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CLOSING STATEMENT
BY
HON. ALAVI MOWLANA
MINISTER OF LABOUR, SRI LANKA
Mr. Director General
Distinguished Ministers
Excellencies
Ladies and Gentlemen
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As our session draws to
a successful conclusion, I am pleased to congratulate you on the
important and very constructive results achieved. We have had wide
ranging and free discussions on a range of issues, of importance not
only to our Region, Asia, but also to global economic and social
well-being. The themes and issues brought out in the Director-General’s
very perceptive report were scrutinized, analysed and, indeed, tested,
by the practitioners of tripartism in our Region.
The ensuing debate has covered a wide
spectrum of issues that encompassed the most pressing concerns of the
region as a whole, and of individual countries and the actors within
them; the actions which are being taken - by the constituents, and by
the Office itself - to address these concerns; and our priorities for
the future. Our goal has been to outline a set of commitments to
action - for the Office, and for ourselves - against which we can
measure our progress in our pursuit of Decent Work for all our
peoples.
Three issues underlay our debate and
shaped - in some measure - its content.
- The first was the looming recession and the recognition that it
could undermine the advances the region has made in the social field,
unless due attention was paid to ensuring that the hardships that
accompanied the Asian financial and economic crisis of the last decade
do not recur.
- The second issue was that of globalization and its implications for
the labour field. The meeting felt that ILO could help constituents to
meet its challenges and harness its potential while attenuating the
impact of its "darker side".
- The third was poverty, an overriding concern in the Asian region
which has the greatest number of the world’s working poor. Many
delegates contended that employment creation was the best anti-poverty
strategy but warned that it had to be under-pinned by sound
macro-economic and social policies and to be backed by supportive
action which targeted the poorest and most excluded segments of the
population, giving them livelihoods, visibility and voice.
International labour standards, and particularly the core standards
embodied in the Declaration of Fundamental Principles and Rights at
Work, constituted an invaluable tool in this regard.
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A Decent Work Agenda
which integrates fundamental rights at work, greater opportunities for
women and men to secure decent jobs and incomes, social protection and
social dialogue, affords us a policy framework through which we can
address these - and other - challenges which confront our countries
today. However, each country must define its own agenda in the light
of its own priorities, its circumstances and the needs of its people.
While the core elements of the agenda remain the same, its emphasis
would differ from one country to another and must be determined
through a process of dialogue at the national level if it was to be
realistic, implementable and sustainable. The very diversity of the
Asian region precluded a "one size fits all" approach to
Decent Work. The Office should stand ready to assist individual
countries in the process of designing and implementing of these
agendas.
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For many delegates,
employment was the central element of a Decent Work Agenda in Asia at
this point in time. While they were important, in and of themselves,
the other strategic objectives of the Agenda follow on this key issue
and support its realization. Many called attention to the Director
General’s own contention that "without work, there could be no
decent work". This was a sentiment to which the poor and disposed
in Asia would certainly subscribe. The Office could be of considerable
service to its constituents in the Asian region by helping them to
formulate employment frameworks which embodied the Decent Work Agenda.
It could also usefully take this Agenda into the international debate
and ensure that it was reflected in the policies and activities of
other international agencies, notably the international financial
institutions. As a clear reflection of the universal aspirations of
people everywhere, the Decent Work Agenda should work for the ILO’s
constituents at every level of the development debate.
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The Report of the
Meeting and its Conclusions have outlined the commitments to action to
which we have pledged ourselves and the assistance we require of the
ILO. I will not reiterate them at this point but I would like to note
that we have set ourselves a formidable, yet vital, agenda and one
which will best be achieved by cooperation and interaction, within our
own countries, and across the region. I am personally convinced that
the Fourteenth Asian Regional Meeting will see us much further forward
on the road to achieving the goal of Decent Work for all our peoples.
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I wish to thank all the
delegations for their constructive co-operation and thoughtful
contributions. The Director General and his staff, particularly the
Regional Director, deserve all credit for efficient and professional
secretariat support, without which we would not have succeeded. I also
wish to thank Thailand for its warm hospitality and the hotel staff
for their courtesy and efficiency which made our stay that much more
comfortable and our work that much easier.
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I would like to place
on record my particular appreciation of the efficient services
provided by the Secretary of the Meeting, Mme Nicole de Warlincourt
and her staff. Last but not least, a big thank you to the Interpreters
not only for their untiring efforts, but also for making whatever I
said more meaningful!
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May I wish all of you
"bon voyage" to your respective destinations and for those
of you who stay back, a pleasant stay in this friendly and beautiful
country - Thailand.
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Thank you and this
Meeting is adjourned.
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