After
28 days of strike, the morale of workers is still high and the
company tries to defeat them by violating the law.
The members of
Sindicato Único Nacional de Trabajadores de Nestlé Perú S.A. (SUNTRANEP)
commenced their strike on 29 October, in the case of a conflict declared
legal by the competent authority. This strike was triggered by the fact that
ever since the set of claims was presented in February and the ensuing
bargaining period, there has been no progress. On the contrary, during the
10 months elapsed the company has hindered the process by adding items in
spite of being perfectly aware that such items would be rejected by the
union. There are three key elements in the negotiations: 1) salary recovery
to compensate for the 4.5 inflation rate of 2007; 2) management trying to
impose unilaterally a new job categorization system (the present categories
were imposed by management just over 20 years ago); and 3) the company
intent to sign a two-year agreement, which is unacceptable for the union if
the two first items are not solved.
A letter
received from Nestle corporate offices in Vevey, in reply to a
note sent by the IUF General Secretary, stated, among other things:
“our investigations indicate that Nestlé Peru is conducting these
negotiations properly and in accordance with the law”. Vevey is
either receiving distorted information or trying to conceal the reality. We
have at sight the records of the three inspections performed by the National
Authority of Labor Inspection on 7, 11 and 13 November, which results are
included in a 12 page report, mainly stating:
§
It has been verified that the strike is peaceful.
§
Acts of substitution of striking workers have been confirmed,
which is evidenced in different ways:
- Workers hired to perform
the activities of striking workers.
- Worker rotation schemes in
place at different positions to discharge duties different from the usual
ones.
- Transfer of employees to
the production areas in order to cover the working positions of striking
workers.
- Extended work days for
outsourced workers, with 4 hours overtime a day.
§ In the inspectors’ opinion, with the above actions the
company intends to offset the main purpose of the strike: the interruption
of work.
§ That Nestle contingent plan violates Peruvian laws and
decrees because it is intended to impede and affect the total abstention of
activities regularly performed by the striking workers.
The report
also reminds that:
Supreme Decree
N 011-92, Art. 70 states: “When a strike is declared in compliance with the
legal requirements both in form and substance, all workers comprised by the
respective field must abstain from working, and therefore, the employer may
not hire personnel to perform the activities of the striking workers.”
Supreme Decree
Nº 019-2006, provides that affecting the right to strike is a very serious
offence in terms of labor relations.
Consequently,
the inspectors’ report is harshly categorical: Nestlé is not
proceeding in accordance with the law.
At the time of
writing these lines, a meeting is being held at the Ministry of Labor, which
has raised the expectations of the union that the company will show up,
something that did not happen in the two last meetings. In turn, the
Minister of Labor promised to attend the meeting. We trust he will, because
his political will to do justice is largely decisive for the solution of
this conflict. And regarding Nestle and its widely advertised
corporate responsibility policy, in Peru, like in many other
countries, it is becoming a bad joke.