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Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, February 26, 1999.

Ecuador is a constitutional republic with a president and a 121-member
unicameral legislature that was chosen in free elections on May
31. On July 12, voters elected President Jamil Mahuad, who took
office on August 10 and is to serve through January 2003. A national
constituent assembly approved extensive constitutional reforms,
which also took effect on August 10. The reforms included the
termination of the Congress' power to dismiss cabinet ministers
and the reduction of fringe parties' influence in the Congress.
Members of the Supreme Court preside over a judiciary that is
constitutionally independent, but in practice susceptible to outside
pressure.
The military enjoys substantial autonomy, reinforced by guaranteed
revenues from the nation's oil exports, as well as from civil
aviation, shipping, and other commercial sectors. The military
has maintained a low profile in domestic politics since the return
to constitutional rule in 1979. The National Police, responsible
for domestic law enforcement and maintenance of internal order,
falls under the civilian Ministry of Government and Police. There
continued to be credible allegations of human rights abuses by
the police and, in some isolated cases, members of the military.
The economy is based on private enterprise, although there continued
to be heavy government involvement in key sectors such as petroleum,
utilities, and aviation. The per capita gross domestic product
of $1,612 provides most of the population with a low standard
of living. According to the World Bank, about 60 percent of citizens
live in poverty; half of these live in extreme poverty. The inflation
rate for the year was 45 percent. The principal exports are oil,
bananas, and shrimp, which are the country's leading sources of
foreign exchange. Manufacturing for regional export markets is
of growing importance. Most citizens are employed in the urban
informal sector or as rural agricultural workers; rural poverty
is extensive, and underemployment is high.
The most fundamental human rights abuse stems from shortcomings
in the politicized, inefficient, and corrupt legal and judicial
system. Persons are subject to arbitrary arrest; once incarcerated,
they may wait years before being convicted or acquitted unless
they pay bribes. More than one-half the prisoners in jail have
not been formally sentenced. Other human rights abuses included
isolated instances of extrajudicial killings; torture and other
mistreatment of prisoners and detainees by the police; poor prison
conditions; and violence and pervasive discrimination against
women, Afro-Ecuadorians, and indigenous people. The Government
failed to prosecute and punish human rights abusers. The Supreme
Court conducted open competitions to fill appellate judge positions
and, at year's end, a newly constituted Judicial Council had begun
to function, charged with modernizing the judicial system. In
September Congress elected a new Ombudsman, who is a former Attorney
General and a strong human rights advocate known for his independence.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
Freedom From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
There were no reports of politically motivated killings. There
continued to be credible reports of police involvement in extrajudicial
killings. Through late September, the Ecumenical Committee for
Human Rights (CEDHU) reported a total of 11 extrajudicial killings.
Police who reportedly were drunk killed four persons. In addition
to the 11 persons killed by the police, 3 other persons were shot
and killed by assailants identified as members of citizen groups
known as neighborhood brigades. (Neighborhood brigades are civic
defense groups organized by the national police to provide an
anticrime presence in neighborhoods. They are not authorized to
carry firearms.)
In Guayas province in January, after rural police had cleared
a group of youths off the streets in the La Bocana neighborhood,
a crowd closed in on the police station. Police fired shots from
the station, killing Jose Ignacio Moreno Castro and wounding two
others.
In May in Guayaquil, police shot and killed Wilter Arturo Guadamud
Macias and Wilson Tomala Guzman. Onlookers told family members
that the police arrested the two men and took them into custody;
the police claimed that the two men were injured in a gun battle,
arrested, and died in transit.
Later in May, also in Guayaquil, a drunken policeman shot and
killed William Robles and wounded Geovanny Oviedo and Victor Robles
when they came to Robles' assistance.
In late May, in Esmeraldas province, a drunken policeman detained
Wilton Estupinan by shooting him in the leg, claiming that Estupinan
had escaped earlier from jail. Estupinan was then beaten and jailed.
The next day, he was moved to the city of Esmeraldas, briefly
treated in a hospital, then jailed again, before his condition
worsened and he was returned to the hospital where he died on
May 27.
In June witnesses reported that five rural police in Guayas province
arrested Leonardo Pita in a brothel and put him in a police car.
Witnesses reported hearing a shot and later found Pita's body
near the site. Pita's family filed a complaint in police court
against those responsible for his death.
In June in Los Rios province, two rural policemen, who had earlier
seized an illegal gun from a nightclub patron, were involved in
a dispute with that patron's father, Fernando Limones, who was
accompanied by Tito Vera. Police shot and killed Vera and wounded
Limones, who later died of his wounds. Police subsequently shot
and killed Vera's brother Julian, according to witnesses.
In June in Guayaquil, two drunken policemen who had attempted
to force taxi driver Jose Franco to drive them attempted to take
his cab and, when he resisted, shot him fatally.
In July in Los Rios province, drunken policemen ordered youths
off a street corner at 5 am, and when an argument ensued, the
police shot and killed Javier Torres.
In October during violent antigovernment demonstrations, a stray
bullet allegedly fired by a naval infantry soldier struck and
killed one person in Guayaquil. A policeman was killed in Manabi
when a hand grenade seized from protesters exploded in his hands.
An innocent bystander was struck and killed by a stray bullet
in Esmeraldas. A woman was struck and killed by a motor vehicle
while crossing the street after fleeing a demonstration.
In Guayas in March witnesses reported to CEDHU that members of
a neighborhood brigade shot and killed Jimmy Olvera. In April
witnesses in Guayas reported that men whom they identified as
members of another neighborhood brigade, despite the fact that
the assailants' faces were covered, shot and killed Javier Gavilanez
and Virgilio Davila and wounded Cesar Lastra.
During the year the Government resolved some lawsuits arising
from extrajudicial killings by military and police officers in
past years. The Government recognized official responsibility
for the unlawful killing of Consuela Benavides, for the disappearances
and presumed deaths of the Restrepo brothers, and for the fatal
shooting of Esteban Villacreses. Following a finding of official
wrongdoing by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR)
in the Benavides case, the Government paid an indemnity to both
the Benavides and Restrepo families. In the later case, the police
officer responsible was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment (see
also Section 1.d.).
Authorities within the police justice system charged police officers
in the January 1997 killing of three prisoners who had allegedly
escaped from the penitentiary in Guayaquil. The case was pending
at year's end.
There were also instances in which citizens took the law into their own hands, inciting mob violence that resulted in lynchings and burnings of suspected criminals (see Section l.e.). Mobs killed 24 crime suspects in 1997 and lynched 12 in the first 5 months of 1998; individual lynchings continue to occur in all parts of the country. Dozens of townspeople helped beat murder suspect Washington Piloso to death in June in the town of Yaguachi. Residents caught Piloso on June 20 and accused him of killing an off-duty police officer during a robbery. They stripped him to his underwear and kicked him brutally while he crawled on the dirt street, police reported. The mob doused him with gasoline and was about to burn him alive when police intervened. Piloso died 2 hours later in a hospital. No one identified the attackers.
According to Amnesty International, on November
26 in Quito, eight unknown men kidnaped Saul Filormo Canar Pauta,
a leader of the Ecuadorean Confederation of United Working Class
Organizations. On December 3, a municipal worker found his body
in a trash dump in Latacunga. His hands and feet were tied and
his body showed signs of torture. Authorities suspect that he
may have been killed by private landowners in retaliation for
his activities organizing land invasions by squatters. An investigation
was pending at year's end.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances.
There was no progress in resolving the January 1997 disappearance
of Angel Heriberto Hinojoza.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
Although the law prohibits torture and similar forms of intimidation
and punishment, police continued to abuse suspects and prisoners,
usually with impunity. In February bank guards in Quito arrested
Guillermo Travez on suspicion of check fraud. The bank guards
took him to the police station in the distant town of Tulcan and,
en route, allegedly tortured him in an attempt to make him confess
to the crimes. Police investigators also were reported to have
abused Travez before he was released after a habeas corpus petition
had been presented on his behalf. However, military police seized
him again before he could leave.
The CEDHU has published one detailed report on suspects who identified
specific policemen as having tortured them. In most cases, the
police appeared to have abused such persons during investigations
of ordinary street crime. The victims reported that the police
beat them, burned them with cigarettes, applied electric shocks,
or threatened them psychologically. There were also 13 reports
of incidents involving physical mistreatment.
Conditions in detention centers generally continued to be poor.
Prisons in the tropical coastal areas tend to be worse than those
in the temperate highlands. Overcrowding is a chronic problem,
although conditions are notably better in the women's prison in
Quito than in other facilities. Prison overcrowding was reduced
slightly by the release of several hundred drug addicts charged
only with possession and prisoners charged with minor offenses
who had been held in preventive custody for more than a year.
The Constitution that took effect in August requires that prisoners
charged with lesser offenses (carrying a maximum sentence of 5
years) and who have been detained for more than 1 year without
a sentence shall obtain their freedom immediately. There are no
separate facilities for hard-core or dangerous criminals, nor
are there effective rehabilitation programs. New prisons have
not been constructed due to lack of financial resources.
The Government permits prison visits by independent human rights
monitors.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
The Constitution and the Penal Code provide that no one may be
deprived of liberty without a written order from a governmental
authority, but the authorities often violated these legal protections.
By law, the authorities must issue specific written arrest orders
within 24 hours of detention--even in cases in which a suspect
is caught committing a crime--and must charge the suspect with
a specific criminal offense within 48 hours of arrest. All detained
persons may challenge the legality of their detention within 48
hours of their arrest, but in practice few such petitions are
brought. The senior elected official (usually the mayor) of the
locality in which the suspect is held conducts this review. Regardless
of the legality of a detention, a prisoner may be released only
by court order. In some cases, detainees who are unaware of this,
or who do not have the funds to hire a lawyer, may remain in prison
for an extended period before being released. Bail is not generally
available, and the law prohibits it in narcotics cases. Families
of detainees sometimes intervene in an attempt to secure the prisoners'
freedom through illegal means.
Human rights organizations reported occasional cases of incommunicado
detention, although the law prohibits this practice. Even when
the police obtain a written arrest order, those charged with determining
the validity of detention often allowed frivolous charges to be
brought, either because they were overworked or because the accuser
bribed them. In many instances, the system was used as a means
of harassment in civil cases in which one party sought to have
the other arrested on criminal charges. Preventive detention up
to and including trial is legal if a judge determines that it
is necessary and if evidence that a crime has been committed is
presented.
Following the 1997 ruling by the Inter-American Court of Human
Rights that the Government had violated due process provisions
in connection with the arrest, investigation, and pretrial detention
of Ivan Suarez Rosero, the authorities released him. In the aftermath
of the Suarez ruling, the Government moved quickly to settle several
other cases that were under consideration by the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights and one--the Benavides case--that had
been accepted by the Inter-American Court. Led by the then-Attorney
General (and current Ombudsman), the Government took the unprecedented
step of admitting fault officially and of negotiating and paying
settlements to the families of Consuelo Benavides and the Restrepo
brothers, for wrongful death, and to the Putumayo 11, a group
of rural workers, for illegal arrest, detention, and torture (also
see Section 1.a.).
The Government does not use exile as a method of political control.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary. In practice,
however, the judiciary is susceptible to outside pressure.
The regular court system tries most nonmilitary defendants, although
some indigenous groups try members independently for violations
of tribal rules. Despite efforts begun in 1992 to depoliticize
and modernize the court system, the judiciary continues to operate
slowly and inconsistently. Judges reportedly rendered decisions
more quickly or more slowly depending on political pressure or
the payment of bribes. However, the norm is for lengthy delays
before cases come to the courts.
The law permits police or military courts to try police officers
and military defendants in closed sessions, in accordance with
the respective military and police court martial manuals. Only
the Supreme Court may try cases involving flag-rank officers.
The police court does not announce verdicts or punishments, reinforcing
the strong impression that the police are immune from prosecution.
The constitutional reforms by the National Constituent Assembly
placed both police and military justice under the control of the
Supreme Court. However, the three systems had not yet been integrated
by year's end.
The new Supreme Court that took office in 1997 publicly recognized
the shortcomings of the judicial system and pledged to improve
the quality and training of judges. In May the Supreme Court supervised
the selection by open competition of all appellate judges. A new
judicial council, charged with administering the court system
and disciplining judges, took office in the fall.
The failure of the justice system led to a growing number of cases
of communities taking the law into their own hands. There continued
to be reports of lynchings and burnings of suspected criminals
by enraged citizens (see Section 1.a.). These occurred particularly
in indigenous communities and poor neighborhoods of the major
cities where there is little police presence. One egregious incident
that, like many, was linked to purported cattle rustling, occurred
in September in Manabi when a crowd of local farmers reportedly
caught three men in the process of stealing cattle, shot and killed
them, and then burned their bodies.
The law provides for internationally accepted due process rights
for criminal defendants, but the authorities often did not observe
these rights in practice. By law, the accused is presumed innocent
until proven guilty, and defendants have the right to a public
trial, defense attorneys, and appeal. They may present evidence,
refuse to testify against themselves, and may confront and cross-examine
witnesses. Although a public defender system exists, in practice
there are relatively few attorneys available to defend the large
number of indigent suspects.
Trial is supposed to begin within 15 to 60 days of the initial
arrest, but in practice, initiation of the trial phase can take
years. Less than 40 percent of all prisoners have been convicted
and sentenced. Accused narcotics traffickers cannot obtain bail
or be released on recognizance. The number of narcotics cases
is likely to decline, however, following passage of a law decriminalizing
possession of small amounts of narcotics by addicts for their
own use.
A foreign assistance program begun in 1994 has enabled the courts
to computerize the National Register of Prisoners. Use of this
system made it possible for the courts to track prisoners' status
more easily. Since its inception, the courts have been able to
track prison populations more accurately. In 1998, the courts
used this system to help identify and release hundreds of accused
minor offenders who had spent more than a year in preventive detention.
There were no reports of political prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference With Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The law prohibits such practices, government authorities generally
respect these prohibitions, and violations are subject to effective
legal sanctions.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech, and the authorities
generally respected this provision in practice, but with some
notable exceptions. There are frequent charges of slander and
libel brought by and against public figures, but few result in
final decisions or judicial relief. In October a court tried former
President Abdala Bucaram in absentia and convicted him of slandering
Congresswoman Alexandra Vela.
All of the major media organs--television, newspapers, and radio--are
in local, private hands except for two government-owned radio
stations. The law limits foreign investment in broadcast media.
Using a law promulgated by the last military regime that requires
the media to give the Government free space or air time, the Government
can and does require television and radio to broadcast government-produced
programs featuring the President and other top administration
officials.
There is a free and vigorous press. Ownership of the media is
broadly based, and editorials represent a wide range of political
views and often criticize the Government. However, some degree
of self-censorship in the print media occurs, particularly with
respect to politically sensitive issues or stories about the military
and its related industries.
The Government does not interfere in issues involving academic
freedom.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for the right of free assembly for peaceful
purposes, and the Government generally respected this right in
practice. Public rallies require prior government permits, which
are generally granted, although exceptions occur. Numerous labor
and student demonstrations took place without incident in the
capital and the outlying regions. In general the security forces
intervened in demonstrations only when there was violence against
bystanders or property. In September protests in Quito against
government austerity measures were marred by violence, with several
policemen injured and property damaged.
The Constitution provides for freedom of association, and the
Government generally respected this right in practice.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government
respects this right in practice. The Government allows missionary
activity and religious demonstrations by all religions.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration,
and Repatriation
The Constitution provides for these rights, and the Government
respects them in practice. The Government cooperates with the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and other humanitarian
organizations in assisting refugees. The issue of provision of
first asylum did not arise. There were no reports of the forced
return of persons to a country where they feared persecution.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens
to Change Their Government
The Constitution provides citizens with the right to change their
government peacefully, and citizens exercise this right in practice
through periodic, free, and fair elections held on the basis of
universal suffrage. Since the return to civilian rule in 1979,
citizens have actively exercised their right to change their national
and local governments. In May voters elected 121 members to a
new Congress; in July President Jamil Mahuad defeated Alvaro Noboa
in the second round of the presidential election in a close contest.
Noboa disputed Mahuad's election, but an OAS-led observer mission
noted that the election had been conducted transparently and that
the official results accorded with the observers' private sample
of election day ballots.
Voting is mandatory for literate citizens over 18 years of age
and voluntary for illiterate citizens. The law does not permit
active duty members of the military to vote. The Constitution
bars members of the clergy and active duty military personnel
from election to Congress, the presidency, or vice presidency.
The National Constituent Assembly to reform the Constitution concluded
its work in June. The new Constitution took effect on August 10,
with changes intended to strengthen the presidency, improve management
of the Congress, and ensure increased protection for the rights
of women, children, indigenous groups, and minorities.
Traditional elites tend to be self-perpetuating. Consequently,
few women, Afro-Ecuadorians, and indigenous people are found in
high positions in government, although no specific laws prevent
women or minorities from attaining leadership positions. Women
hold 16 of 121 seats in Congress, the largest proportion of seats
held by women in the country's history. One Afro-Ecuadorian serves
as a member of Congress. There are no other Afro-Ecuadorians serving
in senior level government jobs.
The indigenous movement, which previously shunned traditional
politics, formed an electoral movement called Pachakutik (which
means "cataclysmic change" in Quichua) and ran candidates
for national, provincial, and local office in the 1996 and 1998
elections. A Pachakutik Congresswoman, Nina Pacari, was elected
Second Vice President of Congress. The first indigenous member
to hold a top leadership rank, Pacari heads an eight-member congressional
bloc whose cooperation with the majority in congress on some issues
has ensured it significant influence. Indigenous members of the
National Constituent Assembly, and their supporters, won important
constitutional protections for indigenous rights, which took effect
with the new Constitution in August.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
A number of human rights groups, both domestic and international,
operate without restriction, investigating and publishing their
findings on human rights cases. Domestic human rights groups,
such as the CEDHU and the regional Latin American Human Rights
Association (ALDHU), were outspoken in their criticism of the
Government's record on specific cases. Nevertheless, the Government
contracted with the ALDHU to provide human rights training to
the military and the police.
The Truth and Justice Commission, established in 1996 to investigate
reports of past rights abuse, is no longer active. The office
of Ombudsman was created to ensure ongoing attention to human
rights issues. In September Congress elected a new Ombudsman who,
as Attorney General under interim President Alarcon, had earned
a reputation as a human rights advocate.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability,
Language, or Social Status
The Constitution prohibits discrimination based on race, religion,
sex, or social status. In addition, the constitutional reforms
explicitly increased the rights of women, children, and minorities,
banned discrimination based on sexual preference, and required
the new Congress to pass legislation implementing these rights
promptly. However, women, Afro-Ecuadorians, and indigenous people
face significant discrimination.
Women
Although the law prohibits violence against women, including within
marriage, it is a widespread practice. Many rapes go unreported
because of the victims' reluctance to confront the perpetrators.
Women may file complaints against a rapist or an abusive spouse
or companion only if they produce a witness. In cases of statutory
rape involving "amorous" sex with a minor, if the rapist
marries the victim, the charges against him or anyone else who
took part in the rape cannot be pursued unless the marriage is
subsequently annulled. While some communities have established
their own centers for counseling and legal support of abused women,
the Government only began to address this question seriously with
the formation of the "Comisaria de la Mujer," or Women's
Bureau, in 1994. Although this office can accept complaints about
abuse of women, it has no authority to act on them itself. However,
the Women's Bureau doubled the number of its outreach offices
and actively referred abuse cases to prosecutors.
A 1995 Law Against Violence Affecting Women and Children, drafted
by a coalition of women's organizations, criminalizes spousal
abuse for the first time, including physical, sexual, and psychological
abuse. It also creates family courts and reforms the Penal Code
to give courts the power to separate an abusive spouse from the
home.
Discrimination against women is pervasive in society, particularly
with respect to educational and economic opportunities for those
in the lower economic strata. The increasingly active women's
movement blames culture and tradition for inhibiting achievement
of full equality for women. There are fewer women than men in
the professions and skilled trades, and pay discrimination against
women is common.
Children
The Government has not taken effective steps to promote the welfare
of children. The Government rarely enforces the constitutional
requirement of education through the age of 14.
There is no societal pattern of abuse against children. Government
resources to assist children have traditionally been limited,
although the Government instituted a program to care for the children
of the working poor called "Operation Child Rescue."
The IACHR concluded that this program reached only a small percentage
of those affected. Approximately 45 percent of children under
the age of 5 are malnourished. Government spending on education
continued to decline, both in real terms and as a proportion of
gross domestic product.
Several private organizations are very active in programs to assist
street children, and the United Nations Children's Fund also runs
a program in conjunction with the Central Bank. Especially in
urban areas, the children of the poor often experience severe
hardships. It is common to see children as young as 5 or 6 years
of age selling newspapers or candy on the street to support themselves
or to augment the family income. Also, there are instances of
prostitution by girls under 18 years of age in urban areas. In
rural areas, young children often must leave school at an early
age to help out on the family's plot of land.
People With Disabilities
There is no official discrimination against disabled persons in
employment, education, or the provision of other state services.
However, there are no laws to guarantee disabled people access
to public buildings or services, nor are they provided any other
special government assistance.
Indigenous People
While at least 85 percent of all citizens claim some indigenous
heritage, culturally indigenous people make up about 15 to 20
percent of the total population. The vast majority live in rural
areas, and most live in varying degrees of poverty. Land is scarce
in the more heavily populated highland areas where high infant
mortality, malnutrition, and epidemic disease are also common.
In addition, electricity and potable water are often unavailable.
Although the rural education system is seriously deficient, many
indigenous groups participated actively with the Ministry of Education
in the development of the bilingual education program used in
rural public schools.
The new Constitution recognizes the rights of indigenous communities
to hold property communally, to administer traditional community
justice in certain cases, and to be consulted before natural resources
were exploited in community territories. Indigenous people continue
to enjoy, in addition, the same civil and political rights as
other citizens. In the Amazon area, indigenous groups have lobbied
the Government, enlisted the help of foreign and domestic NGO's,
and mounted protests (including kidnaping oil workers and tourists)
in attempts to win a share of oil revenues and a voice in exploitation
and development decisions. The new Constitution expressly recognizes
the indigenous communities' rights to be consulted, but not to
approve, oil exploration and development. Oil companies have increased
their efforts to minimize the environmental and social impact
of their oil projects in the Amazon but continue to face criticism
from indigenous groups that environmental damage ensues.
Despite their growing political influence (see Section 3) and
the efforts of grassroots community groups, which were increasingly
successful in pressuring the central Government to assist them,
Indians continue to suffer discrimination at many levels of society.
With few exceptions, the indigenous people are at the lowest end
of the socioeconomic scale.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The population of the rural, northern coastal area includes large
numbers of Afro-Ecuadorian citizens. They suffer widespread poverty
and pervasive discrimination, particularly with regard to educational
and economic opportunity. There were no special government efforts
to address these problems.
There are five major Afro-Ecuadorian organizations active in the
country; they estimate that Afro-Ecuadorians account for 700,000
people, or about 6 percent of the total population. While the
presence of Afro-Ecuadorians has grown in the fields of sports
and culture, educational opportunities continue to be limited.
The press has focused on lingering racism among all strata of society. Afro-Ecuadorian organizations note that despite the absence of official discrimination, societal discrimination continues to affect them. For example, they assert that the
police stop Afro-Ecuadorians for document checks with greater
frequency than other citizens.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The Constitution and Labor Code provide most workers with the
right to form trade unions. Members of the police and the military,
and public sector employees in nonrevenue producing entities are
not free to form trade unions. The 1991 Labor Code reforms raised
the number of workers required for an establishment to be unionized
from 15 to 30, which the International Labor Organization's Committee
on Freedom of Association considered too stringent a limitation
at the plant workers' council level.
While employees of state-owned organizations enjoy rights similar to those in the private sector, the law technically prevents the majority of public sector employees from joining unions or exercising collective bargaining rights. Nevertheless, most public employees maintain membership in some labor organization, and there are frequent "illegal" strikes. Despite official threats, the Government rarely takes action against striking public workers. The National Constituent Assembly defeated an attempt to overturn November 1997 legislation that outlawed public sector strikes that paralyze key services, including schools. Although the labor confederations are politically independent, the two largest single labor unions, the Teachers' Union and the Union of Social Security Workers, are allied with the Democratic Political Movement, a far-left socialist party.
Approximately 12 percent of the work force is organized. There
are four large labor centrals or confederations. None of the main
labor centrals is firmly connected to any one political party,
and there are no ties between the Government and any labor union.
There are few restrictions on the right of workers to strike,
although a 10-day cooling-off period is required before a strike
is declared. The Labor Code revisions limit solidarity strikes
or boycotts to 3 days, provided that they are approved by the
Labor Ministry. In a legal strike, workers may take possession
of the factory or workplace, thus ending production at the site,
and receive police protection during the takeover. The employer
must pay all salaries and benefits during a legal strike; the
Labor Code protects strikers and their leaders from retaliation.
The only significant strikes were by public sector employees such
as teachers, social security, and medical workers. None of the
strikes resulted in violence.
Unions may freely form and join federations or confederations,
and three of the large labor centrals maintain international affiliations.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The labor market is highly segmented, with a minority of workers in skilled, usually unionized, positions in state-run
enterprises or in medium to large industries. Most of the economically
active population is employed in the agricultural sector or the
urban informal sector; the vast majority of these workers are
not organized. The Labor Code requires that all private employers
with 30 or more workers belonging to a union must negotiate collectively
when the union so requests. Although approximately 12 percent
of the work force is organized, collective bargaining agreements
cover only one-quarter of these workers.
The Labor Code streamlined the bargaining process in state enterprises
by requiring workers to be represented by one labor union only.
It prohibits discrimination against unions and requires that employers
provide space for union activities upon the union's request. The
law does not permit employers to dismiss a worker without the
express permission of the Ministry of Labor, whose rulings are
not subject to judicial review. If the Ministry of Labor rules
that a dismissal is unjustified, it can require the employer to
pay large indemnities or separation payments to the worker, although
the reforms set a cap on such payments. The Labor Code provides
for resolution of labor conflicts through an arbitration and conciliation
board comprising one representative of the Ministry of Labor,
two from the union, and two representatives of management.
The Maquila (in bond) Law passed in 1990 permits the hiring of
temporary workers for the maquila industries only. While there
is no express prohibition on association rights in the Maquila
Law, in practice it is difficult to organize temporary employees
on short-term contracts. Since temporary workers are not recognized
by the Labor Code, they do not enjoy the same level of protection
offered to other workers. The maquila system allows a company
and its property to become an export processing zone wherever
it is located. Many such "zones" have thus been established;
most are dedicated to textiles and fish processing.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The Constitution and the Labor Code prohibit compulsory labor,
and there were no reports of it in general, nor of forced or bonded
labor by children.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The Constitution establishes that children must attend school
until 14 years of age. However, because of the lack of schools
in many rural communities and the need for children to work, this
provision is rarely enforced. The law prohibits persons younger
than 14 years old from working, except in special circumstances
such as apprenticeships. It requires those between the ages of
14 and 18 years to have the permission of their parent or guardian
to work. The law prohibits children between the ages of 15 and
18 years from working more than 7 hours per day or 35 hours per
week, and it restricts children below the age of 15 years to a
maximum of 6 hours per day and 30 hours per week. In practice,
the Ministry of Labor fails to enforce child labor laws. In rural
areas many children attend school only sporadically after about
10 years of age in order to contribute to household income as
farm laborers. In the city many children under 14 years of age
work in family-owned "businesses" in the informal sector,
shining shoes, collecting and recycling garbage, or as street
peddlers. The law prohibits forced or bonded labor by children,
and there were no reports of such practices (see Section 6.c.).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The Ministry of Labor sets the minimum wage every 6 months in
consultation with the Commission on Salaries, but Congress may
also adjust it. The statutory minimum wage is not adequate to
provide a decent standard of living for a worker and family. As
of September, the minimum wage plus mandated bonuses provided
a gross monthly compensation of approximately $134 (S/803,333).
Most organized workers in state industries and formal sector private
enterprises earned substantially more than the minimum wage and
also received significant other benefits through collective bargaining
agreements. The majority of workers, however, work in the large
informal and rural sector without recourse to the minimum wage
or legally mandated benefits.
The Ministry of Labor has the principal role in enforcing labor
laws and carries this out through a corps of labor inspectors
who are active in all 21 provinces. The Labor Code provides for
a 40-hour workweek, a 15-day annual vacation, a minimum wage,
and other employer-provided benefits, such as uniforms and training
opportunities.
The Labor Code also provides general protection for workers' health
and safety on the job. A worker may not leave the workplace of
his own volition, even if there is a hazardous situation. The
worker is allowed to request that an inspector from the Ministry
of Labor come to the workplace and confirm the hazard; that inspector
may then close down the workplace.
The Government enforces health and safety standards and regulations
through the Social Security Institute. In the formal sector, occupational
health and safety is not a major problem. However, there are no
specific regulations governing health and safety standards in
the agricultural sector and, in practice, there is no enforcement
of safety rules in the small mines that make up the vast majority
of the mining sector.
[end of document]
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