Pressed by violent street protests, the Panamanian government has approved a bylaw that promises to improve health and safety conditions for workers in the country's burgeoning construction industry, the newswire EFE reports.
The new bylaw answers one item of a list of demands of members of the builders' union, SUNTRACS, who clashed with police last week. Protests grew fiercer with the shooting death of union leader Al Iromi Smith last Tuesday and ended in hundreds of arrests through the week.
President Martín Torrijos and Labor Minister Edwin Salamín signed a presidential decree late Friday, according to a state press release, ordering the new piece of legislation to take effect within 30 days.
The bylaw “is aimed at regulating and promoting security, health and hygiene in construction work, through the application and development of measures and actions needed to prevent risk factors on construction sites, whether public or private,” the statement said.
The measure also obliges construction companies to create committees to oversee the implementation of such health and safety measures.
Though the bylaw responds to workers' demands, its swift approval might not quell further protests or strikes, according to reports by Panamanian media including the daily La Prensa and Pa-Digital.com.pa.
SUNTRACS leaders are calling for demonstrations to continue until the government meets the union's initial list of demands. These include the resignation of the minister of justice and the head of the National Police force, whom labor organizers charge with what they call the “assassination” of Smith, as well as the murders in 2007 of Osvaldo Lorenzo and Luigi Argüelles.
The government said it is investigating Smith's death.
Also high on the list of demands are better wages, a lower cost of living and a freeze on the price of basic groceries, EFE reported.
Today SUNTRACS leaders are expected to be at the ombudsman's office, according to Pa-Digital.com.pa, to push forward their nine-item list.
Some residents, however, are hoping the protests will have already ended. Mario Fonseca, whose office overlooks one of the streets that was in the fray last week, said the demonstrations are a nuisance for Panama, bringing much of the capital to a halt.
Protestors set piles of tires on fire along busy roads and highways across the city, the newswire Reuters reported. Some union workers hurled rocks at the police, who, in turn, launched tear gas at the angry mob.
But Fonseca said what began as an ordinary rally, “hardly any different from the one last year,” turned unnecessarily violent when Smith was killed.
“The killing was the trigger,” Fonseca told The Tico Times over the phone from his office in Panama City's banking district.
“It was unfortunate, but the workers took it as an excuse to throw rocks, break windows… Not a protest, more an act of vandalism.”
He continued, “We are normally a very quiet and peaceful people.” |