The Council of Europe has upheld an earlier ruling permitting members of the Garda Síochána to strike and participate in trade union action.
In
a ruling by the Committee of Ministers – the council’s main
decision-making body – the human rights organisation reiterated the
findings of the European Committee of Social Rights (ECSR) in May which
ruled gardaí should be permitted to strike, negotiate pay and engage in
union action.
That ruling followed a complaint by
the Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors over the Government
ban on their participation in trade union action. In its decision
yesterday, the Strasbourg-based body said it was awaiting a further
response from the Government.
But in its initial response to the
ECSR’s decision, the Government said providing gardaí with the right to
strike “would raise the most serious issues in respect of the capacity
of the State to ensure the maintenance of law and order”.
In
a submission to the Council of Europe in June, the Government stated
that An Garda Síochána’s right to strike was “a particularly sensitive
and difficult issue”. Noting only a “narrow margin” within the ECSR had
voted in favour, the Government said it would only be in the “full
knowledge of all aspects of this issue that full and careful
consideration can be given to any proposed change in the present
arrangements”.
As regards the council’s finding Ireland
was in breach of two articles of the charter in relation to gardaí
participation in employee representative groups and the right to
collective bargaining, the Government said these were being dealt with
in the ongoing review into the Garda.
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