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Artículo

19 May 2022

Autor:
Reuters

Mexico: U.S. labour officials file complaint under the USMCA to probe whether workers at Panasonic auto parts Reynosa factory were denied their rights

"U.S. files third labor complaint in Mexico, on behalf of Panasonic workers", 19 May 2022

...U.S. labor officials asked Mexico on Wednesday to probe whether workers at a Panasonic auto parts factory were denied their rights, marking the third U.S. labor complaint under a new trade deal that aims to improve workplace conditions in Mexico.

The request from the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) follows a petition from a Mexican union asking the U.S. government to probe a Panasonic plant in the northern border city of Reynosa, alleging violations of the 2020 United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).

U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai said in a letter to Mexico's Economy Minister Tatiana Clouthier that the agency was concerned workers at Panasonic Automotive Systems de Mexico were being denied rights to free association and collective bargaining, in breach of the USMCA.

Panasonic Corp of North America said it "respects and supports" those rights and that it did not believe they had been denied. The unit of the Japanese conglomerate added it would cooperate with Mexican authorities...

The Mexican government has 10 days to decide whether to conduct a review. The Economy Ministry said it received the U.S. request and would consult with the Labor Ministry before sending a response.

The Mexican union that requested the inquiry, SNITIS, accused Panasonic of signing a union contract behind workers' backs and of firing several dozen employees who protested. Days after submitting the petition last month, SNITIS won a sweeping vote to become the plant's new labor representation...

Parte de las siguientes historias

México: En nombre de las personas trabajadoras de la planta de Panasonic en Reynosa, EEUU presenta la tercera queja laboral en el marco del T-MEC

México: Peticiones de derechos laborales presentadas en el marco del Acuerdo Estados Unidos-México-Canadá (T-MEC)