ILO PONDERS SUPER CONVENTION

Wednesday, 08 February 2006

THE International Labour Organization (ILO) has started considering a draft 
convention on maritime labour standards which will consolidate and modernise 
a large number existing, and in many cases widely ignored, ILO conventions 
on seafarers’ conditions.

The 10th maritime session of the International Labour Conference will run 
from today through 23 February. Such maritime sessions are held only every 
10 years, while the ILO’s annual labour conference meets every year.

An ILO statement says that the convention, if adopted, will represent the 
“most sweeping and comprehensive global legal instrument ever forged 
regarding the world’s shipowners, seafarers and maritime nations”.

While there is considerable optimism that a convention will result from the 
conference it by no means a foregone conclusion. There are still important 
and sensitive issues unresolved, including the definition of a “seafarer”. 
Moreover the nature of the ILO process means that even though a huge amount 
of very detailed drafting work has gone on for over four years it is still 
possible for any of the participants to raise new issues or object to 
something that has previously been regarded as agreed.

Nevertheless the betting among those involved seems to be that a convention 
will be adopted, partly because all sides are loathe to see so much hard 
work go to waste.

Delegates elected top French transport official Jean-Marc Schindler as 
President of the Conference while the vice presidents are Dierk Lindemann, 
Brian Orrell and Tatsuya Teranishi representing respectively owners, 
seafarers and governments.

Delegates to the Conference are to consider a new, single “framework 
Convention” on maritime labour standards that consolidates and updates more 
than 65 international maritime labour standards adopted since the ILO was 
founded in 1919. The ILO has adopted 185 Conventions setting standards for 
all aspects of the world of work since its founding.

In his speech to the assembly, Mr Schindler, characterised the meeting as “a 
new and unique event in the history of this organisation” and said the 
convention marked “the first attempt to create the global instrument for a 
specific sector of industry”.

He also referred to the two major principles of the Convention, allowing 
ratifying governments discretion as to the way in which they implement the 
seafarers’ rights, but setting out firm obligations on governments to 
respect those rights, backed up by a detailed enforcement system to ensure 
that the Convention’s provisions are respected.







JALESVEVA YAYAMAHE 
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