This Act was repealed on 2000-08-25 by Industrial Relations Act, 2000.
Related documents
- Is repealed by Industrial Relations Act, 2000
eSwatini
Industrial Relations Act, 1996
Act 1 of 1996
- Commenced on 19 January 1996
- [This is the version of this document at 1 December 1998.]
- [Repealed by Industrial Relations Act, 2000 (Act 1 of 2000) on 25 August 2000]
Part I – Preliminary
1. Short title and commencement
This Act may be cited as the Industrial Relations Act, 1996 and shall come into operation on such date as the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint.2. Interpretation
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires—“abitrator” means a person listed as an arbitrator by the Labour Advisory Board and approved by the Minister;“casual employee” means an employee whose terms of engagement—(a)provide for his payment at the end of each day, and(b)who is not engaged for a longer period than twenty four hours at a time;“certificate of registration” means a certificate issued under section 25;“collective agreement” means an agreement in writing covering terms and conditions of employment and procedures for the settlement of disputes and grievances, concluded by a joint industrial council, or by an employer, a group of employers, or an employers association on the one hand and an industry union or industry staff association on the other hand;“collective employee representative” means an industry union or industry staff association which has been designated by the Court as the collective representative of all employees or categories of employees in a particular industry included in the designation, or which has been recognised as such under section 43;“collective employer representative” means an employers association which has been designated by the Court as the collective representative of all employers in the industry named in the designation;“collective representative” means “collective employee representative” or” collective employer representative” as the context may require;“Commissioner of Labour” means any person appointed Commissioner of Labour or any other person acting in the capacity of the Commissioner of Labour;“company” means a body corporate and includes a partnership;“Court” means the Industrial Court established under section 4 and the Industrial Court of Appeal established under section 17;“dispute” includes a grievance, a trade dispute and means any dispute over the—(a)entitlement of any person or group of persons to any benefit under an existing collective agreement or work council agreement;(b)existence or non-existence of a collective agreement or works council agreement;(c)disciplinary act, dismissal, employment, suspension from emploment, reemployment or reinstatement of any person or group of persons;(d)recognition or non-recognition of an organization seeking to represent employees in the determination of their terms and condition of employment;(e)application or the interpretation of any law relating to employment; or(f)terms and conditions of employment of any employee or the physical conditions under which such employee may be required to work;“employee” means a person, whether or not the person is an employee at common law, who works for pay or other remuneration under a contract of service or under any other arrangement involving control by, or sustained dependence for the provision of work upon another person but does not include a casual employee;“employer” means a person who employs another person as an employee under this Act and includes the Government, the Swazi National Council or anyone acting on behalf of an employer;“employers association” means an association of employers which seeks to provide collective representation for employers in the negotiation and regulation of relations between employers and employees or between employers and employers;“federation” means a body which is wholly comprised of employers and a combination of employers association, industry unions or industry staff associations as the case may be;“immediate family” means, in relation to a person, such person’s father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, step-father, step-mother, son, daughter, grandson, granddaughter, step-son, step-daughter, brother, sister, half-brother, half-sister, wife, husband, common law wife or common law husband;“industry” means a sector of economic activity where the employers provide a similar service, or are engaged in the production, manufacture, processing, purchase or sale of a similar product or similar products;“industry staff association” means any combination of staff, the principal purpose of which is the regulation of relations between staff and employers within one industry;“industry union” means a combination of employees, other than staff, the principal purpose of which is the regulation of relations between employees and employers in a particular industry;“joint industrial council” means a body constituted for an industry under section 45 and having the duty of negotiating terms and conditions of employment for all employees, other than staff, in that industry;“Labour Advisory Board” means the Board established by section 21 of this Act;“lockout” means a total or partial refusal by an employer or group of employers to allow his or their employees to work, if such refusal is done with a view to inducing compliance with any demand or with a view to inducing the abandonment or modification of any demand;"staff" means an employee who—(a)has authority on behalf of the employer to employ, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote, dismiss, reward, discipline other employees, deal with their grievances, authorise or recommend such action, when the exercise thereof is not solely of a routine or clerical nature, but requires the use of independent judgement; or(b)participates in the making of general company policy; or(c)works in a capacity which requires him to have full knowledge of the financial position of the employer; or(d)has free personal access to other confidential information substantially affecting the conduct of the business of the employer; or(e)combines any of the functions in paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d);“mediation” means the process of settling a dispute through mediators as provided for in section 65;“Minister” means the Minister for the time being responsible for Labour;“office” means an official position in an industry union, industry staff association, employers association or federation as the case may be;“officer” means a person who holds an office in a federation, an industry union, industry staff association, employers association and includes a member of a committee of an industry union, staff association or employers association, or a person employed by such a body as its secretary in a full time or part time capacity;“organisation” means an industry union, industry staff association or an employers association as the context may require;“picketing” means the attendance, by one or more persons, directly involved in a dispute, at or near a place where such persons are normally employed or carry on business, for the purpose of peacefully obtaining or communicating information, or of peacefully persuading any person to work or refrain from working;“President” means the President of the Court;“recognition” means recognition as collective employee representative as provided by section 43;“strike” means a complete or partial stoppage of work or slow down of work carried out in concert by two or more employees or any other concerted action on their part designed to restrict their output of work against their employer, if such action is done with a view to inducing compliance with any demand or with a view to inducing the abandonment or modification of any demand;“undertaking” means—(a)mines, quarries or other works for the extraction of minerals from the earth;(b)undertakings in which articles are manufactured, altered, cleaned, repaired, ornamented, finished, adapted for sale, broken up or demolished, or in which materials are transformed, including undertakings engaged in the generation, transformation or transmission of electricity or motive power of any kind;(c)undertakings engaged in building and civil engineering work, including constructional repair, maintenance, alteration and demolition work;(d)undertaking engaged in the transport of passengers or goods by road, rail or air including the handling of goods at warehouses or airports;(e)any establishment or office, including establishments engaged wholly or mainly in the sale, purchase, distribution, insurance, negatiation, loan or administration of goods or services of any kind;(f)any establishment or administrative service in which the persons employed are mainly engaged in clerical work;(g)any newspaper undertaking;(h)any establishment for the treatment or case of children or aged, destitute, infirm, mentally unfit or sick persons;(i)any broadcasting, postal or telecommunication service, or establishment for the production of cinematographic films;(j)any boarding house, cafe, club, hotel, restaurant, or other establishment for public refreshment or public entertainment;(k)any undertaking employing more than ten persons engaged in(i)the clearing, felling or stripping of trees, or the construction of roads, bridges or tunnels in a forest area;(ii)the cultivation of land and the use of land for the purpose of husbandry, horticulture, fruit growing, seed growing, dairy farming, livestock or poultry keeping, or breeding, grazing of livestock and the preparation of food for livestock;but shall not include—(i)any undertaking, other than an undertaking in which any harmful or dangerous trade or occupation is carried on, in which only members of the immediate family of the proprietors are employed, or(ii)domestic service in a private house;“Works Council” means a body established under Part VI;“Works Council agreement” means an agreement reached by a Works Council under Part VI;3. Power of Minister to exempt
Part II – Establishment and administration of Industrial Court
4. Establishment and composition of Industrial Court
5. Jurisdiction
6. Court practice and procedure
The President, after consulting the Attorney-General and the Chief Justice shall, by notice in the Gazette, make rules to govern the Court’s practice and procedure.7. Representation of parties
Subject to any rules. made under section 6, any party to any proceedings brought under this Act before the Court may represent himself or herself or be represented by a legal practitioner or any other person authorised by such party.8. Evidence and technical irregularities
9. Power of Court to remit matters to parties, order parties to attend, etc.
10. Costs
11. Right of appeal or review
12. Enforcement of Court orders
13. Penalty for contempt of order of Court
A person, organisation or federation held, by the Court to have breached an order of the Court, other than an order referred to in section 9, shall upon conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding E5,000 (Five thousand Emalangeni), or in default of payment to a period of imprisonment not exceeding two years:Provided that the court shall consider each day of a continuing contravention of this section or section 9 as a separate contravention or breach.14. Fine may be ordered to be paid to person suffering loss
If a Court imposes a fine under this Act, and if the Court is satisfied that any person, federation or organisation has suffered monetary loss as a result of the breach which led to the fine, the Court may order the whole or any part of the fine to be paid to that person, federation or organisation.15. Remedial powers of Court in cases of dismissal, discipline or other unlawful disadvantage.
16. Housing
17. Establishment of the Industrial Court of Appeal
18. Appointment of assessors
The Industrial Court of Appeal may, in any case in which it appears to the Court to be expedient, call in the aid of one or more assessors with such special qualification as the Court may think fit and hear such case wholly or in part with the assistance of such assessors.19. Jurisdiction of the Industrial Court of Appeal
20. Rules of Court and Procedure of the Industrial Court of Appeal
The Judge President of the Industrial Court of Appeal in consultation with the Chief Justice and the Attorney-General shall, by notice in the Gazette, make rules governing the Court’s practice and procedure.Part III – Labour Advisory Board
21. Establishment and composition of Labour Advisory Board
22. Duties of the Board
23. Meeting of the Board
Part IV – Employee, staff and employer organisations, federations and international organisations
24. Adoption and registration of constitutions
25. Restriction on activities until constitution registered
An organisation shall not nominate any candidate for election to a joint industrial council, or carry on any activities for or against any candidate in any such election until the constitution of that organisation has been registered with the Commissioner of Labour and a certificate has been issued by the Commissioner to the organisation that such constitution complies with this Act.26. Constitution
The constitution of an organisation shall include the following—27. Organisations to be confined to one industry
28. Right to be or not to be a member and prohibited provisions and practices
29. Annual return from organisations and federations
30. Powers of Commissioner of Labour concerning constitutions and returns of organisations and federations.
31. Powers of Court in regard to constitution and returns etc.
32. Compliance with constitution
33. Improper practices in election of officers
34. Criminal conviction a disqualification for office
35. Disqualification from holding office etc.
36. Deposit and safeguarding of funds
37. Legal status of organisation, federation and officers
38. Defunct organisations or federations
39. No compulsion to join or support organisation
40. Provision for federations
41. International workers’ and employers’ organisations
42. Limitation on non-occupational activities of organisation and federations
43. Recognition as collective employee representative
44. Dues deduction
Part V – Negotiating machinery
45. Joint Industrial Councils
46. Constitution of Joint lndustrial Council
The constitution of a Joint Industrial Council shall provide for—Part VI – Works Councils
47. Establishment of Works Councils
48. Right to submit Works Council constitution to Court
49. Enforcement of agreements reached by a Works Council
Part VII – Collective agreements
50. Collective agreements
51. Procedure by Court on receipt of agreement
52. Status of registered collective agreements
53. Amendments to registered agreements
54. Coverage of registered agreements
Upon application by an affected party, the Court shall determine whether any employer or employee, or any class of employers or employees is engaged or employed in a particular industry or is covered or not covered by a registered agreement.55. Terms more favourable to employees permitted
56. Application to abolish Wages Council
Where a Joint Industrial Council has been established in an industry and the Council reaches a collective agreement covering the terms and conditions of employment in the industry, both parties in the Joint Industrial Council, may apply to the Minister for the abolition of any Wages Council established under the Wages Act, 1964 or any successor thereto applicable to the industry covered by the collective agreement.Part VIII – Disputes procedure
57. Reporting of disputes
58. Contents of report and notice of dispute
59. Powers of Commissioner of Labour on a report
60. Referral of question as to nature of dispute to the Court
61. Action on report by Commissioner of Labour
62. Intervention by Commissioner of Labour
63. Date of report in certain cases
If under this Part more than one date is to be deemed to be the date when a dispute is first reported to the Commissioner of Labour, the date on which the report shall be considered to have been so made to the Commissioner of Labour shall be the date which is last in point to time.64. Resolved dispute
65. Unresolved disputes
66. Strike or lockout procedures
67. Referral of unresolved dispute to Court
68. Strike and lockout action in conformity with this Part
69. Consequences for strike or lockout action not in conformity with this Part
70. Minister may apply for order in national interest
71. Attorney-General may apply for a declaratory order
72. Strike action or lockout prohibited during hearing
73. Strike action or lockouts prohibited in essential services
74. Offence for person or organisation or federation which contribute financial assistance or any other assistance to promote or support strike action or lockout in an essential service
75. Criminal liability of officers of body corporate
76. Civil liability for loss or damage arising from a strike or lockout action
Notwithstanding any other provision in this Act, if as a result of any strike or lockout action whether or not in conformity with this Part, any person suffers any loss or damage, such person may institute any civil action in any appropriate court to seek redress from any person. organisation or federation responsible for causing such strike or lockout action and the court may issue such order as it may deem necessary including an order for sequestration.Part IX – Freedom of association and the right to organise
77. Basic employee rights
An employee may—78. Basic employer rights
An employer may—79. Prohibited employer practices
80. Lawful striker’s right to return to employment
If an employee who has been lawfully on strike, or who has been locked out by his employer, presents himself for work not more than two working days after the end of the strike or lockout, the employer shall reinstate such employee in the employment which he held immediately before the beginning of the strike or lockout, unless material changes to the employer’s operations have resulted in the abolition of such employment.81. Refusal to do strikers’ work
An employee, or number of employees acting in concert, may refuse to do any work normally done by an employee or employees who are lawfully on strike:Provided that such refusal will not endanger the safety of persons or property.82. No interference by public officers
A person holding government office, or acting or purporting to act on behalf of anyone holding such office, shall not exercise any power conferred by or under any law in such a way as to impede the exercise of rights conferred or recognised by this Act.83. Access to employer’s premises
84. Representative’s credentials and requirements as to representation etc.
85. Remedies for breach
86. No encouragement of violence
Part X – Miscellaneous
87. Picketing
88. Expenses
The Minister shall determine the remuneration, including any allowance payable to members of the Court and to any other persons appointed for dig purposes of this Act, and the expenses so incurred shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.89. Code of Practice
90. Regulations
The Minister may prescribe anything under this Act which requires to be prescribed and may make regulations for giving effect generally to the purposes and provisions of this Act.91. Application to Government
This Act shall apply to employment by or under the Government in the same way and to the same extent as if the Government were a private person but shall not apply to—92. Transitional provisions
93. Repeal
History of this document
25 August 2000
Repealed by
Industrial Relations Act, 2000
01 December 1998 this version
Consolidation
19 January 1996
Commenced