site.btaTrade Unions Alert International Institutions about Employers' Conduct
Sofia, July 26 (BTA) - The Confederation of Independent Trade Unions in  Bulgaria (CITUB) and the Podkrepa Confederation of Labour have alerted  all the international institutions about "the unprecedented aggression  of the leaders of the nationally represented employer organizations  against social dialogue and the labour force in Bulgaria", CITUB  announced.
 
 A letter calling for support and reaction has been addressed to the  International Labour Organization, the International Trade Union  Confederation, the European Trade Union Confederation, the European  Commission, the European Economic and Social Council and the world  business organizations of which Bulgarian employers are members. Prime  Minister Boyko Borissov and Deputy Prime Minister Valeri Simeonov have  also been sent copies of the letter.
 
 The letter says: "In the last few days the Bulgarian public has  witnessed the unprecedented aggression and cynical conduct of the  leaders of the nationally represented employer organizations against one  of the key values of European democracy - social partnership and social  dialogue. At an official news conference, working people were called  'freeloaders, lazybones and criminals' (Vassil Velev of the Bulgarian  Industrial Capital Association and Bozhidar Danev of the Bulgarian  Industrial Association). The trade unions were called 'harmful',  'obstructive to the country's economic development' and 'unsurprisingly,  [they are] not to be found in many successful companies (Kiril  Domouschiev of the Confederation of Employers and Industrialists in  Bulgaria)."
 
 The trade unions stress that such conduct erodes Bulgaria's image on the  eve of its first stint at the EU Presidency and denigrates core  European values and instruments of social peace, fans hostility and  urges the companies and their managers to wage war on the trade unions  and their chapters. "Intentionally or not, this conduct harms social  peace, which is essential to a predictable economic and social  environment for local and foreign investors and manufacturers. What is  more, this by no means encourages qualified young Bulgarians to stay and  work in their own country," CITUB President Plamen Dimitrov and  Podkrepa's Dimiter Manolov said.
 
 They recall that the role of the social partners and their  responsibilities are enshrined in all EU documents from the Treaty on  the Functioning of the European Union to numerous directives, opinions  and recommendations of the Commission and the Council.
 
 The Presidents of the two unions argue that such statements set a  precedent which can torpedo social peace. They violate the Constitution  of Bulgaria, documents of the ILO, the Charter of Fundamental Rights of  the EU and the EU treaties, and constitute an offence insofar as they  call for undermining the foundations of European democracy and the  State, which are guaranteed by the trade unions, among others.
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