A/HRC/44/42
restrictions on non-citizen participation in a group.9 Some countries allow non-citizens to
found an organization only in conjunction with a citizen. Others have laws that prohibit
non-citizens from becoming leaders of civil society organizations; 10 limit the percentage of
foreign staff allowed; place restrictions on receiving funds or opening bank accounts; or
even prohibit the formation of certain types of organizations by non-citizens. Some
countries restrict the right to freedom of association only to documented migrants. For
example, Uganda has claimed that its constitutional guarantee of freedom of association,
including the freedom to join trade unions, excludes undocumented migrants
(CMW/C/UGA/CO/1, para. 36).
43.
Any legislation or policy that gives law enforcement officers expanded ability to
arrest and deport migrants will have a chilling effect on migrants’ ability to challenge
authority by exercising their freedom of association rights, especially for migrants who are
undocumented or in an irregular situation. Where migrants may be arbitrarily stopped and
deported, they will refrain from taking any action that puts them on law enforcement’s
radar, which includes organizing. In countries where migration status takes precedence over
rights redress, undocumented workers may doubt whether the fruits of their association and
advocacy are worth the risk.
44.
Research shows that, across Europe, migrants have lower levels of unionization than
native workers.11 While challenges arise in the collection of data on migrant workers’ trade
union membership, since few unions keep disaggregated data on members’ migration
status, it is believed that in some countries, migrant trade union membership level is
extremely low. 12 This is problematic given the central importance of trade unions in
protecting the rights of migrant workers through collective bargaining for fair wages and
labour conditions. Trade unions may also aid migrants in creating a forum for discussion
with employers, delivering safe migration training, acting as trusted information sources for
migrants, encouraging bilateral cooperation, facilitating complaint processes or addressing
recruitment agency abuses.
45.
Migrants who wish to form or join trade unions may face additional limitations in
law. Unfortunately, certain States bar migrants from joining trade unions, restrict migrants’
ability to form or hold office in a trade union or otherwise deny them full rights to engage
in union activities. For example, in Qatar, although about 90 per cent of the total population
are migrant workers,13 article 116 of the Labour Law permits only Qatari citizens to join
workers committees and unions. 14 In Turkey, undocumented migrant workers are prohibited
from joining trade unions (CMW/C/TUR/CO/1, para. 61). In Thailand, the Labour
Relations Act bars non-citizens from forming unions and from membership in a union
committee or subcommittee. 15 In Senegal, the Labour Code limits the right of migrant
workers to serve as officials in trade unions, subject to a reciprocal agreement with the
migrant worker’s country of origin (CMW/C/SEN/CO/1, para. 16). In Singapore, migrants
may not act as an officer of or be employed by any trade union without prior ministerial
approval. 16 Given that many migrants work in sectors that are almost entirely migrantstaffed, the prohibition on migrants’ forming or leading their own trade unions can act as a
complete bar to unionization, as there may be no national union available to them. Even
where migrants work in a sector in which there is a pre-existing union, it may not have the
resources to reach out to migrants, given the additional outreach barriers, such as language
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
See, e.g., India, Foreigners Act, 1946, Act No. 31 of 1946, sect. 3 (2) (e) (vi); Timor Leste,
Immigration and Asylum Act, Law No. 9/2003 of 2003, art. 11 (1) (c).
See, e.g., Malaysia, Societies Act 1966, Act 335, as amended 1 January 2006, art. 13 (1) (a) and
schedule 1 (2), which allows the Registrar to remove non-citizen officers of non-profit organizations
and requires that officers of political parties be citizens.
Torben Krings, “‘Unorganisable’? Migrant workers and trade union membership”, paper presented at
the Industrial Relations in Europe Conference, Dublin, September 2014.
In Malaysia, for example, fewer than 3 per cent of migrant workers are part of a union. See Nicholas
Chung, “Bosses stopping migrant workers joining unions, says MTUC”, FMT News, 27 November
2019.
Rebecca Ratcliffe, “Qatar law change hailed as milestone for migrant workers in World Cup run-up”,
The Guardian, 6 September 2018.
Qatar, Labour Law, Law No. 14 of 2014.
Thailand, Labour Relations Act, B.E. 2518 (1975), sects. 88 and 101.
Singapore, Trade Unions Act (Chapter 333), 31 July 2004, sects. 30 (3) and 31 (4).
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