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United Nations Global Compact Seeks
Humane Business Practices Worldwide
By: Dr. Uddesh Kohli, CEO, Power
Finance Corporation (India) and IFTDO Past Chair and Past
President
Dr. Uddesh Kohli, CEO, Power Finance
Corporation (India) and IFTDO Past Chair and Past President,
was among the top level participants from 50 transnational
companies invited to a high level meeting by UN Secretary
General Kofi A. Annan. Other participants were from associations
and civil society organisations worldwide. The meeting was
held July 26, 2000 at the United Nations to launch the Global
Compact Programme initiated by the Secretary General. The
Global Compact Programme encourages the private sector and
corporate organisations to embrace, support and enact a set
of core values and responsible business practices in the areas
of labour standards, human rights and environment. These principles
derive from those already adopted by the worlds nations
at prior UN meetings: The UNs Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, the International Labour Organisations
Fundamental Principles on Rights at Work, and the Rio Principles
on Environment and Development. The idea of the Compact is
to get companies to sign on voluntarily to its principles.
The aim is to help strengthen the social
pillars within which any market, including the global market,
must be embedded if it is to survive and thrive. According
to the Washington Post newspaper, For all its growth-enhancing
efficiency and opportunities to pull millions of people out
of poverty
globalisation coexists with inequalities
that threaten its legitimacy: Nearly three billion people
half of all humanity subsist on USD$2 a day or less.
The growth of international rules on trade, and intellectual
property are growing but are not matched by rules on the minimum
conditions of work for workers or other social objectives.
The backlash against globlisation, the U.N. argues, will gather
force until its harsher side is softened.
Business, labour and civil society participants
welcomed the Global Compact as an innovative and timely initiative.
They agreed to work together within the framework of the Compact
to build a more inclusive global market by promoting
broadly shared values and practices that meet global social
needs, and make globalization work for all people.
Under the 9 principles of the Global
Compact Programme businesses should:
Human Rights
1. Support
and respect the protection of internationally proclaimed human
rights
2.
Not be complicit in human rights abuses
Labour
3. Uphold
freedom of association and effectively recognise the right
to collective bargaining
4.
Eliminate all forms of forced and compulsory labour
5. Support
the effective abolition of child labour
6. Eliminate
discrimination in respect to employment and occupation
Environment
7. Support
a precautionary approach to environmental challenges
8. Undertake
initiatives to promote greater environmental responsibility,
and
9. Encourage
the development and diffusion of environmentally friendly
technologies.
Among the implementing actions are:
Advocating
the Compact in enterprise mission statements, annual reports
and similar venues;
At
least once a year, posting on the Global Compact website specific
examples of progress enterprises have made, or lessons they
have learned, in putting the principles into practice;
Joining
with the United Nations in partnership projects, either at
the policy level for instance, a dialogue on the role
of corporations in zones of conflict or at the operational
level in developing countries, such as helping villagers link
up to the Internet, or strengthening small and medium-sised
firms.
The
labor and civil society partners will help build and deepen
the Compact, and lend their expertise and support to designing
and implementing its undertakings.
All
participants agreed to help involve additional actors and
to meet the goal of adding to the Compact coalition 100 large
transnational corporations and 1,000 companies overall from
across the worlds regions within a period of three years.
Business
associations also undertook to initiate concrete plans intended
to advance the goals of the Compact. For example, the International
Employers Association will organise regional workshops before
the end of the year. The International Chamber of Commerce
and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development
propose to use the framework of the Compact to address not
only environmental but also social issues and development
when preparing the business contribution for the Rio-plus-ten
conference in 2002.
The
Secretary-General reiterated his personal commitment to the
initiative. He asked all participants to finalise a priority
plan for collaborative action within the next five months
and announced that he would establish a Global Compact Office
to help make this happen.
VOLUNTARY INITIATIVES OF THE KIND REPRESENTED
BY THE GLOBAL COMPACT ARE NO SUBSTITUTE FOR ACTION BY GOVERNMENTS
AND OTHER ENTERPRISES WORLDWIDE. CONSIDER WHAT YOUR ENTERPRISE
CAN DO.
For further information visit:
www.unglobalcompact.org
Dr. Uddesh Kohli also participated as
Employers Delegate from India in the 88th Session of
the International Labour Conference held at Geneva from May
30 to June 15, 2000. One of the agenda items was human resource
training and development. While addressing the conference,
Dr. Kohli highlighted the role played by IFTDO in worldwide
exchanges of human resource development research and best
practices.
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