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Workers' body alleges corruption in SESSI and WWBS
Workers' body alleges corruption in SESSI and WWBS

Express Tribune

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Express Tribune

Workers' body alleges corruption in SESSI and WWBS

The Workers' Solidarity Committee (WSC) — a coalition of labour, human rights, and social organisations alongside progressive intellectuals — has strongly condemned what it described as an "assault on workers' rights," the legitimisation of lawlessness through the Sindh Labour Code. WSC alleged large-scale corruption within key social protection institutions, the Sindh Employees Social Security Institution (SESSI) and Sindh Workers Welfare Board (WWBS). Speaking at a press conference at the Karachi Press Club, prominent activists including Anees Haroon (National Commission on Human Rights), Dr Riaz Shaikh (SZABIST), Nasir Mansoor (NTUF), Gul Shar (Watan Dost Mazdoor Federation), Liaqat Sahi (Democratic Workers Union), Razzaq Memon (Port Workers Union), Qazi Khizar (HRCP), Tahir Khan (PFUJ), Zehra Khan (HBWWF), and labour leader Comrade Usman Baloch, accused the Sindh Labour Dept of shielding factory owners while failing to enforce labour laws. They claimed that the WWBS - which manages over Rs50 billion in workers' funds - has been run on an ad-hoc basis for months, violated procurement rules, purchased an expensive Clifton office inaccessible to workers, and misused billions on poorly executed repairs, non-mandated insurance schemes, and unapproved projects such as a Rs3 billion e-bike programme. They demanded full investigation into WWBS expenditures and reconstitution of its board, permanent appointments in all social protection institutions, registration of at least 3 million workers in SESSI per court orders.

Labour leaders reject Sindh labour code
Labour leaders reject Sindh labour code

Express Tribune

time30-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Express Tribune

Labour leaders reject Sindh labour code

All conspiracies to impose the Sindh Labour Code through the backdoor will be defeated. Ensuring a living wage is essential for industrial peace, and any attempt to enforce lawlessness in factories will be met with strong resistance from workers. These views were expressed by labour leaders during a "Labour Conference" of the textile, garment, shoe, and leather sectors, organised by the National Trade Union Federation (NTUF) Pakistan and the Home-Based Women Workers Federation (HBWWF). The conference, chaired by HBWWF General Secretary Comrade Zehra Khan, saw participation from workers, including home-based workers from major industrial zones of the city on Sunday. Riaz Abbasi of the NTUF strongly condemned the International Labour Organization's (ILO) collaboration with provincial governments under the guise of the Punjab and Sindh Labour Codes, accusing it of abolishing workers' legal right to permanent employment. He asserted that the real objective of the code was to legitimise the exploitative contract system, suppress workers' right to strike and unionise, and ultimately weaken their collective power. Abbasi added that the proposed code legitimised bonded labour through the deceptive concept of "advance loans," effectively institutionalising the buying and selling of workers. He argued it contradicted the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act of 1992, violated the Constitution of Pakistan, defied ILO conventions, and threatened to reintroduce slavery under the guise of legal reform. Zehra Khan of HBWWF said that the code seeks to protect the interests of industrialists and bureaucrats-not workers. She accused the ILO, in cooperation with international financial institutions and the World Bank, of playing a neocolonial role in suppressing worker resistance in the Global South. Khan emphasised that both federal and provincial governments had become facilitators of this anti-worker agenda. She said the Punjab government, continuing its anti-labour tradition, had already approved the code despite widespread objections and was pushing it through the assembly. In Sindh, the government sent the draft to the law department without consulting labour organisations, contrary to earlier commitments. Following strong protests, the provincial labour minister promised to share the final draft with workers' representatives. Qamar-ul-Hassan of IUF warned the PPP-led Sindh government not to follow Punjab's repressive path, cautioning that doing so would bring lasting disgrace for imposing such an anti-worker code by force. He also expressed grave concern over skyrocketing inflation, which has made necessities unaffordable. Under pressure from international financial institutions, the state, he said, was abandoning its constitutional obligations, including free education and healthcare, employment guarantees, housing, affordable transport, electricity, and water. The struggle to access these basic rights was making life unbearable for ordinary people.

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