Social-Economic Council to meet next month

Serbia's Labor and Social Policy Minister Rasim Ljajić has announced a meeting of the Social-Economic Council for July 4 in Belgrade.

Izvor: Tanjug

Monday, 27.06.2011.

10:17

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Serbia's Labor and Social Policy Minister Rasim Ljajic has announced a meeting of the Social-Economic Council for July 4 in Belgrade. The meeting will be called in order to analyze the measures adopted by the government thus far, he was quoted as saying. Social-Economic Council to meet next month "We'll see what's been done, which elements are moving slowly, in order to undertake appropriate action to speed up the measures we agreed upon," Ljajic told daily Vecernje Novosti. Commenting on a draft law designed to regulate strikes - which seeks to severely restrict workers' right to this form of protest - the minister said there had been "much ado about nothing" in public when it comes to this subject. "This is a working version, which is yet to enter a public debate. I believe many who criticize it did not even read the text," asserted Ljajic. The minister also noted that this piece of legislation was not one of the conditions put before Serbia and its hopes to join the EU, "because seven EU countries have no legislation at all regulating strikes". Rasim Ljajic (file)

Social-Economic Council to meet next month

"We'll see what's been done, which elements are moving slowly, in order to undertake appropriate action to speed up the measures we agreed upon," Ljajić told daily Večernje Novosti.

Commenting on a draft law designed to regulate strikes - which seeks to severely restrict workers' right to this form of protest - the minister said there had been "much ado about nothing" in public when it comes to this subject.

"This is a working version, which is yet to enter a public debate. I believe many who criticize it did not even read the text," asserted Ljajić.

The minister also noted that this piece of legislation was not one of the conditions put before Serbia and its hopes to join the EU, "because seven EU countries have no legislation at all regulating strikes".

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