JULY 14 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – BISHKEK — Dozens of people protested in central Bishkek against proposed changes to labour laws which they say will reduce the rights of temporary workers.
The main proposed changes focus on making it easier for foreign companies to hire and fire workers.
The government has argued that it needs to update labour laws to crackdown on the “shadow economy” where employers hire people for short periods but do not pay tax.
Protesters said the amendments would help foreign companies dodge paying social security and over-time.
The mood at the protest, which wound its way through central Bishkek under a cloudless blue sky, was angry but calm.
“We are against slavery,” one of the protesters’ banners said.
Many of the protesters were representatives of workers’ unions attached to mines, including the Kumtor mine in the east of the country owned by Toronto-based Centerra Gold. Kumtor is Kyrgyzstan’s single biggest industrial asset.
After the protest, the government said they would set up a working group to look at the demonstrators’ concerns.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 240, published on July 16 2015)