Get the World to Work – Trade Unions Mobilise Around the Globe on 7 October, World Day for Decent Work

07/10/2009

ITUC OnLine
155/071009

Brussels, 7 October (ITUC OnLine): Trade unions in more than 100 countries, from the eastern Pacific to the west coast of the Americas, are mobilising on 7 October to tackle the global economic and employment crisis and demand fundamental reform of the world economy. Organisations from more than 100 countries have already posted information on their events onto the special website http://www.wddw.org

ITUC OnLine - Get the World to Work – Trade Unions Mobilise Around the Globe on 7 October, World Day for Decent Work

Live internet coverage of the activities around the world, including videos, photographs and messages from events in every continent, is being broadcast on the website, which will be updated via a 24-hour live feed. Large-scale mobilisations are taking place in several countries while events elsewhere will include public rallies and workplace meetings, demonstrations in front of national parliaments, concerts, trade union member-to-member contacts in person and by phone and email, seminars involving trade unionists, academics and politicians and public events in city squares and other venues.

On a video message http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1U_WQIJqT30, ITUC General Secretary Guy Ryder insists “that governments make a decisive and fundamental change in direction: away from the policies which have caused the deepest recession in 70 years, allowing a small minority to amass vast wealth at the expense of working people’s jobs, security and incomes, while hundreds of millions of people remain locked in absolute poverty.”

The world’s trade union movement has described the results of the Pittsburgh G20 Summit as representing progress on the outcome of the April Summit in London, but has warned against complacency and highlighted crucial areas where little or no progress has been made.

“The current challenges that the world is facing cannot be used as an excuse to threaten and weaken internationally recognised labor standards. We must reverse the trend towards precarious work and insecurity, and continue to confront violations of workers’ rights wherever they happen,” said Ryder.

A new ITUC report released to mark the World Day for Decent Work, The Path to Recovery, How employment is central to ending the global crisis http://www.ituc-csi.org/IMG/pdf/Finacial_crisis_EN-final.pdf , describes how in response to the global economic crisis, the worst since the Great Depression with tens of millions of jobs disappearing, the economy must be built on social justice and environmental sustainability, respect for internationally-recognised workers’ rights, effective financial regulation and global governance which puts people first.

“This 7 October trade unions are raising their voices across the continents, to keep up the pressure for fundamental change, for justice and equity. They face tremendous resistance from those who have profited from the exploitation of others in the past. Trade unions are determined to confront and defeat that resistance, and to ensure that governments everywhere get the message that they must deliver the results that working people demand,” Ryder concluded.

See also: http://www.global-unions.org/spip.php?article253

The ITUC represents 170 million workers in 157 countries and territories and has 312 national affiliates. http://www.ituc-csi.org y http://www.youtube.com/ITUCCSI

For more information, please contact the ITUC Press Department on: +32 2 224 0204 or +32 476 621 018.

Translate to:

For more secure employment, against precarious work

The EMF Collective Bargaining Policy Conference 2009 launched the 2nd Common Demand:

“For more secure employment, against precarious work”,

which will be included in the collective bargaining demands of all its 75 affiliated trade unions and in future collective bargaining rounds throughout Europe over the next four years.

 

eZ debug

Clear cache:

Quick settings:

Timing: Feb 06 2012 16:16:18
Module start 'content'
Timing: Feb 06 2012 16:16:18
Module end 'content'
Timing: Feb 06 2012 16:16:18
End

Timing points:

CheckpointElapsedRel. ElapsedMemoryRel. Memory
Module start 'content'0.0000 sec0.1059 sec4,347.4648KB2,204.2969KB
Module end 'content'0.1059 sec0.0619 sec6,551.7617KB1,984.8594KB
End0.1677 sec 8,536.6211KB0.0000KB
Total runtime:0.1904 sec

Time accumulators:

 Accumulator Elapsed Percent Count Average
ini_load
Load cache0.0269 sec9.7031%110.0024 sec
FindInputFiles0.0212 sec7.6463%110.0019 sec
Mysql Total
Mysqli_queries0.0020 sec0.7224%30.0007 sec
Looping result0.0001 sec0.0335%30.0000 sec
Template Total0.0777 sec 28.0% 2 0.0389 sec
Template load0.0210 sec7.5769%20.0105 sec
Template processing0.0564 sec20.3594%20.0282 sec
override
Cache load0.0111 sec3.9926%20.0055 sec
General
String conversion0.0000 sec0.0065%10.0000 sec
dbfile0.0440 sec15.8821%60.0073 sec
Total script time:0.2773 sec

Templates used to render the page:

Usage countRequested templateTemplateTemplate loadedEditOverride
1pagelayout.tpl<No override>design/precariouswork/templates/pagelayout.tplEdit templateOverride template
1setup/debug_toolbar.tpl<No override>design/sydesy/templates/setup/debug_toolbar.tplEdit templateOverride template
      
 Number of times templates used: 2
 Number of unique templates used: 2
 Time used to render template usage: 0.0002 secs
Home page/News/