A full-scale attack on Ukraine’s labour rights 
 Georgii Sandul, Brave New Europe 
 February 17, 2023 
 The war cannot be used to justify stripping workers of their rights.  Decent labour conditions must be the cornerstone for national security  in wartime 
Georgii Sandul is a lawyer and the director of the NGO Labour Initiatives 
Cross-posted from IPS 
We, Ukrainians, are all living in a state of war. Along with Russia’s  full-scale invasion in February 2022, Ukrainians are facing another  threat: since March we have also experienced a full-scale attack on the  labour rights of all working people in Ukraine. This is, unfortunately,  one of the dominant narratives of the present day, unabated in recent years. 
Clearly, after 24 February 2022, the labour sector could not remain in  its former state and had to change and undergo reforms. Nobody in their  right mind would insist on the same working conditions as before the war  and the full rights and guarantees they were entitled to up till then.  For entirely logical reasons, practices employed before the onset of the  war — such as strikes and peaceful assembly — are now prohibited. 
Systematically undermining worker’s right 
In March, at the very start of the war, the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian  parliament) passed a new law ‘On the Organisation of Labour Relations  During Martial Law’, which unfortunately meant that certain extreme  forms of liberalisation of labour rights became a legal reality. This  law, in fact, contained very few provisions conducive to strengthening  the defence capabilities of the state during a war. However, it did  include several provisions which fundamentally undermined the labour  rights of those who had been working at the frontlines since the start  of the invasion. In particular, the proposed ‘suspension’ of the  employment contract. According to this concept, employees are not  formally dismissed, but in reality, no longer work for or receive a  salary from their company. By allowing employers to unilaterally cancel  the provisions of collective agreements without justification this law  destroyed the foundations of trade union work. Such laws became the  unpleasant reality for hundreds and thousands of people, actively  fighting for democratic change in their workplaces. Employment relations  began to be suspended for no reason at all, even in companies of  strategic importance for the defence of Ukraine. 
Another scandalous legal provision was the law ‘On Amending Certain  Legislative Acts of Ukraine on Optimisation of Employment Relations’,  adopted in July 2022, which released employers from the obligation to  pay an average salary to employees mobilised for the defence of their  country. 
In addition, in summer 2022, the Verkhovna Rada passed a law  substantially reducing the labour rights of those working for small and  medium-sized enterprises (up to 250 employees). This law established a  separate regime to regulate labour relations in these enterprises, where  an individual employment contract was defined as the main document  regulating labour relations. In other words, the employee had to  personally negotiate all the specifics of their employment directly with  the employer. Yet labour law was created precisely for the collective  protection of workers because it is impossible to effectively negotiate  all employment terms and conditions with massive corporations and the like. 
Another innovation adopted during martial law was the introduction into  domestic practice of ‘non-fixed-hour contracts’, known in the West as  ‘zero-hour contracts’. This type of contract does not define standard  working hours and the employee becomes a ‘call-to-action person’.  According to the authors of the document, the law is intended to  regulate the work of freelancers, but in fact it is applicable to any  type of worker. 
The struggle for workers started before the war 
It should be pointed out here that the aforementioned changes blatantly  contradict Ukraine’s ambitions of European integration. Article 296 of  the Association Agreement between Ukraine and the EU states: ‘a Party  shall not weaken or reduce the environmental or labour protection  afforded by its laws to encourage trade or investment, by waiving or  otherwise derogating from, or offering to waive or otherwise derogate  from, its laws, regulations or standards, in a manner affecting trade or  investment between the Parties.’ It is clear that the new changes to  national legislation do not bring our warring country any closer to  becoming a member of the European family. 
Due to the lack of a single coordinated state policy on labour in  Ukraine, highly negative regulations are mixed with the positive results  of the ongoing labour reform. For example, one relatively positive law  that was adopted provided safeguards to prevent bullying (harassment) in  the workplace. 
It is clear that the focus should not only be on the legislative aspect  but also on the practical one. Institutional failure to effectively  protect labour rights was common in Ukraine even before the war. The  lack of due justice and the attempt to paralyse the labour inspectorate  in defiance of the conventions of the International Labour Organisation  had led to impunity for unscrupulous employers even in peacetime.  Ukraine was renowned, for instance, for such disgraceful and very  widespread phenomena as informal employment: in 2021, according to  various estimates, one in five Ukrainians worked in the informal sector,  with no employment rights and no safeguards. 
Yet these are just a few of the challenges the Ukrainian government  faces in the field of labour protection. In fact, the struggle for  labour rights in Ukraine started long before the onset of open warfare  with an external enemy. Ensuring a decent life for every employed person  in Ukraine needs a common front of governmental institutions who must be  aware of their social function, employers focused on retaining labour  during and after the war, and trade unions who must drive not only the  protection of existing but also the achievement of new rights for wage  earners. 
Establishing decent labour conditions in accordance with European and  international standards, as well as developing effective state policy on  the protection of labour rights, must become the cornerstone for  guaranteeing both national security during wartime and the physical  availability of a workforce for post-war reconstruction. The war cannot  be used to justify stripping workers of their rights. 
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Die Ukraine unter Präsident Selenskyj
Entwicklung hin zum »populistischen Autoritarismus«?
Ende 2021 hatte der ukrainische Präsident Wolodymyr Selenskyj die Hälfte seiner ersten Amtsperiode absolviert. Der klare Sieg bei der Präsidentschaftswahl 2019 und die absolute Parlamentsmehrheit seiner Partei »Diener des Volkes« hatten dem politischen Quereinsteiger gute institutionelle Startbedingungen für seine ambitionierte Agenda verschafft. Zweieinhalb Jahre später hat sich das Bild indes stark gewandelt. Immer lauter wird die Kritik der Opposition, Selenskyj arbeite an einer autoritären »Machtvertikale«. swp-berlin
