considering that unlawful activities had become entrenched at
construction sites and were causing serious damage to the industry, in October 2021 the
Government discussed the status of construction site recruitment conflicts and
countermeasures with the relevant ministries and subsequently formed the Task Force to
identify the problems and respond to them. The Government emphasizes that the Task Force
was created to enable construction workers to work safely and to have fair opportunities
through actively guaranteeing the legitimate activities of construction unions, but also
strictly and lawfully responding to illegal activities.
- 623. The Government rejects the complainants’ claim that the enforcement
of rule of law in labour relations does not equally apply to the illegal acts of
employers and indicates that the Task Force aims to eradicate illegal and unfair acts at
construction sites, on the part of both labour and management. The “Measures to
Eradicate Illegal and Unfair Acts at Construction Sites,” announced on 21 February 2023,
include “measures to protect construction workers by preventing illegal subcontracting
and overdue wages by the employers”. In addition, the “Follow-up Plan” announced on 11
May 2023, includes a plan to improve working conditions by curbing illegal
subcontracting, and aims to restrict illegal activities by the employers. In 2023, the
Government inspected construction sites suspected of habitually delaying wage payments
and identified violations such as illegal subcontracting and failure to comply with
requirement to pay wages directly at six sites, which led to actions, including judicial
action. In 2024, inspections on illegal subcontracting, delayed wage payments and
coerced hiring at construction sites were conducted in March and April. Subsequently the
MOLIT, the MOEL, the national police agency and other relevant agencies jointly carried
out an intensive crackdown targeting 155 workplaces suspected of illegal activities. The
MOLIT also revised its directive titled “guidelines on the establishment and operation
of fair construction support centre”. The revised version increased the reward for
reporting illegal acts to encourage reporting illegal activities at construction sites
and expanded the scope of reports to include all illegal acts regardless of whether they
involve labour or management.
- 624. In reply to the complainants’ allegation that the FTC has
misclassified members of the KCWU Construction Equipment Division such as dump truck
drivers and excavator operators as business entities and trade associations, while they
should be considered as workers under the TULRAA, the Government indicates that the
TULRAA and the FTA have distinct proposes and subjects, therefore the applicability of
the FTA does not depend on whether a person is a labour union or a worker under the
TULRAA. The FTA applies to business entities and trade associations and the FTC
determines whether a person is within the scope of the law based on the type of
business, the form of organization, and engagement in activities that provide goods and
services, in return for which benefit is received, be it for profit or not. The
Government indicates that in the case concerning the KCWU Construction Equipment
Division, the FTC has applied the FTA criteria consistently, as it has determined that
the composing members of the organizations concerned have registered their construction
machinery business with the competent administrative authorities and are engaged in the
construction machinery rental business. Therefore, they are considered business entities
or trade associations pursuant to section 2 of the FTA. The FTC concluded in its
decision that it is unclear whether the subject trade association is a trade union under
the TULRAA, however even if the members of the trade association were workers in special
types of employment (dependent self-employed), and the association had some
characteristics of a trade union, this would not have excluded their being subject to
the FTA. According to the Government, it is legitimate for the FTC to take necessary
administrative measures pursuant to the FTA regarding alleged violations by a subject
association. The Government finally indicates that in a ruling dated 31 July 2023
concerning Ulsan Port Workers Union, the Supreme Court held that the sanction decided by
the FTC against interference with the loading and unloading operations of a competing
labour union was lawful because the respondent was a trade association. According to the
judgment, a union that has been granted a labour supply business permit has both the
status of a union and a business operator and the FTA remains applicable to it. The
Government suggests that this judgment may be applicable to the case of the KCWU
Construction Equipment Division as well.
- 625. The Government further indicates that section 116 of the FTA
provides:
- This Act shall not apply to any legitimate act done by a business
entity or trade association in accordance with other statutes.
- Pursuant to this provision, the FTA does not apply to legitimate acts
that comply with the procedural and substantive requirements set in labour legislation.
The Government pursues that the FTA was applied to the actions of the KCWU, such as
unfairly excluding competitors or restricting competition, because these acts could not
be considered as constituting a legitimate collective agreement or labour dispute under
labour legislation. In light of the legislative purpose and content of the FTA, even if
the actor is a labour union, it is perfectly reasonable for the Fair Trade Act or other
related laws to apply if the content of the act is a general offence unrelated to
legitimate labour union activities.
- 626. Concerning the FTC corrective order against the Ulleung Local of the
KCWU (Case 2021GuSa1312), the Government indicates that the FTC applied the criteria set
in section 51(1)(1) of the FTA concerning the constitutive elements of a prohibited
pricing act (act of unfairly restricting competition by determining, maintaining, or
changing prices) and found that the actions of the union constituted violations of the
law. The Government emphasizes that the corrective order did not restrict the trade
union’s collective bargaining activities considering that in this specific case the
Ulleung Local prepared a rental unit price list for construction machinery and
unilaterally sent it to local construction companies and the Ulleung County Government
Office for the purpose of unfairly raising the market price of construction machinery.
The specifics of the case and the issue were not related to the union’s exercise of its
collective bargaining rights: the union and local construction companies were not
engaged in collective bargaining negotiations.
- 627. Concerning the three FTC cases against Busan Regional Construction
Equipment Branch of the KCWU (Cases 2020BuSa1323, 2021BuSa1173 and 2021BuSa1625) and the
related corrective order issued on 28 February 2023, the Government explains that the
FTC has carefully applied the criteria set in the FTA for qualification of an act as the
unfair trade practice of “refusal to deal”. The Government provides the following
account of the facts of these cases: the officers of the Busan Construction Machinery
Branch visited the construction sites and demanded that the construction companies stop
doing business with other entities; they also held a rally at construction sites and
communicated it to the member entities through social media; they mobilized the Ready
Mixer Local of the Busan Construction Machinery Branch and other construction machinery
Locals to communicate their intention to stop the transportation of ready-mixed concrete
and the work of other construction machinery; and the actual transportation of
ready-mixed concrete was suspended. The Government adds that the Busan Construction
Machinery Branch is a trade association whose members include more than 3,000
construction machinery rental companies in Busan and parts of Gyeongsangnam-do province,
and it is in a position to exert significant influence over construction companies in
the region, especially in the case of concrete mixer trucks, which are essential
equipment for construction sites, as their market share in the region is approximately
97.6 per cent. Therefore, when they demanded that the construction companies stop doing
business with the non-member renters, the construction companies accepted and
implemented their demand while, according to the Government, they should have been able
to decide on their own whether to do business with a renter in consideration of their
business strategy and conditions. By imposing its demand, the Busan Construction
Machinery Branch infringed on the freedom of construction companies to choose their
business partners and made it difficult for non-member renters to conduct business, so
they potentially limited competition in the construction machinery rental market in the
region where they are active and effectively coerced the construction companies to
refuse to do business with other entities. The Government finally indicates that forcing
the construction companies to stop doing business with construction machinery renters
that were not KCWU members, violated the purpose and objectives of the TULRAA, such as
maintaining and improving working conditions. It underlines that the union, not only
actively interfered with the construction by stopping the transportation of ready-mixed
concrete, stopping the operation of construction machinery, and holding rallies at the
site, it also failed to comply with minimum procedures such as mediation required by the
TULRAA. Therefore, its acts could not be regarded as a legitimate trade union activity
or industrial dispute and could not justify the application of section 116(1) of the
FTA.
- 628. Concerning the allegation that the Government imposed a fine against
the KCWU for having bargained on job opportunities for union members with employers and
for having organized activities to urge the implementation of a labour management
agreement in this respect, the Government confirms that such a decision was taken on
grounds of violation of section 4-2(1) of the Fair Hiring Procedure Act which provides
that no person may engage in “acts that infringe on the fairness of recruitment through
unfair solicitation, pressure, or coercion in relation to recruitment in violation of
the Act”, and that a fine of not exceeding 30 million won may be imposed for
non-compliance. According to the Government, the legislative intent of this provision is
to prevent and sanction recruitment irregularities that deprive people of fair
employment opportunities and harm the sound employment order and its scope is not
limited to employers. The Government further refers to provisions from the Framework Act
on Employment Policy, section 5(3) of which provide that trade unions and employers
organizations shall actively cooperate in efforts to promote employment security and
workers’ and employment equality. Section 7(1) of the same act provides that employers
shall not discriminate without reasonable cause when recruiting and hiring workers and
shall ensure equal employment opportunities.
- 629. The Government provides details concerning the facts that entailed
the administrative decision of the MOEL imposing a 15 million won fine against Mr Ahn
Ik-bong, president of the Daejeon Chungcheong Regional Tower Crane Branch of the KCWU,
indicating that on 15 October 2021, a complaint was submitted to the Daejeon Regional
Employment and Labor Office, which alleged the violation of the Fair Hiring Procedure
Act by Mr Ahn Ik-bong, and also by Mr Lee Ki-jung, head of the Daejeon Sejong
Chungcheong Regional Headquarters of the Korean Tower Crane Workers’ Union of the FKTU.
According to the complaint, after Dongyang Tower, a tower crane rental company, hired a
member of the Jungbu Local, Tower Crane Branch of the Korean Construction Industry Trade
Union, an affiliate of the FKTU (hereafter FKTU2), for work at a new residential
complex, the KCWU and the FKTU pressured Dongyang Tower to exclude the member of FKTU2
from the construction site and hire members of the KCWU and the FKTU. The Daejeon
Regional Employment and Labor Office of the MOEL conducted investigations and determined
that there were sufficient circumstances to believe that the respondents coerced
Dongyang Tower to recruit members in violation of relevant laws. Specifically, the
member of FKTU2 was hired on 13 October 2021 to work on the tower crane of unit 2 at the
site. Immediately afterwards, between 14 and 16 October, 13 tower cranes of Dongyang
Tower at construction sites in Daejeon and Chungcheong (Asan and Cheongju) were
suspended. A director of Dongyang Tower testified that the respondents twice asked that
the members of their respective trade unions be hired, on 14 and 17 October
respectively. On 17 October, the company accepted the opinions (pressure) of the KCWU
and the FKTU and issued a labour contract to the respondents and subsequently members of
KCWU and others were hired for tower crane No. 2 at the site. The Government adds that
at the time, FKTU2 filed a complaint with the police against the respondents for
“coercion” and an investigation was under way.
- 630. The Government indicates that both Mr Ahn Ik-bong and Mr Lee Ki-jung
were fined and both appealed against the administrative decision. The case concerning Mr
Ahn Ik-bong was decided at first instance by a ruling of Daejeon District Court
(2022Gwa84) dated 17 February 2023, which upheld the challenged administrative decision,
providing that it would be a violation of the law to exert pressure to force the
employer to recruit members of only one union to the exclusion of members of other
unions. This ruling also rejected that the respondent’s act could be justified as a
legitimate exercise of the right to collective action, since the order to stop work and
demand for recruitment were not aimed at improving working conditions. Mr Ahn Ik-bong
passed away before the conclusion of his appeal against the first instance ruling and
the fine was revoked because of his death. The Government adds that Mr Lee Ki-jung’s
appeal is currently pending at the Cheongju District Court.
- 631. The Government adds that in addition to rallies, construction unions
used other unlawful means of pressure against employers such as obstructing site
traffic, occupying tower cranes, and stopping the input of manpower at the same or other
sites, which correspond to the types of acts (pressure, coercion, and so on) prohibited
under section 4-2(1) of the Fair Hiring Procedure Act.
- 632. The Government further adds that coercion for recruitment violates
the freedom of occupational choice and the employers’ freedom of recruitment based on
the guarantee of property rights under articles 15 and 23(1) of the constitution as well
as the right to equality guaranteed by article 11 of the constitution, because it
unfairly discriminates against workers who are not union members. Furthermore, “coercion
in recruitment” may, depending on the circumstances of the case, also constitute a
criminal offence under the Criminal Act sections 283 (intimidation), 314 (interference
with business), and 324 (coercion). The Government indicates that in January 2024, union
officials who had obstructed construction to demand the hiring of union members were
sentenced to one year of imprisonment with labour, and in June 2016, 15 KCTU officials
who had had recourse to threats to demand the hiring of union members were also
sentenced to imprisonment with labour. In 2024 the courts continued to condemn
perpetrators of acts such as conducting rallies and obstruction of access to sites to
obtain hiring of union members and upheld the imposition of administrative fines in this
respect, considering that these acts constituted unfair pressure or coercion regarding
employment in violation of the law (Suwon District Court Ansan Branch Decision
2023Gwa61, 1February 2024 and Decision 2023Gwa41, 2 February 2024; as well as Suwon
District Court Yeoju Branch Decision 2024Gwa10204, 5 June 2024).
- 633. Concerning the complainants’ allegation that the Public Prosecutor’s
Office and courts qualified legitimate collective action such as reporting the
violations of Occupational Safety and Health Act as “communication of harm” amounting to
the crime of coercion, the Government indicates that the Korean Supreme Court has judged
that even if the “communication of harm” is used as a means to realize legitimate
rights, when the method of realizing those rights exceeds the level or scope accepted by
social norms, the crime of coercion can be established. It explains that the crime of
coercion under section 324 of the Criminal Act is committed when the KCWU goes beyond
merely suggesting ‘filing a complaint’, ‘holding a rally’, or ‘criminal accusation for
violating the law’ and mentions specific ‘disadvantages’ so that the other party may
perform, due to fear that it will suffer ‘disadvantages’ from the KCWU, an act that is
not obligatory, such as recruitment of union members, using the union’s construction
machinery, or signing an agreement to pay wages to full-time union officers and
contribute to welfare funds. The Government indicates that Korean courts have held that
statements made during the collective bargaining process by KCWU officials, such as ‘I
will file charges against the construction site for violating the Occupational Safety
and Health Act’, ‘I will hold a rally with as many as possible, with 800 or 1,000 people
on the site, and the rally will not stop once’; ‘If something goes wrong, the head of
the construction site will be blown off’ and ‘I will hold a rally in front of the site
and file charges to make the construction difficult.’ constitute intimidation. The
courts also considered that the main purpose of these statements was to push for the
employment of the union members, while the victim company was only obligated to
cooperate to improve employment, and had no legal obligation to hire union members, so
the notification of such harm did not constitute an acceptable method of exercising
rights according to social norms. Coercion to hire a union member cannot be considered a
legitimate trade union activity because it is difficult to consider it as the subject of
collective bargaining. On these grounds Seoul High Court found the perpetrators guilty
of extortion and coercion in the case brought by Junkyung Tower Crane Services (Decision
2016 No. 1781, dated 31 May 2017). The Government affirms on this basis that the KCWU’s
coercion for recruitment of its members is outside the scope of legitimate collective
bargaining and cannot be considered a legitimate trade union activity, and the
application of criminal coercion laws and sanctions for pressuring employers,
assembling, and reporting violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act for the
purpose of getting its members hired is irrelevant to the domestic application of ILO
Conventions on freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining.
- 634. In its latest communication, the Government indicates that the
construction site examination conducted by the MOEL found that trade unions had filed 40
civil petitions against construction companies for the violation of the Occupational
Safety and Health Act and Clean Air Conservation Act over a three-month period.
According to the Government, after the unions come to terms with the employer for hiring
some union members, they withdrew the civil petitions. There were cases where unions
were suspected of filing civil petitions for the purpose of demanding the hiring of
their members.
- 635. Concerning the allegation that the Government focused on outlawing
paid time-off provisions in collective agreements through qualifying paid time off
demands as criminal acts of extorsion, the Government refers to the definition provided
in section 24 of the TULRAA and indicates that given that the time-off system permits
workers to receive wages while dedicating themselves entirely to trade union activities
without fulfilling their contractual work duties, it would be a manipulation of the
legal system and against the intent of the time-off system for someone without an
existing employment contract to enter into such a contract solely to receive time-off
wages. The Government adds in this respect that the National Labor Relations Commission
(NLRC) of Korea ruled in favour of the construction companies in ten cases brought by
the KCWU concerning “unfair labour practice applications for remedies for non-payment of
wages to time-off workers”. In these cases, the NLRC ruled that stopping the payment of
wages to the time-off workers, who were construction union officials, did not constitute
the unfair labour practices of domination and interference because these acts were not
done with the intent to commit unfair labour practices.
- 636. In response to the complainant’s rejection of the authorities’
assumption that demands to hire union members were in fact aimed at obtaining paid time
off, the Government states that press reports and court decisions confirm that the KCWU
made demands that construction companies hire their members as well as their demands for
money and goods under the guise of wages for full-time union officers, monthly dues and
the union development fund. The Government cites a ruling of Daejeon District Court
Nonsan Division, (2023GoDan293), dated 25 August 2023 indicating that the defendants
threatened the victims with the intent of extorting concessions for not employing their
union members, saying “Sign a collective wage agreement and increase man-hour or extend
the duration of payments in lieu of hiring our members. And pay collective agreement
fees and the Union Development Fund.” Consequently, the victims were forced to sign a
collective bargaining agreement on wages, which demands to pay 3 million won as time-off
wages and 200,000 won as welfare benefits without the hiring of union members.
- 637. The Government further indicates that there have been instances
where criminal gangs disguised as union members have threatened construction companies
and extorted goods and money from them. It emphasizes that illicit tactics of demanding
money and goods under the name of “time-off wages” and “Union Development Fund” fall
outside the scope of permissible support to trade unions under the current legal
framework and confirms that courts have held the KCWU accountable for such practices,
categorizing them as serious crimes. The courts stated that these acts not only lead to
increased construction costs but also to substandard building quality, which negatively
impacted society. According to the Government, between September and November 2023, the
MOEL conducted the “Planned Labour Inspection on the Operation of Time-Off and Operation
Fee Aid” across 202 workplaces including public organizations, the results of which
revealed that 109 workplaces were in breach of relevant laws. Among these workplaces 94
rectified their practices and the remaining 15 received corrective orders in January
2024. In 2024, the media continued to report cases of extortion by “ghost unions” at
construction sites, which led to the prosecution and condemnation of KCWU and KCTU
members and officials. The Government indicates that, where illegal payment of wages to
full-time union officers or illegal payment of monthly dues were sanctioned, extortion
happened under the new guise of inflation of overtime wages. For example, media reported
a case where at a construction site in Ulsan, four tower crane operators affiliated with
FKTU and KCTU received up to six times the overtime pay that should have been paid for
the extra hours they worked.
- 638. The Government recalls that in 2021, it made amendments to the
TULRAA, removing the prohibition and criminal penalties associated with wage payment for
full-time union officers and eliminating prohibitions and penal sanctions regarding
industrial action that required the wage payment of full-time union officers and
time-off hours exceeding the limit. Furthermore, the TULRAA now more actively safeguards
the rights of trade unions by defining as unfair labour practice, any action limiting
the legitimate activities of time-off workers or disadvantaging them for such
activities. The Government however emphasizes that the KCWU pressured construction
companies by disrupting operations at construction sites and demanded the payments of
“time-off wages” and “Union Development Fund” in lieu of not hiring union members,
practices which are not in line with section 24 of the TULRAA. The Government further
indicates that between September and November 2023, it has conducted labour inspections
at 202 workplaces in relation to this matter and has issued corrective orders in respect
of 109 workplaces. These orders were complied with in 107 workplaces while two were
under investigation for criminal charges and non-compliance with corrective orders.
- 639. In response to the complainants’ allegation that on 9 March 2023,
the MOLIT addressed a memorandum to construction companies, asking them to report
unions’ alleged wrongdoings, using derogatory expressions referring to a KCWU official
and suggesting that he should be denounced, the Government indicates that the
communication in question was not a part of the official document, but was contained in
a text message sent via a mobile phone by a MOLIT official, which was aimed at
encouraging the reporting of illegal activities at construction sites, because at the
time illegal activities often remained unreported for fear of more disruptions. In its
latest communication, the Government indicates that thanks to its efforts illegal
activities at construction sites were declining although there were still instances in
certain workplaces as reflected in a status survey conducted by the MOLIT in March 2024,
which found 285 cases of illegal acts by trade unions in 45 companies, most of which
concerned demands for the payment of monthly union dues.
- 640. Concerning the special police crackdowns on “organized illegal
activities” at construction sites, the scope of this operation, the promotions promised
to agents participating in this operation, and the 15 per cent drop in KCWU membership
during the crackdown period, the Government indicates that the investigations were
conducted in accordance with the law and there is no evidence that the drop in union
membership is related to them and adds that it does not yet have the data required to
confirm that there was such a decrease in KCWU membership. The Government reiterates
that union activities such as demanding the employment of their members, the exclusive
use of their members’ machinery, and the provision of time-off wages and welfare funds,
accompanied by the threat of specific “disadvantages” to the point of causing fear are
not legitimate and constitute crimes such as intimidation, extortion and coercion. The
investigations on KCWU members were part of the crackdown targeting “organized illegal
activities such as extortion and assaults at construction sites” particularly those
occurring in line with the KCWU’s demands for employment of their members. The
investigations were carried out in accordance with the law regardless of the subject
organizations or groups and did not intend to destroy unions. As of November 2023, all
144 individuals who were indicted as a result of the investigations were found guilty at
first instance. Among them, 49 individuals received prison sentences ranging from 10
months to 2 years and 6 months with labour; 88 were given probation, and 7 were fined.
The Government adds that in 2024 special police crackdowns were carried out from 29 July
to 31 October and their scope included not only acts of violence, but also construction
related corruption such as poor construction and illegal subcontracting. As of August
2024, the operation had led to the opening of 140 cases involving 685 persons. These
cases included 59 cases of extortion and violence involving 215 persons and 81 cases of
corruption involving 470 persons. In this context, 288 persons were referred to the
Prosecution Service, including two individuals in custody, and 316 persons were still
under investigation as of 10 September 2024.
- 641. The Government confirms that special promotion slots were allocated
for police agents participating in the crackdown and indicates that the targeted
activities were longstanding and serious issues garnering considerable public concern
and calls for action. Therefore, the National Police Agency considered factors such as
public sentiment, the scale and complexity of cases investigated and the size of
involved organizations in allocating its promotion slots. The Government adds that the
scoring system referred to by the KCWU is merely an internal standard used to evaluate
the investigation’s level of difficulty and significance, therefore the Government
rejects the allegation that the promotions were used as a mean to suppress the
union.
- 642. In conclusion, the Government expresses its firm commitment to root
out illegal activities and unfair practices at construction sites through fair legal
enforcement within the established legal frameworks and indicates that all its
enforcement actions have been both necessary and justified as well as in conformity with
its obligations under Conventions Nos 87 and 98 and requests the dismissal of the
complaint.
C. The Committee’s conclusions
C. The Committee’s conclusions- 643. The Committee notes that the allegations in this case concerns the
following issues: (i) whether access to employment for members of construction worker
unions is a legitimate collective bargaining subject; (ii) the limitation of certain
activities of the Construction Equipment Branch of the KCWU through the application of
competition law, and (iii) the imposition of administrative and criminal sanctions for
charges of coercion, intimidation and extorsion in relation to certain activities of
KCWU affiliates, such as putting forward to the employer demands of access to employment
for union members, paid time off and the creation of a union development fund, as well
as collective actions to support those demands and reporting violations of the
Occupational Safety and Health Act as a means to put pressure on the employer during
negotiations. The Committee notes that the first issue, namely whether access to
employment of union members can be covered by collective bargaining, is the central
matter which underlies all the other allegations in the present case.
- 644. The Committee notes the complainants’ allegation that, as a craft
union organizing various categories of skilled workers in an industry characterized by
intermittent employment, the KCWU focuses on securing more employment opportunities for
its members through negotiation with employers. They add that as employers in the
industry tend to deny employment to union members, it becomes almost vital for unions to
secure employment for their members through collective bargaining, otherwise they risk
losing their members and face difficulties to survive. They allege that stevedore’s
unions, which operate in a labour market like that of the construction industry in terms
of employment intermittence, are allowed to demand employment for their members in
collective bargaining. In contrast, in cases concerning KCWU, Korean prosecutors and
courts have considered that demands of employment of union members are not appropriate
collective bargaining demands, because they don’t relate to working conditions and
infringe the management rights of employers. The Committee notes that the complainants
refer specifically to “site-level bargaining” and allege that as union security
provisions in collective bargaining agreements are outlawed, the only means left to
construction unions for guaranteeing union rights is to secure the hiring of union
members through site-level bargaining. Furthermore, the Committee notes the complainants
emphasize that the dispute is not about the establishment of a union security system, as
the union’s demand was not to employ only union members or enter into a closed shop, and
details such as the amount and procedures for the employment and the union’s
responsibility for skills could be discussed between labour and management in collective
bargaining negotiations. In summary, the complainants allege that through their position
that KCWU’s request for employing union members is illegal, the Korean Government and
judicial authorities have unilaterally determined the scope of negotiable issues in
collective bargaining and therefore have violated Article 4 of Convention No. 98.
- 645. The Committee notes that the Government confirms in this respect
that from its standpoint, pursuant to the rules of national law, issues related to
hiring, which are dealt with before the establishment of employment contract, do not
pertain to working conditions but to the right of personnel management exclusive to
employers and fall within the inherent right of the employer to manage and exercise
constitutionally guaranteed property rights; therefore, they are not subject to
collective bargaining under the TULRAA. The Government also refers to a court ruling
expressing the same position in relation to access to employment demands of construction
unions (the Ulsan District Court, Decision 2017 No. 316, dated 8 June 2017 and Seoul
High Court, Decision 2016 No. 1781, dated 31 May 2017, both upheld by the Supreme
Court). Nevertheless, the Committee notes that the Government confirms that the KFPTWU,
a stevedores’ union, can bargain collectively on employment of its members, but
distinguishes its situation as exceptional and indicates that it is titular of a “labour
supply business” permit issued by the MOEL in accordance with section 33 of the
Employment Security Act. The Committee also notes the Government’s indications
concerning the corruption issues associated with the labour supply monopoly and the
Government’s caution in issuing labour supply business permits. The Committee also notes
that according to the Government, the four branches of the KCWU regularly engage in
collective bargaining with employers on matters such as wages.
- 646. The Committee notes the Government’s indication that it understands
that the complainants allege that the KCWU should be able to demand the hiring of its
members through collective bargaining in the form of a closed shop and rejects this
allegation by indicating that the Korean legal system does not allow agreement on closed
shops, except in the limited cases referred to in section 81(1) of the TULRAA. The
Committee notes that this provision provides the following:
- (1) The employers
shall not conduct any of the following acts (hereinafter referred to as “unfair
labour practice”): ... 2. Employment of a worker on condition that he or she should
not join or should withdraw from, a trade union, or on condition that he or she
should join a particular trade union: Provided, That where a trade union represents
2/3 or more of the workers working in the place of business concerned, a conclusion
of a collective agreement under which a person is employed on condition that he or
she should join the trade union shall be allowed as an exceptional
case
- 647. The Committee notes however that there is a discrepancy between the
Government view of the complainants’ claim, and the statement of the latter that the
union’s demand was not to employ only union members, but only for the Government to
ensure that their demand for employment could be dealt with in autonomous collective
bargaining between the management and labour in consideration of the employment
structure and characteristics of construction sites where short-term employment
dominates, and to build regulations and institutions necessary to support autonomous
collective bargaining in this respect. The Committee further notes that both the
complainant and the Government refer to tension and recruitment conflicts on
construction sites, but while the complainants consider that clashes erupt on
construction sites between labour and management because collective bargaining which can
provide an outlet for tension is blocked, the Government considers that not restricting
the subject of collective bargaining leads to extreme inefficiency and constant
labour-management conflicts and indicates that it has formed the “Taskforce for
Eradicating Unlawful Activities at Construction Sites” to identify the problems and
respond to them.
- 648. In view of the complainants’ allegations and the Government’s
response to them, the Committee notes that while at least in the case of stevedores’
unions, collective bargaining on access to employment opportunities is allowed in the
Republic of Korea, the Government does not consider it appropriate to allow the
extension of this practice to the construction industry and expresses the determination
not to recognize any collective bargaining or agreements between unions and employers on
this matter in the construction sector. The Committee recalls in this respect, that it
has always considered that “It is for the parties concerned to decide on the subjects
for negotiation” and that “Measures taken unilaterally by the authorities to restrict
the scope of negotiable issues are often incompatible with Convention No. 98; tripartite
discussions for the preparation, on a voluntary basis, of guidelines for collective
bargaining are a particularly appropriate method of resolving these difficulties”. [see
Compilation of decisions of the Committee on Freedom of Association, sixth edition,
2018, paras 1289 and 1290]. The Committee therefore requests the Government to take
measures to initiate consultations with the representative organizations of workers and
employers in the construction industry to address the concerns on the instability of
employment in the sector and prevent recruitment conflicts on construction sites. The
Committee requests the Government to provide information on any measures taken in this
respect.
- 649. Concerning the restrictions imposed on the activities of the
Construction Equipment Division of the KCWU through the application of the Monopoly
Regulation and Fair Trade Act (FTA), the Committee notes the complainants’ allegation
that the members of this Division such as dump truck drivers, concrete mixer drivers and
excavator operators are workers and have long been involved in union activities.
Nevertheless, the Fair Trade Commission has considered they are business entities, which
makes the union a trade association subject to the FTA, and has launched investigations
against the union in eight cases based on allegations of violations of the FTA. The
complainants allege that in two of those cases activities such as setting guidelines for
wage bargaining with employers, engaging in wage/rental rates negotiations in accordance
with those guidelines, and establishing directives with a view to preventing
deterioration of working conditions due to excessive competition among members were
qualified as price fixing and limiting competition, and protests against a subcontractor
who had unilaterally terminated hiring contracts with union members were qualified as
forcing a third party to refuse a transaction. The complainants state that qualification
of this Division as a business entity under the FTA would entail the denial of their
basic labour rights in particular the rights to collective bargaining and collective
action. Ordinary union activities aimed at compelling members to comply with internally
set standards, would also be qualified as violations of the FTA.
- 650. The Committee notes that the Government indicates in this respect
that an organization can be simultaneously a trade union and a trade association,
subject to both the TULRAA and the FTA. According to the Government, in the cases
concerning the KCWU Construction Equipment Division, the FTC has applied FTA criteria
consistently, as the composing members of the organizations concerned are registered as
construction machinery businesses. The Government further indicates that in one decision
the FTA found that it is unclear whether the subject trade association is a trade union
under the TULRAA, however even if the members of the trade association were workers in
special types of employment (dependent self-employed), and the association had some
characteristics of a trade union, this would not have excluded their being subject to
the FTA. The Committee notes the Government’s reference to section 116(1) of the FTA,
which would exclude the application of the FTA to legitimate acts that comply with the
procedural and substantive requirements set in labour legislation and the subsequent
indication that in the cases concerning the Construction Equipment Division, the FTA was
applied to actions such as unfairly excluding competitors or restricting competition,
which could not be considered as constituting a legitimate collective agreement or
labour dispute under labour legislation, but constituted offences unrelated to
legitimate labour union activities.
- 651. The Committee notes the details provided by the Government
concerning the case entailing the FTC corrective order against the Ulleung Local of the
KCWU (Case 2021GuSa1312), in which the Ulleung Local prepared a rental unit price list
for construction machinery and unilaterally sent it to local construction companies and
the Ulleung County Government Office for the purpose of unfairly raising the market
price of construction machinery. According to the Government, the specifics of the case
and the issue were not related to collective bargaining rights as the union and local
construction companies were not engaged in collective bargaining. The Committee further
notes the details provided by the Government concerning the three FTC cases against
Busan Regional Construction Equipment Branch, where a rally was organized by the union
on construction sites, and the transportation of ready-made concrete was suspended,
demanding that the construction companies stop doing business with the non-member
renters. The Government indicates that the companies accepted this demand due to the
strong impact of the action organized by the union. The Committee notes that the
Government considers that by imposing its demand, the union potentially limited
competition in the construction machinery market in the region and that it not only
actively interfered with the construction by stopping the transportation of ready-mixed
concrete, stopping the operation of construction machinery, and holding rallies at the
site, it also failed to comply with minimum procedures such as mediation required by the
TULRAA. Therefore, its acts could not be regarded as a legitimate trade union activity
or industrial dispute and could not justify the application of section 116(1) of the
FTA.
- 652. The Committee recalls that it has previously examined cases
concerning the recognition of freedom of association and collective bargaining rights of
organizations of self-employed truck drivers in the Republic of Korea [see Case No.
3439, 405th Report, paras 510–565 and Case No. 2602, 359th Report, paras 342–370]. Most
recently, at its examination of Case No. 3439 in March 2024 the Committee urged the
Government “to take all the necessary measures to ensure that all workers, including
’self-employed‘ workers, such as heavy goods vehicle drivers, can fully enjoy the
principles of freedom of association and collective bargaining for the purpose of
furthering and defending their interest” [405th Report, para. 565(a)]. The Committee
notes in the information provided by the complainants and the Government that in the
three FTC cases against the Busan Regional Construction Equipment Branch of the KCWU
(Cases 2020BuSa1323, 2021BuSa1173 and 2021BuSa1625), a collective action comprised of
rallies on construction sites and work stoppage was organized by the union, which
resulted in an agreement between the union and construction companies. The Committee
notes that while the complainants indicate that the mobilization was triggered by a
subcontractor’s unilateral ending of a previous agreement with union members, the
Government indicates that the union’s demand was that the construction companies stop
doing business with non-member renters. The Committee notes that in this case the FTC
imposed a penalty of 100 million won (US$72,000) on the union.
- 653. The Committee notes in this respect that according to the Government
indications, the FTC has indicated in one of its decisions that it is unclear whether
the “subject trade association” is a trade union under the TULRAA. The Committee also
notes the Government’s indication that if the subject association is a trade union, and
its actions constitute legitimate actions under the TULRAA, its actions are exempt from
the Fair Trade Act as “legitimate actions under other laws” (article 116(1) FTA). The
Committee notes that the application of section 116(1) of the FTA can potentially
resolve the issue of the conflict between the FTA and the freedom of association and
collective bargaining rights of the unions who are also qualified as “trade
associations”, provided that the trade union status of the organizations of
self-employed workers is unequivocally recognized, and that “legitimate collective
bargaining” and “legitimate industrial action” are interpreted in line with the
principles of freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to
collective bargaining. The Committee notes that in this case, as the trade union status
of the KCWU Construction Equipment Division was not clearly recognized, and the
collective action aimed to support an agreement between the union and the employers on
access to employment which the Government does not consider within the scope of
legitimate collective bargaining, the rights of the respondent to collective bargaining
and collective action were not considered as relevant.
- 654. In view of the foregoing, the Committee requests the Government to
ensure that, while investigating and deciding on the conduct of the KCWU Construction
Equipment Division branches, the Fair Trade Commission will not interfere with
legitimate trade union activities. The Committee expects that the establishment of
guidelines for negotiation will create a clear framework for the exercise of freedom of
association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining.
- 655. The Committee notes the complainants’ allegations concerning the
police crackdown on the KCWU and the imposition of administrative and criminal sanctions
on union members for charges of coercion, intimidation and extorsion in relation to the
exercise of the rights to collective action and collective bargaining and receiving
time-off wages or other funds from the employer. The Committee also notes the
Government’s indication that another police crackdown was carried out in 2024, which
targeted acts of extorsion and violence on construction sites, as well as unlawful
activities by the employers such as poor construction and illegal subcontracting, and as
of August 2024 this police operation had led to the opening of 140 cases. Concerning the
administrative sanctions (fines) imposed under the Fair Hiring Procedure Act, the
Committee notes that the complainants indicate that the President of the Daejeon
Chungcheong Regional Tower Crane Branch of the KCWU, received a fine of 15 million won,
because the union had held a rally in front of a construction site to protest against
the unilateral revocation of an agreement with a tower crane rental firm, which had
agreed to hire union members on tower cranes installed at the site. The Committee notes
the Government’s indication regarding the same case, indicating that both KCWU and FKTU
had put forward demands to the tower crane rental company to hire their members to the
exclusion of the member of another branch of the FKTU and had successfully coerced that
company to accept their demands by holding a rally and a three-day suspension of tower
cranes in several construction sites. The Government indicates that representatives of
the concerned branch of the KCWU and the FKTU where both fined and then appealed against
the decision. The Committee notes the Government’s indication that the first instance
court rejected the argument that the respondent’s act could be justified as a legitimate
exercise of the right to collective action, since the “order to stop work and demand for
recruitment were not aimed at improving working conditions”. The Committee notes that in
this case again, the fact that access to employment is not recognized as a matter within
the scope of legitimate collective bargaining has entailed the qualification of a
collective action aiming at supporting such a demand as an illegal act of coercion.
- 656. The Committee notes the complainants’ reference to the condemnation
of officials of the Tower Crane Operators’ Division under criminal charge of coercion
(section 324 of the Criminal Act) by Seoul High Court on 31 May 2017 for having
requested the employment of union members, reported violations of the Occupational
Safety and Health Act and held a rally to support that demand. It also notes the
Government’s indications in this respect that the main purpose of the union’s actions
was to push for the employment of the union members, while the victim company was only
obligated to cooperate to improve employment and had no legal obligation to hire union
members. Coercion to hire a union member cannot be considered a legitimate trade union
activity because it is difficult to consider it as the subject of collective bargaining.
The Committee also notes the Government’s indication that after the unions come to terms
with the employer for hiring some union members, they withdraw their civil petitions
filed for violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act and Clean Air
Conservation Act, and that therefore, the unions were suspected of filing civil
petitions for the purpose of demanding the hiring of their members.
- 657. Concerning the “special police crackdown” of January–August 2023,
the Committee notes with concern the allegations of the summoning of 1,700 KCWU members
under the charges of coercion and intimidation, and specifically the charges of
“extorsion” for having demanded or received time-off wages (465 investigations). The
Committee notes the Government’s indication in this respect that as of November 2023,
all 144 individuals who were indicted as a result of the investigations in the framework
of the “crackdown on illegal activities at construction sites” were found guilty at
first instance. Among them, 49 individuals received prison sentences ranging from 10
months to 2 years and 6 months with labour; 88 were given probation, and seven were
fined. The Committee deplores that in this context, Mr Hoe-dong Yang, a union member who
was under investigation for extortion and intimidation, took his life by self-immolation
on May Day 2023.
- 658. The Committee notes that the complainants allege that unionists were
prosecuted for having made demands for hiring union members, bargaining with
construction companies, and receiving paid time off in accordance with concluded
collective agreements, and the Government responds that union activities such as
demanding the employment of their members, the exclusive use of their members’
machinery, and the provision of time-off wages and welfare funds, accompanied by the
threat of specific “disadvantages” to the point of causing fear, are not legitimate
union activities and constitute crimes such as intimidation, extortion, and coercion.
The Committee notes the Government’s indication that Korean courts have held that
statements made during the collective bargaining process by KCWU officials, such as ‘I
will file charges against the construction site for violating the Occupational Safety
and Health Act’, ‘I will hold a rally with as many as possible, with 800 or 1,000 people
on the site, and the rally will not stop once’; ‘If something goes wrong, the head of
the construction site will be blown off’ and ‘I will hold a rally in front of the site
and file charges to make the construction difficult.’ constitute intimidation. The
Committee also notes the Government’s indication that the investigations on KCWU members
were part of the crackdown targeting “organized illegal activities such as extortion and
assaults at construction sites” particularly those occurring in line with the KCWU’s
demands for employment of their members, and that there have been instances where
criminal gangs disguised as union members have threatened construction companies and
extorted goods and money from them. Finally, the Committee notes that the Government
indicates that following inspections carried out in September–November 2023, corrective
orders were issued to 109 workplaces in relation to paid time-off provisions.
- 659. Regarding charges of extorsion in relation to demanding time-off
wages, the Committee notes the Government’s reference to a ruling of Daejeon District
Court Nonsan Division (2023GoDan293, dated 25 August 2023), indicating that “the
defendants threatened the victims with the intent of extorting concessions for not
employing their union members, saying ’Sign a collective wage agreement and increase
man-hour or extend the duration of payments in lieu of hiring our members. And pay
collective agreement fees and the Union Development Fund.’ Consequently, the victims
were forced to sign a collective bargaining agreement on wages, which demands to pay
3,000,000 won as time-off wages and 200,000 won as welfare benefits without the hiring
of union members”. The Committee notes with concern that this passage seems to
incriminate the fact of demanding the payment of wages to full-time union officers
during collective bargaining. The Committee notes the Government’s indication that it
would be a manipulation of the legal system and against the intent of the time-off
system for someone without an existing employment contract to enter such a contract
solely to receive time-off wages. It also notes that in their communication of 12
September 2023, the complainants reject the authorities’ assumption that demands to hire
union members were made to obtain paid time off and affirm that this is misleading
because the granting of paid time off is agreed upon by the employer and the union
through the bargaining process. The Committee recalls in this respect that in Case No.
1865 concerning the Republic of Korea, the Government had similarly indicated that under
the TULRAA, a full-time unionist was one who was employed by a firm; thus, if an
executive of a trade union was not employed by a firm in charge of the construction
site, he/she could not request the firm to recognize him/her as a full-time unionist. At
the time, the Committee had expressed its deep concern that the “activity payment” to
full-time unionists, which appeared to be the result of voluntary negotiations, should
be considered a criminal act and had considered that “a main contractor on a
construction site should be able to voluntarily recognize a worker on the site as a
full-time unionist even if the worker concerned does not work directly for the main
contractor” [see 340th Report, paras 773 and 776]. The Committee further notes the
Government’s indication that illicit tactics of demanding money and goods under the name
of “time-off wages” and “Union Development Fund” fall outside the scope of permissible
support to trade unions under the current legal framework without however providing
further details on those “illicit tactics”. The Government further confirms that courts
have held the KCWU accountable for such practices, categorizing them as serious crimes
without however explaining what circumstances made these demands serious crimes, besides
the fact that they were associated with demands of employment of union members.
- 660. The Committee recalls that “The issue of the payment of wages by the
employer to full-time union officials should be up to the parties to determine and the
Government should authorize negotiation on the issue of whether trade union activity by
full-time union officials should be treated as unpaid leave” [Compilation, para. 1296].
The Committee notes that in the present case, the Government’s effort to outlaw
collective bargaining on access to employment in the construction industry has
culminated in criminalizing attempts to put forward bargaining demands to such effect.
The Committee notes that even distinct demands such as time-off wages or creation of
union development funds seem to have been criminalized through association with demands
of employment of union members.
- 661. Regarding what the Government has characterized as the union’s
negotiation tactic to demand the employer during collective bargaining to accept to hire
union members voluntarily or its violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act
would be reported to the authorities, and its qualification by courts as “notification
of harm” or a threat constitutive of crime of coercion, the Committee recalls that it
has already considered in another case concerning the Republic of Korea, that
“denouncing to the competent authorities insufficient OSH measures is in fact a
legitimate trade union activity and a workers’ right which should be guaranteed by law”
[see Case No. 1865, 340th Report, para. 774]. The Committee further notes that in the
same context of negotiation with the employer, statements by union representatives that
they would have recourse to collective action were considered as notification of harm
and in many of the cases invoked in the present case, collective action and work
stoppages organized to support demands of access to employment for union members were
qualified as constitutive of crime of coercion. While the Committee duly notes the
Government’s characterization of other sentences such as ‘If something goes wrong, the
head of the construction site will be blown off’ as a threat that may constitute an
element of the crime of coercion, it considers that the legitimate trade union
activities noted above should not be treated the same way. It recalls in this respect
that, “The Committee has pointed out the danger for the free exercise of trade union
rights of sentences imposed on representatives of workers for activities related to the
defence of the interests of those they represent” [Compilation, para. 154]. In view of
the foregoing the Committee requests the Government to ensure that no one is arrested,
prosecuted or sentenced, for having organized a peaceful collective action to negotiate
their demands such as in this case, or for having asserted that they would denounce
occupational safety and health shortcomings at the workplace.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 662. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The Committee
requests the Government to take measures to initiate consultations with the
representative organizations of workers and employers in the construction industry
to address the concerns on the instability of employment in the sector and prevent
recruitment conflicts on construction sites. The Committee requests the Government
to provide information on any measures taken in this respect.
- (b) The
Committee requests the Government to ensure that, while investigating and deciding
on the conduct of the KCWU Construction Equipment Division branches, the Fair Trade
Commission will not interfere with legitimate trade union activities. The Committee
expects that the establishment of guidelines for negotiation will create a clear
framework for the exercise of freedom of association and the effective recognition
of the right to collective bargaining.
- (c) The Committee requests the
Government to ensure that no one is arrested, prosecuted or sentenced for having
organized a peaceful collective action to negotiate their demands such as in this
case, or for having asserted that they would denounce occupational safety and health
shortcomings at the workplace.