US seeks talks with Bahrain on worker rights

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    United States is seeking talks with Bahrain over workers’ rights following a report that cited the deterioration of labor protections in the Gulf state after 2011 unrest, officials said Tuesday.

    Acting United States Trade Representative Demetrios Marantis and acting Secretary of Labor Seth Harris said they had requested consultations over the alleged firings of trade union leaders and sectarian-related discrimination in employment since the March 2011 general strike.

    Such issues would be inconsistent with the labor chapter of the US-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement, they said.

    “Ensuring that workers in Bahrain — and in other countries — can exercise their fundamental labor rights is a top priority for the Obama administration, and we expect that the action we are taking today will produce a collaborative discussion and positive resolution to these important labor issues,” Marantis said in a statement.

    “We look forward to working with Bahrain to improve respect for labor rights through the mechanisms provided by our trade agreement.”

    The request for talks came in the wake of a report last December by the Labor Department that concluded that since the early 2011 labor unrest, a number of trade unionists and leaders were targeted for firing.

    In addition, the report says that Shiite workers are being discriminated against in Bahrain, which is ruled by members of the Sunni Moslem minority.

    Despite having made some efforts to reinstate most of the workers involved in the strike, the report said, Bahrain’s government nevertheless “directly engaged in discrimination on the basis of political opinion and/or religion in the public sector.”

    It also “failed to sanction such discriminatory practices by private sector employers.”

    On Sunday, Bahrain’s cabinet approved a parliamentary proposal to take unspecified action to stop “interference” in the kingdom’s affairs by the US ambassador.

    “The cabinet has approved a proposal by the parliament to put an end to the interference of US Ambassador Thomas Krajeski in Bahrain’s internal affairs,” government spokeswoman Samira Rajab said, according to the official BNA news agency.

    The measure also aims at ending “his repeated meetings with instigators of sedition” — a government term for Shiite protesters who frequently clash with police.

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