Chapter I - Preliminary
Chapter II - Trade Unions
Chapter III - Workers' Participation and Dispute Resolution
Chapter IV - Labour Courts
Chapter V - National
Industrial Relations Commission
Chapter VI - Authorities
Chapter VII - Decisions,
Settlements and Awards
Chapter VIII - Penalties
and Procedures
Chapter IX - Miscellaneous
The Schedule I - PUBLIC
UTILITY SERVICES
The Schedule II - Rights
and Duties of Workers and Employers
AN ORDINANCE to
amend, consolidate and rationalize the law relating to formation
of trade unions, regulation and improvement of relations between
employers and workmen and avoidance and settlement of any
differences or disputes arising between them
WHEREAS it is
expedient to amend, consolidate and rationalize the law relating
to formation of trade unions, regulation and improvement of
relations between employers and workmen and avoidance and
settlement of any differences or disputes arising between them;
AND WHEREAS the
President is satisfied that circumstances exist which render it
necessary to take immediate action;
Now, therefore, in
pursuance of the Proclamation of Emergency of the fourteenth day
of October, 1999, and the Provisional Constitutional Order No.1
of 1999, read with the Provisional Constitution (Amendment)
Order No.9 of 1999, and in exercise of all powers enabling him
in that behalf, the President of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan is pleased to make and promulgate the following
Ordinance:-
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Chapter
I - Preliminary
1. Short title,
extent, commencement and application.-
(1) This Ordinance
may be called the Industrial Relations Ordinance, 2002.
(2) It extends to
the whole of Pakistan.
(3) It shall come
into force at once.
(4) It shall apply
to all persons employed in any establishment or group of
establishments or industry except those employed (a) in the
Police or any of the Defence Services of Pakistan; (b) in any
installations or services exclusively connected with the Armed
Forces of Pakistan including Ministry of Defence lines of the
Railways; (c) by the Pakistan Security Printing Corporation or
the Security Papers Limited or Pakistan Mint; (d) in the
administration of the State other than those employed as workmen
by the Railways, Post, Telegraph and Telephone Departments; (e)
by an establishment or institution maintained for the treatment
or care of sick, infirm, destitute and mentally unfit persons
excluding those run on commercial basis; (f) by an institution
established for payment of employees' old-age pensions or for
workers' welfare; (g) as a member of the Watch and Ward,
Security or Fire Service Staff of an oil refinery or of an
establishment engaged in the production, transmission or
distribution of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gas or
petroleum products or of a seaport or an airport:
Provided that the
Federal Government may suspend, in the public interest, by an
order published in the official Gazette, the application of this
Ordinance to any establishment or industry for a period
specified in the order not exceeding six months at a time.
Definitions.-
In this Ordinance, unless there is anything repugnant in the
subject or context,-
(i) "arbitrator"
means a person appointed as such under this Ordinance;
(ii) "award" means
the determination by a Labour Court, Arbitrator or an Appellate
Court of competent jurisdiction of any industrial dispute or any
matter relating thereto and includes an interim award;
(iii) "association"
means any organization of employers formed primarily for
furthering and defending the interests and rights of employers;
(iv) "Board of
Conciliators" means a tripartite Board of Conciliators
constituted under sub-section (3) of section 26;
(v) "collective
bargaining agent" means the trade union of workmen which, under
section 20, is the agent of the workmen in the establishment,
group of establishments or, as the case may be, industry in the
matter of collective bargaining;
(vi) "collective
bargaining unit" means those workers or class of workers of an
employer in one or more establishments coming within the same
class of industry whose terms and conditions of employment are,
or could appropriately be, the subject of collective bargaining
together;
(vii) "Commission"
means the National Industrial Relations Commission constituted
under section 49;
(viii) "conciliation
proceedings" mean any proceedings before a Conciliator or Board
of Conciliators;
(ix) "Conciliator"
means-
-
(a) a person
appointed as such by the Federal Government under
sub-section (2) of section 26, in respect of disputes which
the Commission is competent to adjudicate and determine; and
-
(b) in respect
of other disputes, a person appointed as such by the
Provincial Government under sub-section (1) of section 26.
(x) "employer" in
relation to an establishment means any person or body of
persons, whether incorporated or not, who or which employs
workmen in an establishment under a contract of employment and
includes-
-
(a) an heir,
successor or assign, as the case may be, of such person or,
body as aforesaid;
-
(b) any person
responsible for the direction, administration, management
and control of the establishment;
-
(c) the
authority, in relation to an establishment or group of
establishments run by or under the authority of any
department of the Federal Government or a Provincial
Government, appointed in this behalf or, where no authority
is appointed, the Head of the department;
-
(d) the office
bearer, in relation to an establishment run by or on behalf
of a local authority, appointed in this behalf, or where no
officer is so appointed, the chief executive office bearer
of that authority;
-
(e) the
proprietor, in relation to any other establishment, of such
establishment and every director, manager, secretary, agent
or office bearer or person concerned with the management of
the affairs thereof;
-
(f) a contractor
or an establishment of a contractor who or which undertakes
to procure the labour or services of workmen for use by
another person or in another establishment for any purpose
whatsoever and for payment in any form and on any basis
whatsoever; and
-
(g) office
bearers of a department or Division of the Federal or a
Provincial or local authority who belong to the managerial,
secretarial or directional cadre or categories of
supervisors or agents and those who have been notified for
this purpose in the official Gazette;
(xi) "establishment"
means any office, firm, factory, society, undertaking, company,
shop, premises or enterprise which employs workmen directly or
through a contractor for the purposes of carrying on any
business or industry and includes all its departments and
branches, whether situated in the same place or in different
places having a common balance sheet and profit and loss account
and, except in section 54, includes a collective bargaining
unit, if any, constituted under that section in any
establishment;
(xii) "executive"
means a person or body of persons, by whatever name called, to
whom or which the management of the affairs of a trade union is
entrusted under its constitution;
(xiii) "group of
establishments" means establishments belonging to the same
employer and the same industry;
(xiv) "illegal
lock-out" means a lock-out declared, commenced or continued
otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of this
Ordinance;
(xv) "illegal
strike" means a strike declared, commenced or continued
otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of this
Ordinance;
(xvi) "industrial
dispute" means any dispute or difference between employers and
workmen or between workmen and workmen which is concerned with
the employment or non-employment or the terms of employment or
the conditions of work; and is not in respect of the enforcement
of any right guaranteed or accrued to workers by or under any
law, other than this Ordinance, or any award or settlement for
the time being in force;
(xvii) "industry"
means any business, trade, manufacture, calling, service,
occupation or employment engaged in an organized economic
activity of producing goods or services for sale, excluding
those set up exclusively for charitable purposes, operating
through public or private donations where "charitable purpose"
includes provision of education, medical care, emergency relief
and other needs of the poor and indigent;
(xviii) "Inspector"
means an Inspector appointed under this Ordinance;
(xix) "Labour Court"
means a Labour Court established under section 44;
(xx) "lock-out"
means the closing of a place of employment or part of such place
or the suspension of work, wholly or partly, by an employer, or
refusal, absolute or conditional, by an employer to continue to
employ any number of workmen employed by him where such closing,
suspension or refusal occurs in connection with an industrial
dispute or is intended for the purpose of compelling workmen
employed to accept certain terms and conditions of, or
affecting, employment;
(xxi) "office
bearer" means any member of the executive of a trade union in an
establishment, industry or trade, but does not include an
auditor or legal advisor thereof;
(xxii) "prescribed"
means prescribed by rules made under section 79;
(xxiii) "public
utility service" means any of the services specified in Schedule
I;
(xxiv) "registered
trade union" means a trade union registered under this
Ordinance;
(xxv) "Registrar"
means Registrar of trade unions appointed under section 57;
(xxvi) "settlement"
means a settlement arrived at in the course of conciliation
proceedings, and includes an agreement between an employer, the
collective bargaining agent or workmen, as the case may be,
arrived at otherwise than in the course of such proceedings,
where the agreement is in writing and has been signed by the
parties thereto in such manner as may be prescribed and a copy
thereof has been sent to the Provincial Government, the
Conciliator and such other persons as may be prescribed;
(xxvii) "Schedule"
means the Schedule to this Ordinance;
(xxviii) "strike"
means cessation of work by a body of persons employed in any
establishment acting in combination or a concerted refusal or
refusal under a common understanding of any number of persons
who have been so employed to continue to work or to accept
employment;
(xxix) "trade union"
means any combination of workers formed primarily for the
purpose of furthering and defending the interests and rights of
workers in any industry or establishment and includes an
industry-wise federation of two or more collective bargaining
agent unions and a federation at the national level of ten or
more collective bargaining agent unions; and
(xxx) "worker" and
"workman" means any and all persons not falling within the
definition of employer who is employed in an establishment or
industry for remuneration or reward either directly or through a
contractor, whether the terms of employment be express or
implied, and for the purpose of any proceeding under this
Ordinance in relation to an industrial dispute includes a person
who has been dismissed, discharged, retrenched, laid-off or
otherwise removed from employment in connection with or as a
consequence of that dispute or whose dismissal, discharge,
retrenchment, lay-off or removal has led to that dispute but
does not include any person who is employed mainly in a
managerial or administrative capacity.
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Chapter
II - Trade Unions
3. Trade
unions and freedom of association.- (1) Subject to the
provisions of Article 17 of the Constitution of the Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, this Ordinance and any other law for the
time being in force -
-
(a) the workers
shall, without distinction whatsoever, have the right to
form and, subject to the constitution or rules of a trade
union, join any trade union of their choice within the
establishment or industry they are employed in:
Provided that a worker shall not be entitled to be a member
of more than one trade union at any one time; provided
further that on joining another union, the earlier
membership will stand automatically cancelled;
-
(b) the
employers shall, without distinction whatsoever, have the
right to form or join any association of their choice and
their association shall have the right to draw up their
constitution and rules, elect freely their representatives,
organize their administration and activities and formulate
their programmes;
-
(c) trade unions
of workers and associations of employers shall have the
right to form and join federations and confederations of
trade unions and associations, and such federations and
confederations shall have the right to affiliate with
international organisations and confederations of workers
and employers, as the case may be; and
-
(d) every
collective bargaining agent union shall have to affiliate
with any federation at the national level registered with
the National Industrial Relations Commission within two
months after its determination as collective bargaining
agent or promulgation of this Ordinance, whichever is
earlier.
(2) The workers and
employers and their respective bodies shall, exercising their
rights under sub-section (1), like other persons or organised
collectivities, respect and abide by all Federal and Provincial
laws.
4.
Application for registration.- Any trade union may, under
the signatures of its President and General Secretary, apply for
registration of the trade union under this Ordinance.
5.
Requirements for application.- An application for
registration shall be made to the Registrar and shall be
accompanied by-
(a) a statement
showing-
-
(i) the name of
the trade union and the address of its head office;
-
(ii) date of
formation of the trade union;
-
(iii) the
titles, names, ages, addresses and occupations of the office
bearers of the trade union;
-
(iv) statement
of total paid membership;
-
(v) the name of
the establishment, group of establishments or the industry,
as the case may be, to which the trade union relates along
with a statement of the total number of workers employed
therein;
-
(vi) the names
and addresses of the registered trade unions in the
establishment, group of establishments or industry, as the
case may be, to which the trade union relates;
-
(vii) the names,
addresses and registration number of member trade unions, in
case the application is made by a federation of trade
unions;
(b) three copies of
the constitution of the trade union together with a copy of the
resolution by the members of the trade union adopting such
constitution bearing the signatures of the Chairman of the
meeting;
(c) a copy of the
resolution by the members of the trade union authorising its
President and the General Secretary to apply for its
registration; and
(d) a copy of the
resolution from each of the constituent trade unions agreeing to
become a member of a federation or confederation of trade
unions, where such application is made by a federation or
confederation.
6.
Requirements for registration.- (1) A trade union shall not
be entitled to registration under this Ordinance unless the
constitution thereof provides for the following matters,
namely:-
-
(a) The name and
address of the trade union;
-
(b) the objects
for which the trade union has been formed;
-
(c) the purposes
for which the general funds of the union shall be
applicable;
-
(d) the number
of persons forming the executive which shall not exceed the
prescribed limit and shall include not less than seventy
five per cent from amongst the workmen actually engaged or
employed in the establishment or establishments or the
industry for which the trade union has been formed;
-
(e) the
conditions under which a member shall be entitled to any
benefit assured by the constitution of the trade union and
under which any fine or forfeiture may be imposed on him;
-
(f) the
maintenance of a list of the members of the trade union and
of adequate facilities for the inspection thereof by the
office bearers and members of the trade union;
-
(g) the manner
in which the constitution shall be amended, varied or
rescinded;
-
(h) the safe
custody of the funds of the trade union, its annual audit,
the manner of audit and adequate facilities for inspection
of the account books by the office bearers and members of
trade union;
-
(i) the manner
in which the trade union may be dissolved;
-
(j) the manner
of election of office bearers by the general body of the
trade union and the term not exceeding three years, for
which an office bearer may hold office upon his election or
re-election through secret ballot;
-
(k) the
procedure for expressing want of confidence in any office
bearer of union the trade union; and
-
(l) the meetings
of the executive and of the general body of the trade union,
so that the executive shall meet at least once in every four
months and the general body at least once every year.
(2) Without
prejudice to the provisions of the sub-section (1), a trade
union of workmen shall not be entitled to registration under
this Ordinance -
-
(a) unless all
its members are workmen actually engaged or employed in the
establishment or industry with which the trade union is
connected; and
-
(b) where there
are two or more registered trade unions in the
establishment, group of establishments or industry, with
which the trade union is connected, unless it has as its
members not less than one-fourth of the total number of
workmen employed in such establishments, group of
establishments or industry, as the case may be.
7.
Disqualification for being an office bearer of a trade union.-
Notwithstanding anything contained in the constitution or rules
of a trade union, a person who has been convicted of an offence
under section 70 or of a criminal offence of heinous nature
within the meaning of the Pakistan Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860),
such as theft, physical assault, murder, attempt to murder,
etc., shall be disqualified from being elected as, or from being
a member or office bearer of a trade union.
8. Registered
trade union to maintain register, etc.-Every registered
trade union shall maintain in such form as may be prescribed-
-
(a) a register
of members showing particulars of subscriptions paid by each
member;
-
(b) an accounts
book showing receipt and expenditure; and
-
(c) a minute
book for recording the proceedings of meetings.
9. Registration.-(1)
The Registrar, after having exercised due diligence and
verification of facts, and on being satisfied that a trade union
has complied with all the requirements of this Ordinance, shall
register the trade union in a prescribed register and issue a
registration certificate in the prescribed form within a period
of fifteen days from the date of receipt of the application
under intimation to the concerned employer.
(2) In case the
application for registration is found by the Registrar to be
deficient in any material respect, he shall communicate in
writing all his objections to the trade union within a period of
fifteen days from the receipt of the application and the trade
union shall reply thereto within a period of fifteen days from
the receipt of the objections.
(3) When the
objections raised by the Registrar have been satisfactorily met,
the Registrar shall register the trade union as provided in
sub-section (1) and issue a registration certificate thereunder
within three days of the date of the objections having been so
met under intimation to the employer.
(4) In case the
objections raised under sub-section (2) are not satisfactorily
met or are not replied to within the time mentioned therein, the
Registrar shall reject the application.
(5) Where the
application for registration is rejected or the Registrar delays
the disposal of such application beyond the period of fifteen
days specified in sub-section (1) or does not issue a
registration certificate within a period of three days specified
in sub-section (3), the trade union may appeal to the Labour
Court which may, for reasons to be recorded, by an order, direct
the Registrar to register the trade union and to issue a
registration certificate or may dismiss the appeal.
(6) Notwithstanding
anything contained in any other provision of this Ordinance,
every alteration made in the constitution of a registered trade
union and every change of its office bearers shall be notified
by registered post to the Registrar by the trade union within
fifteen days of such alteration or change, as the case may be.
(7) The Registrar
may refuse to register any alteration or change referred to in
sub-section (6), if it is in contravention of any of the
provisions of this Ordinance or if it is in violation of the
constitution of the trade union.
(8) Subject to the
provisions of sub-section (7), every inclusion or exclusion of
any constituent unit of a federation of trade unions shall be
notified by registered post to the Registrar by the federation
within fifteen days of such inclusion or exclusion.
(9) In case there is
a dispute in relation to the change of office bearers of a trade
union or any trade union is aggrieved by order of the Registrar
made under sub-section (7), any office bearer or member of the
trade union may apply or appeal to the Labour Court which shall
within seven days of receipt of the application or appeal, as
the case may be, pass an order either directing the Registrar to
register such alteration or change or may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, direct the Registrar to hold fresh
elections of the trade union under his supervision.
10.
Transfer, etc., of office bearers of trade union during pendency
of application for registration.- Save with the prior
permission of the Registrar or the Labour Court, no office
bearer of a trade union shall be transferred, discharged,
dismissed or otherwise punished during the pendency of an
application for registration of trade union with the Registrar
or the Labour Court, provided that the union has notified the
names of the office bearers to the employer in writing.
11. Certificate
of registration.- The certificate of registration issued
under section 9 shall be conclusive evidence of the registration
of a trade union under this Ordinance.
12.
Cancellation of registration.- (1) The registration of a
trade union shall be cancelled if the Labour Court so directs
upon a complaint in writing made by the Registrar that the trade
union has-
-
(i) contravened
or has been registered in contravention of, any of the
provisions of this Ordinance or the rules made thereunder;
-
(ii) contravened
any of the provisions of its constitution ; or
-
(iii) made in
its constitution any provision which is inconsistent with
this Ordinance or the rules made thereunder.
(2) Where any person
who is disqualified under section 7 from being elected as, or
from being an office bearer of a trade union, is elected as an
office bearer of a registered trade union, the registration of
that union shall be cancelled if the Labour Court, upon a
complaint in writing made in this behalf by the Registrar, so
directs.
(3) The registration
of a trade union shall be cancelled by the Registrar, by giving
reasons for such cancellation in writing, if, after holding an
inquiry he finds that any trade union:
-
(i) has
dissolved itself or has ceased to exist; or
-
(ii) has not
been a contestant in a referendum for the determination of a
collective bargaining agent; or
-
(iii) has not
applied for determination of collective bargaining agent
under section 20 (2) within two months of its registration
as another union or promulgation of this Ordinance,
whichever is earlier, provided there does not already exist
a collective bargaining agent determined under section
20(11) in an establishment, or group of establishments or
industry; or
-
(iv) has secured
less than 15% of polled votes per final list of voters,
during a referendum for the determination of collective
bargaining agent.
13. Appeal
against cancellation of registration.- Any trade union
aggrieved by a decision given-
-
(a) by the
Labour Court under sub-section (1) or (2) of section 12, may
appeal to the High Court; or
-
(b) by the
Registrar under sub- section (3) of section 12, may appeal
to the Labour Court.
14. Incorporation
of registered trade union.-(1) Every registered trade union
shall be a body corporate by the name under which it is
registered, shall have perpetual succession and a common seal
and the power to contract and to acquire, hold and dispose of
property, both movable and immovable and shall by the same name
sue or be sued.
(2) The Societies
Registration Act, 1860 (XXI of 1860), the Co-operative Societies
Act, 1912 (II of 1912), and the Companies Ordinance, 1984 (XLVII
of 1984), shall not apply to any registered trade union and the
registration of any trade union under any of these enactments
shall be void.
15. Law of
conspiracy limited in application.-No office bearer or
member of a registered trade union or collective bargaining
agent as certified by the Registrar shall be liable to
punishment under sub-section (2) of section 120B of the Pakistan
Penal Code (Act XVL of 1860), in respect of any agreement made
between the members thereof for the purpose of furthering any
such object of the trade union as is specified in its
constitution referred to in section 6, unless the agreement is
an agreement to commit an offence, or otherwise to violate any
law other than this Ordinance.
16. Immunity from
civil suit in certain cases.-(1) No suit or other legal
proceedings shall be maintainable in any civil court against any
registered trade union or collective bargaining agent or any
office bearer or member thereof in respect of any action done in
contemplation or furtherance of an industrial dispute to which
the trade union is a part on the ground only that such act
induces some other person to break a contract of employment or
that it is an interference with the trade, business or
employment of some other person or with the right of some other
person to dispose of his capital or his labour as he wills.
(2) A trade union
shall not be liable in any suit or other legal proceedings in
any civil court in respect of any tortuous act done in
contemplation or furtherance of an industrial dispute by an
agent of the trade union if it is proved that such person acted
without the knowledge of, or contrary to express instructions
given by, the executive of the trade union.
17.
Enforceability of agreement between members of trade union.-
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time
being in force, an agreement between the members of a trade
union shall not be void or avoidable by reason only that any of
the objects of the agreement are in restraint of trade:
Provided that
nothing in this section shall enable any civil court to
entertain any legal proceedings instituted for the express
purpose of enforcing, or recovering damages for the breach of
any agreement concerning the conditions on which any member of a
trade union shall or shall not sell their goods, transact
business, or work, employ or be employed.
18. Registration
of federation of trade unions.-(1) Any two or more
registered trade unions belonging to an industry may constitute
an industry-wise federation. Any ten or more registered trade
unions (at least one from each Province) may constitute a
federation or confederation at the national level. In both
cases, the respective general bodies of the trade unions, if
they so resolve, shall constitute a federation or confederation
of trade unions by executing an instrument of federation or
confederation and apply for registration of such federation or
confederation:
Provided that a
trade union of workmen shall not join a federation which
comprises of an association of employers, nor shall an
association of employers join a federation which comprises of a
trade union.
(2) No trade union,
federation or confederation shall be formed and registered
having same, similar or identical name.
(3) An instrument of
federation referred to in sub-section (1) shall, among other
things, provide for the procedures to be followed by federated
trade unions or associations and the rights and responsibilities
of the federation and the federated trade unions or
associations.
(4) An application
for the registration of a federation of trade unions or
associations shall be signed by the Presidents of all the trade
unions or all associations constituting the federation or by the
office bearers of these trade unions or associations
respectively authorized by the trade unions or associations in
this behalf and shall be accompanied by three copies of the
instrument of federation referred to in sub-section (1).
(5) Subject to
sub-sections (1), (2), (3) and (4), provisions of this Ordinance
shall, so far as may be and with the necessary modifications,
apply to a federation of trade unions or associations as they
apply to a trade union or association.
19. Returns.-(1)
There shall be sent annually to the Registrar, on or before such
date as may be prescribed, a general statement audited in the
prescribed manner of all receipts and expenditure of every
registered trade union, federation or confederation of trade
unions during the year ending on the 31st day of December next
preceding such prescribed date, and of the assets and
liabilities of the trade union, federation or confederation
existing on such 31st day of December, as may be prescribed:
Provided that the
accounts maintained by the collective bargaining agent having
membership of five thousand or more shall be subject to external
audit by a firm of chartered accountants appointed by the
Registrar:
Provided further
that in case of the collective bargaining agent having
membership of less than five thousand, the accounts shall be
subject to audit in the manner as may be prescribed.
(2) Together with
the general statement referred to in sub-section (1), there
shall be sent to the Registrar a statement showing all changes
of office bearers made by the trade union, federation or
confederation of trade unions during the year to which the
general statement refers, along with a statement of the total
paid membership and a copy of the constitution of the trade
union corrected up to the date of the dispatch thereof.
(3) A copy of every
alteration made in the constitution of a registered trade union
and of a resolution of the general body having the effect of a
provision of the constitution shall be sent to the Registrar
within fifteen days of the making of the alteration or adoption
of the resolution.
(4) In case the
registered trade union is member of a federation or
confederation of trade unions, the name of that federation or
confederation shall be given in the annual statement.
20. Collective
bargaining agent.- (1) Where there is only one registered
trade union in an establishment or a group of establishments or
industry, such trade union shall, if it has as its members not
less than one-third of the total number of workmen employed in
such establishment or group of establishments or industry, upon
an application made in this behalf be certified by the Registrar
in the prescribed manner to be the collective bargaining agent
for such establishment or, as the case may be, group of
establishments.
(2) Where there are
more registered trade unions than one in an establishment or a
group of establishments or industry, the Registrar shall, upon
an application made to him in this behalf by any such trade
union, hold within fifteen days from the making of the
application, a secret ballot to determine as to which one of
such trade unions shall be the collective bargaining agent for
the establishment or group of establishments:
Provided that the
Registrar may, in the case of a large establishment having its
branches in more than one town, hold the secret ballot within
thirty days from the making of the application:
Provided further
that the Registrar shall not entertain any application under
this sub-section in respect of an establishment or group of
establishments consisting of, or including, a seasonal factory
within the meaning of section 4 of the Factories Act, 1934 (XXV
of 1934), unless such application is made during the month in
which the number of workmen employed in such factory in a year
is usually the maximum.
(3) Upon receipt of
an application under sub-section (2) the Registrar shall, by
notice in writing, call upon every registered trade union in the
establishment or group of establishments to which the
application relates-
-
(a) to indicate
whether it desires to be a contestant in the secret ballot
to be held for determining the collective bargaining agent
in relation to such establishment or group of
establishments, as the case may be; and
-
(b)to submit to
him within the time specified in the notice a list of its
members showing, in respect of each member, his parentage,
age, the section or department and the place in which he is
employed, his ticket number and the date of his becoming a
member and if the trade union is a federation of trade
unions, a list of its affiliated trade unions together with
a list of members of each such trade union showing in
respect of each such member the said particulars.
(4) Every employer
shall-
-
(a) on being so
required by the Registrar, within fifteen days, submit a
list of all workmen employed in the establishment excluding
those whose period of employment in the establishment is
less than three months and showing, in respect of each
workman, his parentage, age, the section or department and
the place in which he is employed, his ticket number and the
date of his employment in the establishment. However a
separate list of workmen whose period of employment is less
than three months showing the said particulars in respect of
each workman may also be submitted; and
-
(b) provide such
facilities for verification of the list submitted by him and
the trade unions as the Registrar may require :
Provided that in
computing the period of three months referred to in clause (a),
in the case of a workman employed in a seasonal factory within
the meaning of section 4 of the Factories Act, 1934 (XXV of
1934), the period during which he was employed in that factory
during the preceding season shall also be taken into account.
(5) The Registrar
shall, after verification of the lists submitted by trade
unions, prepare a list of voters in which shall be included the
name of every workman whose period of employment, as computed in
accordance with sub-section (4), is not less than three months
and who is a member of any of the contesting trade unions and
shall, at least four days prior to the date fixed for the poll,
send to each of the contesting trade unions a certified copy of
the list of voters so prepared.
(6) Every workman
who is a member of any of the contesting trade unions and whose
name appears in the list of voters prepared under sub-section
(5) shall be entitled to vote at the poll to determine the
collective bargaining agent.
(7) Every employer
shall provide all such facilities in his establishment as may be
required by the Registrar for the conduct of the poll but shall
not interfere with, or in any way, influence, the voting.
(8) No person shall
canvass for vote within a radius of hundred yards of the polling
station.
(9) For the purpose
of holding secret ballot to determine the collective bargaining
agent, the Registrar shall-
-
(a) fix the date
of the poll and intimate the same to each of the contesting
trade unions and also to every employer four days prior to
such date;
-
(b) on the date
fixed for the poll so place, in the polling station set up
for the purpose, the ballot boxes which shall be sealed in
the presence of the representatives of the contesting trade
unions as to receive the ballot papers;
-
(c) conduct the
poll at the polling station at which the representatives of
the contesting trade unions shall have the rights to be
present;
-
(d) after the
conclusion of the poll and in the presence of such of the
representatives of the contesting trade unions as may be
present, open the ballot boxes and count the votes; and
-
(e) after the
conclusion of the count, certify the trade union which has
received the highest number of votes to be the collective
bargaining agent:
Provided that no
trade union shall be certified to be the collective bargaining
agent for an establishment or group of establishments unless the
number of votes received by it is not less than one-third of the
total number of workmen employed in such establishment or, as
the case may be, group of establishments:
Provided further
that, if no trade union secures such number of votes in the
first poll, a second poll shall be held between the two trade
unions which secure the highest numbers of votes in the first
poll and the trade union which secures a majority of the votes
cast at the second poll shall be certified in the prescribed
manner to be the collective bargaining agent:
Provided also that,
if the number of votes secured by two or more trade unions
securing the highest number of votes is equal, further poll
shall be held between them until one of them secures a majority
of the votes cast at such further poll.
(10) No trade union
shall be certified to be the collective bargaining agent under
sub-section (2) without holding a secret ballot.
(11) Where a
registered trade union has been certified under clause (e) of
sub-section (9) to be the collective bargaining agent for an
establishment or group of establishments, no application for
determination of the collective bargaining agent for such
establishment or group of establishments shall be entertained
within a period of three years from the date of such
certification except where the registration of such a registered
trade union is cancelled before the expiration of that period.
(12) A collective
bargaining agent may, without prejudice to its own position,
implead as a party to any proceedings under this Ordinance to
which it is itself a party or any federation of trade unions of
which it is a member.
(13) A collective
bargaining agent in relation to an establishment or group of
establishments shall be entitled to-
-
(a) undertake
collective bargaining with the employer or employers on
matters connected with employment, non-employment, the terms
of employment or the conditions of work, other than matters
which relate to the enforcement of any right guaranteed or
secured to it or any award or settlement;
-
(b) represent
all or any of the workmen in any proceedings; and
-
(c) give notice
of, and declare, a strike in accordance with the provisions
of this Ordinance.
-
(d) nominate
workmen on the Boards of Provident Funds and Workers'
Participation Fund of their respective establishment or
industry.
(14) The Registrar
may authorize in writing an office bearer to perform all or any
of his functions under this Ordinance and the rules made
thereunder.
(15) After an
application under sub-section (2) is made to the Registrar, no
employer shall transfer, remove, retrench or terminate any
worker who is office bearer of any contestant trade union save
with the permission of the Registrar.
21. Check-off.-(1)
If a collective bargaining agent so requests, the employer of
the workmen who are members of a trade union shall deduct from
the wages of the workmen such amounts towards their subscription
to the funds of the trade union as may be specified with the
approval of each individual workman named in the demand
statement furnished by the trade union.
(2) An employer
making any deductions from the wages under sub-section (1)
shall, within fifteen days of the end of the period for which
the deductions have been made, deposit the entire amount so
deducted by him in the account of the trade union on whose
behalf he has made the deductions.
(3) A collective
bargaining agent shall maintain with any Scheduled Bank or with
a Post Office Saving Bank an account to which shall be credited
the entire amount deducted by the employer under sub-section (1)
from the wages of the members of the trade union.
(4) The employer
shall provide facilities to the collective bargaining agent for
ascertaining whether deductions from the wages of its members
are being made under sub-section (1).
22. Performance
of functions pending ascertainment of collective bargaining
agent .- Any act or function which is by this Ordinance
required to be performed by, or has been conferred upon, a
collective bargaining agent may, until a collective bargaining
agent has been certified under the provisions of this Ordinance
be performed by a registered trade union which has been
recognized by the employer or employers.
[back to top]
Chapter III -
Workers' Participation and Dispute Resolution
23. Shop Stewards
to act as link between labour and management.-(1) In every
establishment in which fifty or more workmen are employed, a
Shop Steward, from amongst the workmen in a shop, section or
department of the establishment shall-
-
(a) be nominated
by the collective bargaining agent, where there is a
collective bargaining agent in the establishment; or
-
(b) be elected
at a secret ballot held in the prescribed manner, where
there is no collective bargaining agent in the
establishment.
(2) The employer
shall provide all such facilities in his establishment as may be
required for the holding of a ballot under sub-section (1), but
shall not interfere with, or in any way influence, the voting.
(3) A Shop Steward
shall hold office for a period of one year from the date of his
nomination or election, as the case may be.
(4) Any dispute
arising out of, or in connection with, the election of a Shop
Steward shall be referred to the Registrar whose decision shall
be final and binding on all parties to the dispute.
(5) A Shop Steward
shall act as a link between the workers and the employer, assist
in the improvement of arrangements for the physical working
conditions and production work in the shop, section or
department for which he is elected and help workers in the
settlement of their problems either connected with work or with
any such individual grievance of a workman as is referred to in
sub-section (1) of section 46.
24. Joint Works
Council.- (1) Every establishment which employs fifty
persons or more, shall set up a Joint Works Council consisting
of not more than ten members in which workers' participation
shall be to the extent of forty per cent and the Convener of the
Council shall be from the management.
(2) The employer's
representatives on the Joint Works Council shall be from amongst
the Directors or their nominees or senior executives and the
workers' representatives shall be the office bearers of
collective bargaining agent or their nominees or from workers
elected in the prescribed manner, in case there is no collective
bargaining agent.
(3) The Joint Works
Council shall deal with the following matters, namely: -
-
(i) improvement
in production, productivity and efficiency;
-
(ii) provision
of minimum facilities for such of the workers employed
through contractors as are not covered by the laws relating
to welfare of workers;
-
(iii) promoting
settlement of differences through bilateral negotiations;
-
(iv) promoting
conditions of safety and health for the workers;
-
(v) encouraging
vocational training within the establishment;
-
(vi) taking
measures for facilitating good and harmonious working
conditions in the establishment;
-
(vii) provision
of educational facilities for children of workmen.
(4) The Joint Works
Council may call for reasonable information about the working of
the establishment from its management and the management shall
supply the information called for.
(5) The Joint Works
Council shall meet at such intervals as may be prescribed.
25. Negotiations
relating to differences and disputes.- (1) If at any time an
employer or a collective bargaining agent finds that an
industrial dispute has arisen or is likely to arise, the
employer or, as the case may be, the collective bargaining agent
may communicate his or its views in writing to the other party.
(2) On receipt of
the communication under sub-section (1), the party receiving it
shall try to settle the dispute by bilateral negotiations within
fifteen days of the receipt of the communication or within such
further period as may be agreed upon by the parties and, if the
parties reach a settlement, a memorandum of settlement shall be
recorded in writing and signed by both the parties and a copy
thereof shall be forwarded to the Conciliator and the
authorities specified in clause (xxvi) of section 2.
(3) Where a
settlement is not reached between the employer and the
collective bargaining agent, the employer or the collective
bargaining agent may, within fifteen days from the end of the
period referred to in sub-section (2), serve on the other party
to the dispute a notice of conciliation, in accordance with the
provisions of this Ordinance.
26. Conciliator.-(1)
The Provincial Government shall, by notification in the official
Gazette, appoint as many persons as it considers necessary to be
Conciliators for the purposes of this Ordinance and shall
specify in such notification the area within which, or the class
of establishments or industries in relation to which, each one
of them shall perform his functions.
(2) The Federal
Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, appoint
as many persons as it considers necessary to act as Conciliators
in such disputes as the National Industrial Relations Commission
is competent to adjudicate and determine under this Ordinance.
(3) A tripartite
Board of Conciliators, hereinafter called the Board, consisting
of men of standing competence shall be appointed on the request
of the party raising the dispute, by the Federal Government or
by a Provincial Government, as the case may be, by notification
in the official Gazette, to conciliate in an industrial dispute
involving more than one establishment in a Province or in an
industry at national level or in an industrial dispute of
national importance, if the negotiations are not satisfactorily
progressing.
(4) The Board
constituted under sub-section (3) shall stand dissolved on the
settlement of dispute or on the failure of conciliation
proceedings.
27. Period of
notice of conciliation.- The period of a notice of
conciliation under sub-section (3) of section 25 shall be
fifteen days.
28. Conciliation
after notice. Where a party to an industrial dispute serves
a notice of conciliation under sub-section (3) of section 25, it
shall, simultaneously with the service of such notice, deliver a
copy thereof to the Conciliator who shall proceed to conciliate
in the dispute and to the Labour Court.
29. Proceedings
before Conciliator.-(1) The Conciliator or the Board shall,
as soon as possible, call a meeting of the parties to a dispute
for the purpose of bringing about a settlement.
(2) The parties to a
dispute shall be represented before the Conciliator or the Board
by persons nominated by them and authorised to negotiate and
enter into an agreement binding on the parties:
Provided that if, in
the opinion of the Conciliator or the Board, the presence of the
employer or any office bearer of the trade union connected with
the dispute is necessary in a meeting called by him, he or, as
the case may be, it shall give notice in writing requiring the
employer or such office bearer to appear in person before him or
it at the place, date and time, specified in the notice and it
shall be the duty of the employer or the office bearer of trade
union to comply with the notice.
(3) The Conciliator
or the Board shall perform such functions in relation to a
dispute before him or it as may be prescribed and may, in
particular, suggest to either party to the dispute such
concessions or modifications in its demand as are in the opinion
of the Conciliator or the Board likely to promote an amicable
settlement of the dispute.
(4) If a settlement
of the dispute or of any matter in dispute is arrived at in the
course of the proceedings before him or it, the Conciliator or
the Board shall send a report thereof to the Provincial
Government or the Federal Government, as the case may be,
together with the memorandum of settlement signed by the parties
to the dispute.
(5) If no settlement
is arrived at within the period of the notice of conciliation,
the conciliation proceedings may be continued for such further
period as may be agreed upon by the parties.
30. Arbitration.-(1)
If the conciliation fails, the Conciliator shall try to persuade
the parties to agree to refer the dispute to an arbitrator, and
in case the parties agree, they shall make a joint request in
writing for reference of the dispute to an arbitrator agreed
upon by them.
(2) The arbitrator
to whom a dispute is referred under sub-section (1) may be a
person borne on a panel to be maintained by a Provincial
Government or the Federal Government as the case may be, or any
other person agreed upon by the parties.
(3) The arbitrator
shall give his award within a period of thirty days from the
date on which the dispute is referred to him under sub-section
(1) or such further period as may be agreed upon by the parties
to the dispute.
(4) After the
arbitrator has made the award, he shall forward a copy thereof
to the parties and to a Provincial Government or the Federal
Government, as the case may be, who shall cause it to be
published in the official Gazette.
(5) The award of the
arbitrator shall be final and no appeal shall lie against it and
shall be valid for a period not exceeding two years or as may be
fixed by the arbitrator.
31. Strike and
lock-out.-(1) If no settlement is arrived at during the
course of conciliation proceedings and the parties to the
dispute do not agree to refer it to an arbitrator under section
30, the workmen, subject to a seven days notice to the employer,
may go on strike or, as the case may be, the employer may
declare a lock-out on the expiry of the period of the notice
under section 27 or upon a declaration by the Conciliator or the
Board that conciliation proceedings have failed, whichever is
the later.
(2) The party
raising a dispute may at any time, either before or after the
commencement of a strike or lock-out, make an application to the
Labour Court for adjudication of the dispute.
(3) Where a strike
or lock-out lasts for more than fifteen days, the Federal
Government, if it relates to a dispute which the Commission is
competent to adjudicate and determine, and a Provincial
Government, if it relates to any other dispute, may, by order in
writing, prohibit the strike or lock-out:
Provided that the
Federal Government may, with respect to a strike or lock-out
relating to a dispute which the Commission is competent to
adjudicate and determine and the Provincial Government, with the
previous approval of the Federal Government may, with respect to
any other strike or lock-out, by order in writing, prohibit a
strike or lock-out at any time before the expiry of thirty days,
if it is satisfied that the continuance of such a strike or
lock-out is causing serious hardship to community or is
prejudicial to the national interest:
Provided further
that the Federal Government or a Provincial Government, as the
case may be, shall prohibit, by an order in the official
Gazette, the commencement of a strike or lock-out, as the case
may be, if the same, in the opinion of the Government concerned,
is detrimental to the interest of the community at large.
(4) In any case in
which the Federal Government or a Provincial Government
prohibits a strike or lock-out, it shall forthwith refer the
dispute to the Commission or, as the case may be, the Labour
Court.
(5) The Commission,
or as the case may be, the Labour Court shall, after giving both
the parties to the dispute an opportunity of being heard, make
such award as it deems fit as expeditiously as possible but not
exceeding thirty days from the date on which the dispute was
referred to it:
Provided that the
Commission, or as the case may be, the Labour Court may make an
interim award on any matter of dispute:
Provided further
that any delay by the Commission or, as the case may be, the
Labour Court in making an award shall not affect the validity of
any award made by it.
(6) An award of the
Commission or, as the case may be, the Labour Court shall be for
such period, as may be specified in the award, but shall not be
for more than two years.
32. Strike or
lock-out in public utility services.- The Federal Government
or a Provincial Government, as the case may be, in the case of a
strike or lock-out relating to an industrial dispute in respect
of any of the public utility services may, by order in writing,
prohibit a strike or lock-out at any time before or after the
commencement of the strike or lock-out and refer the dispute to
a Board of arbitrators comprising serving or retired Judges of
the High Court or of the Supreme Court of Pakistan, as may be
constituted by the respective Government, for compulsory
arbitration.
33. Application
to Labour Court.-Any collective bargaining agent or any
employer may apply to the Labour Court for the redressal of any
grievance or enforcement of any right guaranteed or secured to
it or him by or under any law or any award or settlement.
34. Commencement
and conclusion of proceedings.- (1) A conciliation
proceeding shall be deemed to have commenced on the date on
which a notice of conciliation is received by the Conciliator
under section 28.
(2) A conciliation
proceeding shall be deemed to have concluded-
-
(a) where a
settlement is arrived at, on the date on which a memorandum
of settlement is signed by the parties to a dispute; and
-
(b) where no
settlement is arrived at,-
-
(i) if the
dispute is referred to an arbitrator under section 30,
on the date on which the arbitrator has given his award;
or otherwise,
-
(ii) on the
date on which the period of the notice of conciliation
expires.
(3) Proceeding
before a Labour Court shall be deemed to have commenced-
(a) in relation to
an industrial dispute, on the date on which an application has
been made under section 31 or 33, or on the date on which it is
referred to the Labour Court by a Provincial Government under
section 31 or 32; and
(b) in relation to
any other matter, on the date on which it is referred to the
Labour Court.
(4) Proceedings
before the Commission in relation to a dispute referred to it
under section 31 or 32 or to a dispute raised under section 56
shall be deemed to have commenced on the date on which the
reference is made to it or, as the case may be, the dispute is
raised before it.
(5) Proceedings
before the Commission or a Labour Court shall be deemed to have
concluded on the date on which the award or decision is
delivered under sub-section (1) of section 47.
35. Raising of
industrial disputes.- No industrial dispute shall be deemed
to exist unless it has been raised in the prescribed manner by a
collective bargaining agent or an employer.
36. Prohibition
on going on strike or declaring lock-out while proceedings
pending.- No party to an industrial dispute shall go on
strike or declare a lockout while any conciliation proceedings
or proceedings before an arbitrator or a Labour Court is pending
in respect of any matter constituting such industrial dispute.
37. Powers of
Labour Court and Appellate Court of competent jurisdiction to
prohibit strike, etc.-(1) When a strike or lock-out in
pursuance of an industrial dispute has already commenced and is
in existence at the time when, in respect of such industrial
dispute, there is made to, or is pending before, the Labour
Court, an application under section 33, the Labour Court may, by
an order in writing, prohibit continuance of the strike or
lock-out.
(2) When an appeal
in respect of any matter arising out of an industrial dispute is
preferred to the High Court under section 48, the High Court
may, by an order in writing, prohibit continuance of any strike
or lock-out in pursuance of such industrial dispute which had
already commenced and was in existence on the date on which the
appeal was preferred.
38. Illegal
strikes and lock-outs.- (1) A strike or lock-out shall be
illegal if-
-
(a) it is
declared, commenced or continued without giving to the other
party to a dispute, in the prescribed manner, a notice of
conciliation or in contravention of section 36; or
-
(b) it is
declared, commenced or continued in consequence of an
industrial dispute raised in a manner other than that
provided in section 35; or
-
(c) it is
continued in contravention of an order made under section
31, 32, 37 or sub-section (3) section 39; or
-
(d) it is
declared, commenced or continued during the period in which
a settlement or award is in operation in respect of any of
the matters covered by a settlement or award.
(2) A lock-out
declared in consequence of an illegal strike and a strike
declared in consequence of an illegal lock-out shall not be
deemed to be illegal.
39. Procedure in
cases of illegal strikes or lock-out.- (1) Notwithstanding
anything contained in any other provision of this Ordinance or
in any other law for the time being in force, an office bearer
of the Labour Department not below the rank of Assistant
Director, Labour Welfare, hereinafter in this section referred
to as the Officer, may make enquiries in such manner as he may
deem fit into an illegal strike or illegal lock-out in a factory
and make a report to the Labour Court.
(2) After completing
an enquiry the Officer shall serve a notice on the employer and
the collective bargaining agent or the registered trade union
concerned with the dispute to appear before the Labour Court on
a date to be fixed by the Court.
(3) The Labour Court
may, within ten days following the day on which it receives a
report under sub-section (1), after considering the report and
hearing such of the parties as appear before it, order the
strike to be called off or the lock-out to be lifted.
(4) If the employer
contravenes the order of the Labour Court given under
sub-section (3) and the Labour Court is satisfied that the
continuance of the lock-out is causing serious hardship to the
community or is prejudicial to the national interest, it may
issue an order for the attachment of the factory and for the
appointment of an official receiver for such period as it deems
fit, and such period may be varied from time to time.
(5) The official
receiver shall exercise the powers of management and may
transact business, enter into contracts, give valid discharge of
all moneys received and do or omit to do all such acts as are
necessary for conducting the business of the factory.
(6) The Labour Court
may, in appointment and regulating the work of an official
receiver, exercise the powers of a Civil Court under the Code of
Civil Procedure (Act V of 1908).
(7) If the workers
contravene the order of the Labour Court given under sub-section
(3), the Labour Court may pass orders of dismissal against all
or any of the striking workers and, notwithstanding anything to
the contrary contained in this Ordinance, if the Labour Court,
after holding such inquiry as it deems fit, records its finding
that any registered trade union has committed or abetted the
commission of such contravention, the finding shall have the
effect of cancellation of the registration of such trade union
and debarring all office bearers of such trade union from
holding office in that or in any other trade union for the
unexpired term of their offices and for the term immediately
following:
Provided that the
Labour Court may review its orders if good and sufficient cause
is shown by an affected worker within seven days of the orders
of dismissal.
(8) Subject to any
rules made by a Provincial Government in this behalf, the
Officer may, for the purpose of enquiry under sub-section (1),
within the local limits for which he is appointed, enter with
such assistants, if any, being persons in the service of
Pakistan, as he thinks fit, in a factory where he has reason to
believe an illegal strike or lock-out to be in progress, and
make such examination of the premises and plant and of any
registers maintained therein and take on the spot or otherwise
such evidence of persons and exercise such other powers as he
may deem necessary for carrying out the purposes of this
section.
(9) The Officer
shall have authority to call any party to such dispute to his
office or secure his presence in the factory and shall also have
the power to bind any party to the dispute to appear before the
Labour Court.
(10) Where a party
to an illegal strike or lock-out, on being required or bound
under this section to appear before the Officer or the Labour
Court does not so appear, the Officer or the Labour Court, as
the case may be, may, besides taking such other action as may be
admissible under this Ordinance, proceed ex-parte.
40. Conditions of
service to remain unchanged while proceedings pending.- (1)
No employer shall, while any conciliation proceedings or
proceedings before an arbitrator, the Labour Court or a Court of
competent jurisdiction in respect of an industrial dispute are
pending, alter to the disadvantage of any workman concerned in
such dispute, the conditions of service applicable to him before
the commencement of the conciliation proceedings or of the
proceedings before the arbitrator, the Labour Court or, as the
case may be, any other Court of competent jurisdiction , nor
shall he,-
-
(a) save with
the permission of the Conciliator or the Board, while any
conciliation proceedings are pending; or
-
(b) save with
the permission of the arbitrator, the Labour Court or a
Court of competent jurisdiction, while any proceedings
before the arbitrator, the Labour Court or the High Court
are pending,
discharge, dismiss
or otherwise punish any workman except for misconduct not
connected with such dispute.
(2) Notwithstanding
anything contained in sub-section (1), an office-bearer of a
registered trade union shall not, during the pendency of any
proceedings referred to in sub-section (1), be discharged,
dismissed or otherwise punished for misconduct, except with the
previous permission of the Labour Court.
41. Removal of
fixed assets.- No employer shall remove any fixed assets of
an establishment during the currency of an illegal lock-out or a
strike which is not illegal:
Provided that the
Labour Court may, subject to such conditions as it may impose,
cause to be removed any such fixed assets for safe custody to
avoid damage to such assets due to flood, fire, catastrophe or
civil commotion.
42. Protection of
certain persons.- (1) No person refusing to take part or to
continue to take part in any illegal strike or illegal lockout
shall, by reason of such refusal, be subject to expulsion from
any trade union or to any fine or penalty or to the deprivation
of any right or benefit which he or his legal representatives
would otherwise have been entitled, or be liable to be placed in
any respect, either directly or indirectly, under any disability
or disadvantage as compared with other members of the trade
union.
(2) Any
contravention of the provisions of sub-section (1) may be made
the subject-matter of an industrial dispute, and nothing in the
constitution of a trade union providing the manner in which any
dispute between its executive and members shall be settled shall
apply to proceedings for enforcing any right or exemption
granted by sub-section (1).
(3) In any
proceedings referred to in sub-section (1), the Labour Court
may, in lieu of ordering a person who has been expelled from
membership of a trade union, order to be restored to membership
and he be paid out of the funds of the trade union such sum by
way of compensation or damages as the Labour Court thinks just.
43.
Representation of parties.- (1) A workman who is a party to
an industrial dispute shall be entitled to be represented in any
proceedings under this Ordinance by an office-bearer of a
collective bargaining agent and subject to the provisions of
sub-sections (2) and (3) any employer who is a party to an
industrial dispute shall be entitled to be represented in any
such proceedings by a person duly authorized by him.
(2) No party to an
industrial dispute shall be entitled to be represented by a
legal practitioner in any conciliation proceedings under this
Ordinance.
(3) A party to an
industrial dispute may be represented by a legal practitioner in
any proceedings before the Labour Court, or before an
arbitrator, with the permission of the Court or the arbitrator,
as the case may be.
[back to top]
Chapter
IV - Labour Courts
44. Labour
Court.- (1) A Provincial Government may, in consultation
with the Chief Justice of the respective High Court, by
notification in the official Gazette, establish as many Labour
Courts as it considers necessary and, where it establishes more
than one Labour Court, shall specify in the notification the
territorial limits within which or the industry or the classes
of cases in respect of which, each one of them shall exercise
jurisdiction under this Ordinance.
(2) A Labour Court
shall consist of one Presiding Officer appointed by a Provincial
Government, in consultation with the Chief Justice of the
respective High Court.
(3) A person shall
not be qualified for appointment as Presiding Officer unless he
has been, or is qualified to be, Judge or Additional Judge of a
High Court or is a District Judge.
(4) A Labour Court
shall-
-
(a) adjudicate
and determine an industrial dispute which has been referred
to or brought before it under this Ordinance;
-
(b) enquire into
or adjudicate any matter relating to the implementation or
violation of a settlement which is referred to it by a
Provincial Government;
-
(c) try offences
under this Ordinance and such other offences under any other
law as the Provincial Government may, by notification in the
official Gazette, specify in this behalf; and
-
(d) exercise and
perform such other powers and functions as are or may be
conferred upon or assigned to it by or under this Ordinance
or any other law.
45. Procedure and
powers of Labour Court.- (1) Subject to the provisions of
this Ordinance, while trying an offence a Labour Court shall
follow as nearly as possible summary procedure as provided under
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 ( Act V of 1898 ).
(2) A Labour Court
shall, for the purpose of adjudicating and determining any
industrial dispute, be deemed to be a Civil Court and shall have
the same powers as are vested in such Court under the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), including the powers of-
-
(a) enforcing
the attendance of any person and examining him on oath;
-
(b) compelling
the production of documents and material objects; and
-
(c) issuing
commissions for the examination of witnesses or documents.
(3) A Labour Court
shall, for the purpose of trying an offence under this Ordinance
or the West Pakistan Industrial and Commercial Employment
(Standing Orders) Ordinance, 1968 (W.P. Ordinance VI of 1968),
or any other labour law, have the same powers as are vested in
the Court of a Magistrate of the first class specially empowered
under section 30 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V
of 1898).
(4) No court fee
shall be payable for filling, exhibiting or recording any
document in, or obtaining any document from a Labour Court.
(5) If the parties
to a case, at any time before a final order is passed by a
Labour Court, satisfy the Labour Court that the matter has been
resolved by them amicably and that there are sufficient grounds
for withdrawing the case, it may allow such withdrawal.
46. Redress of
individual grievances.- (1) A worker may bring his grievance
in respect of any right guaranteed or secured to him by or under
any law or any award or settlement for the time being in force
to the notice of his employer in writing, either himself or
through his Shop Steward or collective bargaining agent, within
one month of the day on which cause of such grievance arises.
(2) Where a worker
brings his grievance to the notice of an employer himself or
through his Shop Steward or collective bargaining agent, the
employer shall, within fifteen days of the grievance being
brought to his notice, communicate his decision in writing to
the worker.
(3) If an employer
fails to communicate a decision within the period specified in
sub-section (2) or if a worker is dissatisfied with such
decision, the worker or Shop Steward may take the matter to his
collective bargaining agent or the Labour Court, as the case may
be, and where the matter is taken to the Labour Court, it shall
give a decision within seven days from the date of the matter
being brought before it as if such matter were an industrial
dispute:
Provided that a
worker who desires to take the matter to the Labour Court, he
shall do so within a period of two months from the date of the
communication of the employer or, as the case may be, from the
expiry of the period specified in sub-section (2).
(4) In adjudicating
and determining a grievance under sub-section (3), the Labour
Court shall go into all the facts of the case and pass such
orders as may be just and proper in the circumstances of the
case.
(5) The Labour
Court, in case the termination of services of a workman is held
to be wrongful, may award compensation equivalent to not less
than twelve months and not more than thirty months basic pay
last drawn and house rent, if admissible, in lieu of
reinstatement of the worker in service.
(6) If a decision
under sub-section (4) or an order under sub-section (5) given by
the Labour Court or a decision of the High Court in an appeal
against such a decision or order is not given effect to or
complied with within one month or within the period specified in
such order or decision, the defaulter shall additionally be
punishable with fine which may extend to ten thousand rupees.
(7) No person shall
be prosecuted under sub-section (6) except on a complaint in
writing by a workman if the order or decision in his favour is
not implemented within the period specified therein.
(8) For the purposes
of this section, workers having common grievance arising out of
a common cause of action may make a joint application to the
Labour Court.
47. Awards and
decision of Labour Court.- (1) An award or decision of a
Labour Court shall be given in writing and delivered in open
Court and two copies thereof shall be forwarded forthwith to a
Provincial Government, provided that if the Federal Government
be a party, two copies of the award or decision shall be
forwarded to that Government as well.
(2) A Provincial
Government shall, within a period of one month from the receipt
of the copies of the award or decision, publish it in the
official Gazette.
(3) Any party
aggrieved by an award given under sub-section (1) or a decision
given under section 46 or on an application made under section
33 or a sentence passed in an offence tried by the Labour Court
under clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 44 may prefer an
appeal to the High Court within thirty days of the delivery or
passing thereof and the decision of the High Court in such
appeal shall be final.
(4) Save as
otherwise expressly provided in this Ordinance, all decisions
of, and all sentences passed by, a Labour Court shall be final
and shall not be called in question in any manner by or before
any court or other authority.
48. Appeal to the
High Court.- (1) The High Court may, on appeal, confirm, set
aside, vary or modify the award or decision given under section
46 or 33 or a sentence passed under clause (c) of sub-section
(4) of section 44 and shall exercise all the powers conferred by
this Ordinance on the Labour Court, save as otherwise provided.
(2) The decision of
the High Court shall be delivered as expeditiously as possible,
within a period of sixty days following the filing of an appeal,
provided that such decision shall not be rendered invalid by
reason of any delay in its delivery.
(3) The High Court
may, on its own motion, at any time, call for the record of any
case or proceedings under this Ordinance in which a Labour Court
within its jurisdiction has passed an order, for the purpose of
satisfying itself as to the correctness, legality, or propriety
of such order, and may pass such order, in relation thereto as
it thinks fit:
Provided that no
order under this sub-section shall be passed revising or
modifying any order adversely affecting any person without
giving such person a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
(4) The High Court,
subject to its appellate jurisdiction, shall punish for contempt
of its authority, or that of any Labour Court with a fine which
may extend to twenty five thousand rupees.
(5) Any person if
sentenced with a fine exceeding twenty thousand rupees by a
single bench of a High Court under sub-section (4) may prefer an
appeal to the division bench of that High Court.
(6) A High Court
may, on its motion or on the application of any party, transfer
any application or proceeding from a Labour Court within its
jurisdiction to any other Labour Court.
(7) Notwithstanding
anything contained in sub-section (3), if, in an appeal
preferred to it against the order of a Labour Court directing
the re-instatement of a workman or compensation in lieu thereof,
the High Court makes an order staying the operation of the order
of the Labour Court, the High Court shall decide such appeal as
soon as possible but not later than sixty days.
[back to top]
Chapter
V - National Industrial Relations Commission
49. National
Industrial Relations Commission.-(1) The Federal Government
shall constitute a National Industrial Relations Commission
consisting of not more than eight members, including its
Chairman.
(2) The Chairman and
the members shall be appointed by the Federal Government.
(3) The
qualification and terms and conditions of service for
appointment as Chairman and member of the Commission shall be
such as may be determined by the Federal Government.
(4) The functions of
the Commission shall be to-
-
(a) adjudicate
and determine an industrial dispute to which an
industry-wise trade union or a federation of such trade
unions is a party and any other industrial dispute which, in
the opinion of the Federal Government, is of national
importance and is referred to it by that Government;
-
(b) register
industry-wise trade unions, federations of such trade unions
and federations at the national level and carry out ratings
of the trade unions and federations registered by it in
terms of their standing and representative character;
-
(c) determine
the collective bargaining agents amongst industry-wise trade
unions, federations of such trade unions and federations at
the national level;
-
(d) try offences
punishable under-
-
(i) section
65, other than sub-sections (1) and (5) thereof; and
-
(ii) any
other provisions, in so far as they relate to employers
or workers in relation to an industry-wise trade union,
a federation of such trade unions, a federation at the
national level or office-bearers of such unions or
federation;
-
(e) deal with
cases of unfair labour practices specified in sections 63
and 64 on the part of employers, workmen, collective
bargaining agents, industry-wise trade unions of either of
them or persons acting on behalf of any of them, whether
committed individually or collectively, in the manner laid
down under section 46 or 33 or in such other way as may be
prescribed and to take, in such manner as may be prescribed
by regulations under section 55, measures calculated to
prevent an employer or workman from committing an unfair
labour practice:
Provided that, except during pendency of an industrial
dispute, the Commission shall not grant interim relief
against any action mentioned in section 63(d) of this
Ordinance.
-
(f) advise
Government, industry-wise trade unions and federations in
respect to the education of workers in the essentials of
trade unionism, including education in respect of their
rights and obligations, and to secure the provision of
facilities required therefor;
-
(g) promote
healthy trade unionism whether in establishments within a
Province or in more than one Province and federations of
such trade unions;
-
(h) facilitate
the formation of federations at the national level; and
-
(i) exercise
such other powers and perform functions as the Federal
Government may by notification in the official Gazette,
assign to it from time to time.
(5) The Commission
may, on the application of a party, or of its own motion-
-
(a) initiate
prosecution, trial or proceedings or take action, with
regard to any matter relating to its functions; and
-
(b) withdraw
from a Labour Court any application, proceedings or appeal
relating to unfair labour practice.
(6) For the purpose
of dealing with a case of unfair labour practice of which the
Commission is seized, the Commission may-
-
(a) proceed
directly with the case;
-
(b) ask the
Registrar within whose jurisdiction the case has occurred or
is likely to occur to enquire into it and submit a report;
or
-
(c) refer the
case to the Labour Court within whose jurisdiction the case
has occurred or is likely to occur, either for report or for
disposal.
(7) The Labour Court
to whom the case is referred under clause (c) of sub-section (6)
shall enquire into it and, if the case was referred to it for
report, forward its report thereon to the Commission or, if the
case was referred to it for disposal, continue the proceedings
and dispose of the case as if the proceedings had originally
commenced before it and grant such relief as the Commission has
the power to grant.
(8) Save as provided
in sub-sections (6) and (7), no Registrar or Labour Court shall
take any action, or entertain any application or proceedings, in
respect of any matter which falls within the jurisdiction of the
Commission.
(9) Nothing in this
section shall be deemed to exclude the jurisdiction of a Labour
Court to entertain cases of unfair labour practices on the part
of employers or workmen, whether individually or collectively:
Provided that no
Court, including a Labour Court, shall take any action or
entertain any application or proceedings in respect of a case of
unfair labour practice which is being dealt with by the
Commission.
Explanation.-
In this section and in the succeeding provision of this
Ordinance, the expressions "industry-wise trade unions",
"federation of such trade unions" and "federation at the
national level" refer to a trade union, membership of which
extends to establishments in more than one Province and a
federation of trade unions whose membership extends to
registered trade unions in more than one Province.
50. Benches of
the Commission, etc.- (1) The Chairman of the Commission
shall exercise general superintendence over its affairs.
(2) For the
efficient performance of the functions of the Commission, the
Chairman of the Commission shall constitute-
-
(a) a Full Bench
of the Commission which shall consist of not less than three
members of the Commission; and
-
(b) as many
other Benches of the Commission consisting of one or more
members of the Commission as he may deem fit.
(3) The Benches
shall-
-
(a) in relation
to cases based on allegations of unfair labour practices
brought before the Commission for trial of offences, or
enforcement of, or for redress of individual grievances in
respect of any right guaranteed or secured to any employer
or worker by or under any law or any award or settlement,
perform such functions and exercise such powers as are
performed and exercised by a Labour Court; and
-
(b) in relation
to industry-wise trade unions, federations of such trade
unions, federations at the national level and cases referred
to the Commission, perform such functions and exercise such
powers as are performed and exercised by a Registrar or a
Labour Court in relation to trade unions and federations of
trade unions within a Province,
and, for this
purpose, any reference in this Ordinance to a "Registrar" or
"Labour Court", as the case may be, shall be deemed to be a
reference to the appropriate Bench of the Commission to which
such functions are assigned:
Provided that, in
the performance of those functions and in the exercise of those
powers, the Benches shall, unless otherwise provided in this
Ordinance, follow the procedure laid down in the regulations to
be made under section 55.
(4) If any member of
the Commission is absent from, or is otherwise unable to attend
any sitting of the Commission or of a Bench consisting of more
than one member of which he is a member, the proceedings of the
Commission or Bench may continue, and the decision or award may
be given or judgment or sentence may be passed in the absence of
such member and no act, proceedings, decision, or award of the
Commission or Bench shall be invalid or be called in question
merely on the ground of such absence or of the existence of
vacancy in or any defect in the constitution of the Commission
or Bench.
(5) If the members
of a Bench differ in opinion as to the decision to be given on
any point-
-
(a) the point
shall be decided according to the opinion of the majority,
if there is a majority; and
-
(b) if the
members are equally divided, they shall state the point on
which they differ and the case shall be referred by them to
the Chairman for hearing on such point by one or more of the
other members of the Commission and such point shall be
decided according to the opinion or the majority of the
members of the Commission who have heard the case, including
those who first heard it:
Provided that if
upon any matter requiring the decision of a Bench which includes
the Chairman of the Commission as one of its members, there is a
difference of opinion among its members and the members so
constituting the Bench are equally divided, the opinion of the
Chairman shall prevail and the decision of the Bench shall be
expressed in terms of the views of the Chairman.
(6) Any order of
decision made, award given, sentence passed, power exercised,
function preformed or proceedings taken by any Bench of the
Commission in accordance with this Ordinance and the order
constituting the Bench shall be deemed to be the order or
decision made, award given, sentence passed, power exercised,
function performed or proceedings taken, as the case may be, by
the Commission.
Explanation.-
In this section, the expression 'the Chairman of the Commission'
includes such member of the Commission (to be known as Senior
Member) as the Federal Government may nominate to perform the
functions and exercise the powers of the Chairman during his
absence.
51.
Additional powers of the Commission.-In addition to the
powers which the Commission has under section 50-
(a) the Commission
shall have power to punish any person who obstructs or abuses
its process or disobeys any of its order or directions or does
anything which tends to prejudice the case of a party before it,
or tends to bring it or any of its members in relation to
proceedings of the Commission into hatred or contempt, or does
anything which , by law, constitutes contempt of court, with
fine which may extend to forty thousand rupees; and
(b) for the purpose
of any investigation, inquiry or adjudication to be made by the
Commission under this Ordinance, the Chairman or any member of
the Commission may at any time between the hours of sunrise and
sunset, and any other person authorized in writing by the
Chairman or any member of the Commission in this behalf may,
after he has given reasonable notice, enter any building,
factory, workshop, or other place or premises whatsoever and
inspect the same or any work, machinery, appliance or article
therein or interrogate any person therein in respect of anything
situated therein or any matter relevant to matters before the
Commission.
52. Appeals.-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Ordinance, or in
any other law for the time being in force, any person aggrieved
by an award or decision given or a sentence or order determining
and certifying a collective bargaining unit passed by any Bench
of the Commission, other than a Full Bench, may, within thirty
days of such award, decision, sentence or order, prefer an
appeal to the Commission.
(2) An appeal
preferred to the Commission under sub-section (1) shall be
disposed of by the Full Bench of the Commission which shall have
the power to confirm, set aside, vary or modify such award,
decision, sentence or order.
53. Finality of
order.- No Court shall entertain any plea as to the
jurisdiction of the Commission or an application or as to the
legality or propriety of anything done or purporting to be done
by the Commission or any of its Benches, and no order, decision,
judgment or sentence be called in question in any manner
whatsoever, in or before any Court or authority.
54.
Determination, etc., of collective bargaining unit.- (1)
Where the Commission, on an application made in this behalf, by
a trade union of workmen or a federation of such trade unions,
or on a reference made by the Federal Government, after holding
such inquiry as it deems fit, is satisfied that for safeguarding
the interest of the workmen employed in an establishment or
group of establishments belonging to the same employer and the
same industry, in relation to collective bargaining, it is
necessary, just and feasible to determine one or more collective
bargaining units of such workmen in such establishment or group
of establishments, it may, having regard to the distribution of
workers, existing boundaries of the components of such
establishment or group of establishments, facilities of
communication, general convenience, sameness or similarity of
economic activity and other cognate factors-
-
(a) determine
and certify one or more collective bargaining units in such
establishment or group of establishments;
-
(b) specify the
modifications which, in consequence of the decision under
this section, shall take effect in regard to the
registration of the trade unions and federations of trade
unions affected by among such unions and federations,
nomination or election of Shop Stewards, and workers'
representatives for participation in the management of the
factories, if any, affected by such decision;
-
(c) specify the
date or dates from, and the period for which, all or any of
such changes shall take effect:
Provided that the date so specified shall not be a date
falling within the period of three years specified in
sub-section (11) of section 20 in its application to a
collective bargaining agent certified in respect of an
establishment or establishments:
Provided further that, after the receipt of a reference for
determination of a collective bargaining unit, the
Commission may stop or prohibit the proceedings to determine
collective bargaining agent under section 20 for any
establishment or group of establishments which is likely to
be affected by a decision made under this section.
-
(d) take such
measures or issue such directions to the Registrar as may be
necessary to give effect to such modifications; and
-
(e) determine
and certify a collective bargaining agent for each such unit
in accordance with section 20, in so far as applicable and
with necessary modifications, if such a unit relates to more
than one Province, or direct the Registrar to take such
action, if such a unit relates to only one Province.
(2) Where the
Commission issues any directions to the Registrar under this
section, the Registrar shall comply with them within such period
as the Commission may from time to time determine.
(3) After the
certification of a collective bargaining unit, no trade union
shall be registered in respect of that unit except for the whole
of such unit and no certification or proceedings for
determination of collective bargaining agent under section 20
shall take place for a part of a collective bargaining unit or a
group of collective bargaining units.
(4) An order of the
Commission under this section shall have effect notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in this Ordinance.
55. Power to make
regulations.- (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Ordinance, the Commission may, with the prior approval of the
Federal Government, make such regulations relating to its
procedure and the performance of its functions as it may deem
fit.
(2) In particular
and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power,
such regulations may provide for all or any of the following
matters, namely:-
-
(a) registration
on industry-wise trade unions, federations of such trade
unions and federations at the national level, and the
procedure for such registration;
-
(b)
determination of collective bargaining units;
-
(c)
determination of collective bargaining agent from amongst
the industry-wise trade unions, federations of such trade
unions or, as the case may be, federations at the national
level, and the procedure therefor;
-
(d) procedure,
including rules of evidence, for adjudication of industrial
disputes;
-
(e) procedure,
including rules of evidence, for trial of offences;
-
(f) procedure
for dealing with unfair labour practices;
-
(g)
superintendence of the Chairman over the affairs of the
Commission;
-
(h) forms of
registers, processes and returns in respect of matters
relating to the functions of the Commission; and
56. Raising of
industrial dispute by a federation.- (1) Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Ordinance, a federation of
industry-wise trade unions or a federation at the national level
may, if it is a collective bargaining agent, raise an industrial
dispute affecting all employers or workers of the establishments
represented by that federation and a decision of the Commission
shall be binding on all such employers and workers.
(2) No collective
bargaining agent shall, at any time when a decision of the
Commission in respect of any matter is effective, be entitled to
raise a demand relating to that matter.
[back to top]
Chapter
VI - Authorities
57. Registrar of
trade unions.- For the purpose of this Ordinance, a
Provincial Government may, by notification in the official
Gazette, appoint as many persons as it considers necessary to be
Registrars of trade unions and where it appoints more than one
Registrar, it shall specify in the notification the area within
which each one of them shall exercise and perform the powers and
functions under this Ordinance.
58. Powers and
functions of Registrar.-The functions and powers of the
Registrar shall be-
-
(a) to register
the trade unions under this Ordinance and maintain a
register for that purpose;
-
(b) to lodge, or
authorize any person to lodge, complaints with the Labour
Court for action, including prosecution, against trade
unions, employers, workers or other persons for any alleged
offence or any unfair labour practice or violation of any
provision of this Ordinance or for expending the funds of a
trade union in contravention of the provisions of its
constitution;
-
(c) to determine
as to which one of the trade unions in an establishment or
group of establishments or an industry is entitled to be
certified as the collective bargaining agent in relation to
that establishment or group of establishments or industry;
-
(d) to inspect
the accounts and records of the registered trade unions,
investigate or hold such inquiry as he deems fit, either
himself or through any officer subordinate to, and
authorized in writing in this behalf by, him; and
-
(e) to perform
such other functions and exercise such other powers as may
be prescribed.
[back to top]
Chapter
VII - Decisions, Settlements and Awards
59. Settlement
and awards on whom binding.-(1) A settlement arrived at in
the course of a conciliation proceeding or otherwise between
employer and a collective bargaining agent or an award of
arbitrator published under section 30, or an award or decision
of a Labour Court delivered under section 47, or the decision of
a High Court under section 48 shall be-
-
(a) binding on
all parties to an industrial dispute;
-
(b) binding on
all other parties summoned to appear in any proceeding
before a Labour Court as parties to an industrial dispute,
unless the Labour Court specifically otherwise directs in
respect of any such party;
-
(c) binding on
the heirs, successors or assigns of an employer in respect
of the establishment to which an industrial dispute relates
where the employer is one of the parties to that dispute;
and
-
(d) binding,
where a collective bargaining agent is one of the parties to
a dispute, on all workmen who were employed in the
establishment or industry to which an industrial dispute
relates on the date on which the dispute first arose or who
are employed therein after that date:
Provided that, where a collective bargaining agent or a
trade union performing the functions of a collective
bargaining agent under section 20 exists, the employer shall
not enter into a settlement with any other trade union, and
any contravention of this provision shall be deemed to be an
unfair labour practice under section 63.
(2) A settlement
arrived at by agreement between an employer and a trade union
otherwise than in the course of conciliation proceedings shall
be binding on the parties to the agreement.
60. Effective
date of settlement, award, etc.-(1) A settlement shall
become effective -
-
(a) on the date,
if a date is agreed upon by the parties to the dispute to
which it relates; and
-
(b) on the date
on which the memorandum of the settlement is signed by the
parties, if a date is not agreed upon.
(2) A settlement
shall be binding for such period as is agreed upon by the
parties, and if no such period is agreed upon, for a period of
two years from the date on which the memorandum of settlement is
signed by the parties to the dispute and shall continue to be
binding on the parties after the expiry of the aforesaid period
until the expiry of two months from the date on which either
party informs the other party in writing of its intention no
longer to be bound by the settlement.
(3) An award given
under sub-section (1) of section 47 shall, unless an appeal
against it is preferred to the High Court, become effective on
such date and remain effective for such period, not exceeding
two years, as may be specified therein.
(4) The arbitrator,
the Labour Court or, as the case may be, the High Court, shall
specify dates from which the award on various demands shall be
effective and the limits by which it shall be implemented in
each case:
Provided that if, at
any time before the expiry of the said period any party bound by
an award applies to the Labour Court which made the award for
reduction of the period on the ground that the circumstances in
which the award was made have materially changed, may, by order,
after giving to the other party an opportunity of being heard,
terminate the said period on a date specified in the order.
(5) A decision of
the High Court in appeal under sub-section (3) of section 48
shall be effective from the date of award.
(6) Notwithstanding
the expiry of the period for which an award is to be effective
under sub-section (3), the award shall continue to be binding on
the parties until the expiry of two months from the date on
which either party informs the other party in writing of its
intention no longer to be bound by the award.
61.
Interpretation of awards and settlements.- (1) If any
difficulty or doubt arises as to the interpretation of any
provisions of an award or settlement, it shall be referred to
the High Court.
(2) The High Court
to which a matter is referred under sub-section (1) shall, after
giving the parties an opportunity of being heard, decide the
matter and its decision shall be final and binding on the
parties.
62. Recovery of
money due from an employer under an award or settlement.-
(1) Any money due from an employer under an award, settlement or
decision of the arbitrator, Labour Court or High Court may be
recovered as arrears of land revenue or as a public demand if,
upon an application of the person entitled to the money, the
Labour Court so directs.
(2) Where any
workman is entitled to receive from the employer any benefit,
under an award, settlement or decision of the arbitrator, the
Labour Court or High Court, which is capable of being computed
in terms of money, the amount at which such benefit shall be
computed may, subject to the rules made under this Ordinance, be
determined and recovered as provided for in sub-section (1) and
paid to the workman concerned by a specified date.
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Chapter
VIII - Penalties and Procedures
63. Unfair labour
practices on the part of employers.- (1) No employer or an
association of employers and no person acting on behalf of
either shall -
-
(a) impose any
condition in a contract of employment seeking to restrain
the right of a person who is a party to such contract to
join a trade union or continue his membership of a trade
union; or
-
(b) refuse to
employ or refuse to continue to employ any person on the
ground that such person is or is not, a member or
office-bearer of a trade union; or
-
(c) discriminate
against any person in regard to any employment, promotion,
condition of employment or working condition on the ground
that such person is or is not, a member or office-bearer
of a trade union; or
-
(d) dismiss,
discharge, remove from employment or transfer a workman or
injure him in respect of his employment by reason that the
workman-
-
(i) is or
proposes to become a member or office-bearer of a trade
union; or
-
(ii)
participates in the promotion, formation or activities
of a trade union;
-
(e) induce any
person to refrain from becoming, or to cease to be a member
or office-bearer of a trade union, by conferring or offering
to confer any advantage on, or by procuring or offering to
procure any advantage for such person or any other person;
or
-
(f) compel or
attempt to compel any office-bearer of a collective
bargaining agent to arrive at a settlement by using
intimidation, coercion, pressure, threat, confinement to a
place, physical injury, disconnection of water, power or
telephone facilities or by such other methods; or
-
(g) interfere
with or in any way influence the balloting provided for in
section 20; or
-
(h) recruit any
workman during the period of notice of strike under section
31 or during the currency of a strike which is not illegal
except where the Conciliator has, being satisfied that
complete cessation of work is likely to cause serious damage
to the machinery or installations, permitted temporary
employment of a limited number of workmen in the section
where the damage is likely to occur; or
-
(i) close down
the whole of an establishment in contravention of Standing
Order 11A of the West Pakistan Industrial and Commercial
Employment (Standing Orders) Ordinance, 1968 (West Pakistan
Ordinance No.VI of 1968); or
-
(j) commence,
continue, instigate or incite others to take part in, or
expend or supply money or otherwise act in furtherance or
support of, an illegal lock-out.
(2) Nothing in
sub-section (1) shall be deemed to preclude an employer from
requiring that a person upon his appointment or promotion to
managerial position shall cease to be, and shall be disqualified
from being, a member or office-bearer of a trade union of
workmen.
64. Unfair labour
practices on the part of workmen.- (1) No workman, a trade
union of workmen or any of its members or office-bearers, or any
other person shall-
-
(a) persuade a
workman to join or refrain from joining a trade union during
working hours; or
-
(b) intimidate
any person to become, or refrain from becoming, or to
continue to be or to cease to be a member or office-bearer
of a trade union; or
-
(c) induce any
person to refrain from becoming, or cease to be a member or
office-bearer of a trade union by intimidating or conferring
or offering to confer any advantage on or by procuring or
offering to confer any advantage on or by procuring or
offering to procure any advantage for such person or any
other person; or
-
(d) compel or
attempt to compel the employer to accept any demand by using
intimidation, coercion, pressure, threat, confinement or
ouster from a place, dispossession, assault, physical
injury, disconnection of telephone, water or power
facilities or by such other methods; or
-
(e) compel or
attempt to compel any member of a body, bipartite or
tripartite or of any composition, relating to the
functioning of the industry or is in place for the benefit
of workers, to accept any demand by using intimidation,
coercion, pressure, threat, confinement or ouster from a
place, dispossession, assault, physical injury or by such
other methods; or
-
(f) commence,
continue, instigate or incite others to take part in or
expend or supply money or otherwise act in furtherance or
support of an illegal strike or adopt go-slow measures; or
-
(g) carry any
arms or weapons within the premises of an employer without
any legal authority.
Explanation.-
In clause (f) the expression 'go slow' means an organized,
deliberate and purposeful slowing down of normal output, or the
deterioration of the normal quality, of work by a body of
workmen acting in a concerted manner, but does not include the
slowing down of normal output, or the deterioration of the
normal quality, of work which is due to mechanical defect,
break-down of machinery, failure or defect in power-supply or in
the supply of normal materials and spare parts of the machinery.
(2) It shall be an
unfair labour practice for a trade union to interfere with a
ballot held under section 20 by the exercise of undue influence,
intimidation, impersonation or bribery through its executive or
through any person acting on its behalf.
65. Penalty for
unfair labour practices.- (1) Whoever contravenes the
provisions of section 10 shall be punishable with fine which may
extend to twenty thousand rupees.
(2) Whoever
contravenes the provisions of section 63 shall be punishable
with fine which may extend to thirty thousand rupees.
(3) Whoever
contravenes the provisions of section 64, other than those of
clause (d) of sub-section (1) thereof shall be punishable with
fine may extend to twenty thousand rupees.
(4) An office-bearer
of a trade union, a workman, or a person other than a workman,
who contravenes, or abets the contravention of, the provisions
of clause (d) of sub-section (1) of section 64 shall be
punishable with fine which may extend to thirty thousand rupees.
(5) Where the person
accused of an offence under sub-section (4) is an office-bearer
of trade union, the Court may, in addition to any other
punishment which it may award to such person under that
sub-section, direct that he shall cease to hold the office of an
office-bearer and be disqualified from holding any office in any
trade union during the term immediately following the term in
which he so ceases to hold the office.
(6) Whoever
contravenes the provisions of section 41 shall be punishable
with fine which may extend to fifty thousand rupees.
(7) Nothing in this
Ordinance shall be deemed to exclude the jurisdiction of a
Labour Court or the court of a Magistrate to try a case under
this section if it is authorized to do so by a general or
special order of the Commission.
(8) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any law, custom, usage,
constitution of a trade union, memorandum and articles of
association of a company or agreement, no fine paid or payable
due to conviction under this Ordinance shall be debitable
against the accounts of any establishment.
66. Penalty for
committing breach of settlement.- Whoever commits any breach
of any term of any award, settlement or decision which is
binding on him under this Ordinance shall be punishable with a
fine of twenty thousand rupees for each offence.
67. Penalty for
failing to implement settlement, etc.- Whoever willfully
fails to implement any term of any settlement, award or decision
which it is his duty under this Ordinance to implement, shall be
punishable with a fine which may extend to twenty thousand
rupees, and, in the case of continuing failure, with a further
fine which may extend to five thousand rupees for every day
after the first day during which the failure continues.
68. Penalty for
false statements, etc.- Whoever willfully makes or causes to
be made in any application or other document submitted under
this Ordinance or the rules made thereunder, any statement which
he knows or has reason to believe to be false, or willfully
neglects or fails to maintain or furnish any list, document or
information he is required to maintain or furnish under this
Ordinance or the rules, shall be punishable with fine which may
extend to ten thousand rupees.
69. Penalty for
offences under section 40.- Any employer who contravenes the
provisions of section 40 shall be punishable with fine which may
extend to twenty thousand rupees.
70. Penalty for
embezzlement or misappropriation of funds.- (1) Any
office-bearer or any other employee of a registered trade union,
guilty of embezzlement or misappropriation of trade union funds
shall be liable to a fine double the amount found by the Court
to have been embezzled or misappropriated.
(2) Upon
realization of the amount of fine referred to in sub-section
(1), it may be reimbursed by the Court to the trade union
concerned.
71. Penalty for
other offences.- Whoever contravenes, or fails to comply
with any of the provisions of this Ordinance shall, if no other
penalty is provided by this Ordinance for such contravention or
failure, be punishable with fine which may extend to five
thousand rupees.
72. Offences to
be non-cognizable.- Notwithstanding anything contained in
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of 1898), no police
officer shall be competent to arrest without warrant an employer
or a worker for an offence under this Ordinance other than the
offence of illegal strike or illegal lockout continued in
contravention of an order made under sub-section (3) of section
39.
73. Offences by
corporations.- Where the person guilty of any offence under
this Ordinance is a company or other body corporate, every
director, manager, secretary or other officer or agent thereof
shall, unless he proves that the offence was committed without
his knowledge or consent or that he exercised all due diligence
to prevent the commission of the offence, be deemed to be guilty
of such offence:
Provided that, where
a company has intimated to Government in writing the name of any
of its directors resident in Pakistan whom it has nominated for
the purpose of this section and the offence is committed while
such director continues to be so nominated, only such director
shall be deemed to be guilty of such offence.
74. Trial of
offences.- Save as provided in this Ordinance, no Court
other than a Labour Court or any other Court of competent
jurisdiction shall try any offence punishable under this
Ordinance.
[back to top]
Chapter
IX - Miscellaneous
75. Certain
matters to be kept confidential.-There shall not be included
in any report, award or decision under this Ordinance any
information obtained by an arbitrator, inspector, Registrar,
Conciliator, Labour Court or High Court in the course of any
investigation or inquiry as to a trade union or as to any
individual business (whether carried on by a person, firm or
company) which is not available otherwise than through the
evidence given before such authority, if the concerned trade
union, person, firm or company has made a request in writing to
the authority that such information shall be treated as
confidential, nor shall such Conciliator or Board or any person
present at or concerned in such proceedings disclose any such
information without the consent in writing of the Secretary of
such trade union or the person, firm or company, as the case may
be:
Provided that
nothing contained in this section shall apply to disclosure of
any such information for the purpose of prosecution under
section 193 of the Pakistan Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860).
76. Indemnity.-No
suit, prosecution or other legal proceedings shall lie against
any person for anything which is in good faith done or intended
to be done in pursuance of this Ordinance or any rules made
there under.
77. Registrar,
etc., to be public servants.-A Registrar, Conciliator, Board
of Conciliators, the Presiding Officer of a Labour Court, and
the Chairman and members of the Commission shall be deemed to be
public servants within the meaning of section 21 of the Pakistan
Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860).
78. Limitation.-The
provisions of section 5 of the Limitation Act, 1908 (IX of
1908), shall apply in computing the period within which an
application is to be made, or any other thing is to be done,
under this Ordinance.
79. Power to make
rules.-(1) The Federal Government may, by notification in
the official Gazette, make rules for carrying out the purposes
of this Ordinance, in relation to the Commission.
(2) Except as
provided in sub-section (1), a Provincial Government may, in
consultation with the Federal Government, make rules for
carrying out the purposes of this Ordinance, provided that such
rules shall not be inconsistent with the rules made by the
Federal Government under sub-section (1).
(3) Rules made under
this section may provide that a contravention thereof shall be
punishable with fine which may extend to five thousand rupees.
80. Repeal
and savings.- (1) The Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969
(XXIII of 1969), is hereby repealed.
(2) Notwithstanding
the repeal of the Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969 (XXIII of
1969), hereinafter to be called the repealed Ordinance, and
without prejudice to the provisions of sections 6 and 24 of the
General Clauses Act, 1897 (X of 1897)-
-
(a) every trade
union existing immediately before the commencement of this
Ordinance, which was registered under the repealed Ordinance
shall be deemed to be registered under this Ordinance and
its constitution shall continue in force until altered or
rescinded;
-
(b) anything
done, rules made, notification or order issued, officer
appointed, Court constituted, notice given, proceedings
commenced or other actions taken under the repealed
Ordinance shall be deemed to have been done, made, issued,
appointed, constituted, given, commenced or taken, as the
case may be, under the corresponding provision of this
Ordinance; and
-
(c) any document
referring to the repealed Ordinance relating to industrial
relations shall be construed as referring to the
corresponding provisions of this Ordinance.
-
(d) The appeals
pending in the Labour Appellate Tribunals shall stand
transferred to the respective High Courts from the date of
commencement of this Ordinance and it shall not be necessary
for the High Court to recall any witness or to record any
evidence that may have been recorded.
81. Former
registration offices, officers, etc., to continue.-(1) The
offices existing at the commencement of this Ordinance for
registration of trade unions shall be continued as if they had
been established under this Ordinance.
(2) Any person
appointed to any office under, or by virtue of the provisions of
the repealed Ordinance shall be deemed to have been appointed to
that office under or by virtue of this Ordinance.
(3) Any books of
accounts, book, paper, register or document kept under the
provisions of the repealed Ordinance relating to companies shall
be deemed to be part of the books of accounts, book, paper,
register or document to be kept under this Ordinance.
82. Removal of
difficulties.- If any difficulty arises in giving effect to
any provisions of this Ordinance, the Federal Government may, by
notification in the official Gazette, make such order, not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Ordinance, as may
appear to it to be necessary for the purpose of removing the
difficulty:
Provided that no
such power shall be exercised after the expiry of two years from
the coming into force of this Ordinance.
83. Observance of
workers and employers reciprocal rights and obligations.-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the foregoing
provisions of this Ordinance and any other law in force, workers
and employers of an establishment or the industry shall respect
each other's rights and promote the interests of their
enterprise for reasonable return on investments and for its
expansion and growth.
(2) The rights and
duties of workers and employers shall be such as given in
Schedule-II and as may be prescribed.
(3) Workers and
employers both shall promote and foster an atmosphere of mutual
trust, confidence, understanding and cooperation and shall make
every effort to avoid conflict or dispute amongst them and
resolve their differences, if any, through bilateral dialogue
and shall strive to develop good industrial relations for the
efficiency and increased output of the enterprise.
(4) Workers and
employers in their individual capacity as well as through
participative approach, shall take reasonable steps to ensure
compliance with mutual agreements arrived at between them and
follow agreed procedures to achieve the objectives of higher
productivity in the interest of the growth of the enterprise.
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The
Schedule I
[See section
2(xxiii) and 32]
PUBLIC
UTILITY SERVICES
-
The generation,
production, manufacture or supply of electricity, gas, oil,
or water to the public.
-
Any system of
public conservancy or sanitation.
-
Hospitals and
ambulance services.
-
Fire-fighting
services.
-
Any postal
telegraph and telephone services.
-
Railways and
Airways.
-
Ports.
-
Watch and ward
staff and security services maintained in any establishment.
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The
Schedule II
[See section 83(2)]
Rights
and Duties of Workers and Employers
Employer's
Rights
(a) Right to
conduct business.-The employer shall have the right to
manage, control and use the property of his enterprise and
conduct his business in any manner considered appropriate by
him.
(b) Right to
manage.-The employer shall have the right to use available
resources including human resources efficiently and effectively
in the best interest of the enterprise.
Employer's
Duties
(a) While exercising
the right to conduct business and the right to manage the
enterprise, the employer shall act in accordance with the law
and shall comply with the law faithfully.
(b) The employer
shall protect rights of the workers as guaranteed under the law
or secured to them by any award, agreement or settlement in
force.
(c) The employer
shall protect and safeguard the interest of his workers and take
measures within his resources for their socio-economic uplift
and welfare. He shall create an environment congenial for
enhanced productivity of labour and maximum output of the
enterprise.
(d) The employer
shall respect the right of the workers to employment, wages,
decent living and better quality of working life.
Worker's
Right
(a) Right to
work, wage and welfare.-It is the right of a worker to work
according to the job assigned and to receive wages as per agreed
terms and conditions of employment and to such welfare benefits
and safety measures as one is entitled to according to law,
agreement settlement and award.
(b) Right to
freedom of association and collective bargaining and other
rights secured or guaranteed under this Ordinance and other
laws.-Worker has inherent right to trade unionism and
collective bargaining and the right to enjoy the benefits
guaranteed to him under the law, rules and regulations,
settlement, award or agreement.
Worker's
Duties
(a) Worker will
perform his duty, as assigned by the employer or his
representative, according to his best ability with due
diligence, care, honesty and commitment.
(b) Worker will
fully observe norms of organizational discipline.
(c) Worker, in
exercise of his right, will fully respect the rights of the
employer and will cooperate with him in the efficient
performance of the business of the establishment or, as the case
may be, enterprise.
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