Allegations: The complainant organizations allege that certain provisions of
Spanish criminal law, and their application by the public authorities, give rise to
excessive criminal sanction which violates the right to strike
- 445. The complaint is contained in communications dated 25 July and 31
October 2014 from the Trade Union Confederation of Workers’ Commissions (CCOO) and the
General Union of Workers (UGT).
- 446. The Government sent its observations in communications dated 19
October 2015, 24 February 2016, and 9 and 24 May 2016.
- 447. Spain has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of the
Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87), the Right to Organise and Collective
Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98), the Workers’ Representatives Convention, 1971 (No.
135), the Labour Relations (Public Service) Convention, 1978 (No. 151), and the
Collective Bargaining Convention, 1981 (No. 154).
A. The complainants’ allegations
A. The complainants’ allegations- 448. In a communication dated 25 July 2014, the complainants denounce a
trend to repress the exercise of the right to strike, based on certain provisions of
Spanish criminal law, and also the increasing use of those provisions by the Public
Prosecutor’s Office and the criminal courts. The complainants allege, firstly, that
article 315.3 of the Criminal Code (hereinafter: CC) provides for long prison sentences
(from three years to four-and-a-half years) and heavy fines (from 12 months and one day
to 18 months) for those who coerce other persons to begin or continue a strike.
According to the complainants, this criminal definition is being applied across the
board with the aim of criminalizing the exercise of the right to strike, specific cases
having occurred in which trade unionists were handed long prison terms because they had
taken part in strike picketing.
- 449. The complainants add that a reading of article 315.3 CC together
with other provisions of the Criminal Code reveals that trade union activity constitutes
a specific factor which aggravates criminal liability inasmuch as: (i) under article
172.1 CC, any person who commits the basic offence of coercion (consisting of using
violence to prevent another from doing something the law does not prohibit or forcing
another to do something he/she does not want to do) shall be liable to imprisonment from
six months to three years, whereas article 315.3 provides for prison sentences of three
to four-and-a-half years for strikers who coerce other persons; (ii) punishment imposed
under article 315.3 CC prevents the convicted person from enjoying the benefits provided
for in articles 80 and 88 relating, respectively, to suspension or substitution, by
alternative penalties, of custodial sentences not exceeding two years; and (iii) the
sentence prescribed in article 315.3 CC is much heavier than that prescribed in article
315.1 CC, which stipulates imprisonment of six months to three years for any person who,
by deceit or by abuse of a situation of need, obstructs or limits freedom of association
or the exercise of the right to strike.
- 450. The complainants also state that: (i) article 315.3 CC lacks clear
criteria regarding the criminal conduct in question, its purpose and the persons who
carry out such acts, with the result that application of this provision by the courts is
highly inconsistent; and (ii) charges of committing a crime under article 315.3 have led
to several prison sentences of longer than three years, despite the fact that in
virtually all the cases no violence occurred. On the basis of the foregoing, the
complainants state that the general definition of the crime of coercion would be
sufficient to eradicate violent behaviour during the exercise of the right to strike,
without the need to incorporate more severe penalties for exercising that right.
- 451. The complainants also append a communication dated 23 July 2014 from
“Judges for Democracy”, a professional association of the judiciary of Spain, in which
the association: (i) criticizes the disproportionate nature of the punishment prescribed
in article 315.3 CC, the existence and wording of which date back to the period before
Spain’s transition to democracy, an era which saw repeated efforts to suppress the right
to strike; (ii) calls for the abolition of this provision, arguing that the right not to
strike is already sufficiently protected through the criminal offence of coercion; (iii)
requests judges to give this provision an especially narrow interpretation which does
not deter the exercise of the basic right to strike; and (iv) points out that in the
context of the acute social conflict that has followed reform of the labour legislation,
260 trade unionists are now undergoing administrative or criminal proceedings and a
number of trade unionists have gone to prison.
- 452. The complainants allege, secondly, that over and above this
deficiency of the criminal legal framework that they denounce, the manner in which the
legislation is applied by the Public Prosecutor’s Office and the criminal courts is a
factor in the violation of the right to strike. In this regard, the complainants state
that: (i) many trade unionists are under threat of long prison terms simply because they
take a leading role in labour disputes; (ii) the Public Prosecutor’s Office and the
criminal courts do not apply consistent criteria in bringing charges for alleged
criminal acts committed during collective disputes, which creates significant legal
uncertainty; and (iii) the actions of the prosecuting authority and the judges
frequently disregard the position of the Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court,
according to which the application of criminal provisions must take account of the need
to protect the fundamental right to freedom of association.
- 453. The complainants further state that, amid increasing social unrest
in the wake of the labour legislation reforms introduced in Spain since 2010, their
legal departments have been informed of 81 penalty procedures or criminal prosecutions
involving the exercise of the right to strike or collective rights. The complainants
describe below a number of criminal or administrative proceedings under way in 12 of the
Autonomous Communities of Spain.
Andalusia
- 454. The trade union organizations state that 32 workers are affected by
several criminal proceedings arising from their participation in the general strikes of
September 2010 and November 2012 and in a company strike. The charges being brought in
these proceedings include assault and battery, and coercion to go on strike, covered by
article 315.3 CC. The Provincial Court of Granada upheld the sentencing of two persons
to three years and one day of imprisonment for coercion to strike under article 315.3
CC. It was found that these two persons, during the general strike of 29 March 2012, had
verbally abused the owner of premises in Granada and had defaced the premises with
stickers and graffiti, causing damage amounting to €767. In San Fernando (Cadiz) the
prosecution has called for prison sentences of nine months, 14 months and two years and
three months for three workers from the Navantia enterprise for major offences of public
disorder and dangerous assault and a minor offence of battery. The complainants allege
that the violent acts giving rise to criminal proceedings in this case consisted in: (i)
for the first worker, throwing a microphone at a police officer but not actually
striking him; (ii) for the second worker, striking the forearm of a police officer with
an umbrella; and (iii) for the third worker, breaking the shield of a police officer
with blows from an umbrella. In Seville, a prison sentence of one year is being
requested for a road safety offence.
Aragon
- 455. The complainants refer to criminal proceedings brought in Zaragoza
for assault and battery involving the alleged jostling of police officers during the
general strike of 2012.
Asturias
- 456. The complainants refer to 15 cases under way in various courts, in
which prison sentences ranging from six months to four years are being called for in
respect of 43 persons. Public disorder is alleged in ten cases, assault in six, criminal
damage in five, and in only two cases the offence of battery, which would appear to
illustrate that this social upheaval has resulted in very few cases of physical
injury.
Balearic Islands
- 457. In relation to the general strike of March 2012, the complainants
state that criminal proceedings are under way against the General Secretary of the Union
of Workers’ Commissions of the Balearic Islands, in which a prison sentence of more than
four years is being requested.
Castile-La Mancha
- 458. The complainants refer to: (i) the indictment, without any specific
charge having been brought, of the General Secretary of the Provincial Union of Ciudad
Real and another two trade union leaders for lighting a bonfire at a roundabout and
organizing an informational picket during the general strike of 2010; and (ii) charges
against four trade unionists from Albacete, who are still awaiting judgment, for causing
damage (initially for the crime of coercion to strike); they are accused of throwing
tacks and striking a vehicle.
Castile-Leon
- 459. The complainants refer to six criminal proceedings involving charges
of major and minor public order offences, and minor offences of threats and abuse. In
Avila and Valladolid, criminal trials have ended in acquittals or the imposition of
small fines.
Catalonia
- 460. The complainants refer to: (i) the indictment, following the 2010
general strike, for a crime against workers’ rights, of four trade union officials from
Terrassa, for each of whom a four-year prison term had initially been sought, with
agreement finally being reached on a conditional six-month sentence; (ii) several
proceedings relating to informational pickets formed during the 2012 general strike,
without any charges being brought; (iii) the indictment in the Barcelona courts of a
member of the Workers’ Committee of the Barcelona Metro for criminal damage, in relation
to a strike on the Barcelona metropolitan transport system in November 2012; (iv)
charges brought in the magistrates’ courts of Valls and Barcelona for coercion in
connection with a sectoral strike which took place in Tarragona in May 2013; and (v) the
launch of six criminal proceedings, still at the pre-trial stage, deriving from a strike
at the Panrico enterprise.
Galicia
- 461. The complainants refer to: (i) an acquittal by the Provincial Court
of Pontevedra concerning an accusation made against three persons in relation to a
dispute arising from a strike in November 2009; (ii) the sentencing of two workers, by
the same provincial court, to imprisonment of three years and one day, for throwing
paint into a swimming pool during a sectoral strike in 2012; and (iii) the imposition of
a three-year prison term in connection with the general strike in September 2010.
Rioja
- 462. The complainants refer to: (i) the acquittal of five workers, among
them the General Secretary of the Rioja CCOO, who were accused initially of criminal
damage and coercion to strike, and subsequently of the general offence of coercion; and
(ii) the pending oral trial of a worker who is facing calls for five years’ imprisonment
for taking part in the general strike of 29 March 2012.
Murcia
- 463. The complainants refer to criminal proceedings in the magistrates’
courts in Murcia, in which three persons are accused of committing a public order
offence after burning tyres and interrupting traffic during the general strike of March
2012.
Madrid
- 464. The complainants refer, firstly, to proceedings brought before the
courts in Getafe against eight trade unionists at the Airbus company, related to the
conduct of informational pickets during the general strike of September 2010. They state
that the Public Prosecutor’s Office called for eight-year prison terms for each of the
accused, for offences against workers as well as assault and battery, and that the
charge was brought by a group of national security force members who had intervened in
the violent breakup of the picket. The complainants also refer to: (i) a call for seven
years’ imprisonment for two trade unionists from the hotel sector for taking part in the
general strike of 29 March 2012; (ii) calls for prison sentences ranging from two to
four years for two workers from Alcalá de Henares, the proceedings still being at the
pre-trial stage; (iii) criminal proceedings in Magistrates’ Court No. 5 in Getafe,
involving four members of the strike committee and works council in connection with a
strike held in June 2012 at John Deere Iberica SA, the workers being accused of denying
senior company managers access to their posts; and (iv) the conviction of a worker by
the Madrid Provincial Court (ruling of 31 March 2014) for the offence of coercion under
article 620.2 CC, after he had asked the manager of a local branch of MacDonalds to
close her premises during the general strike of 14 November 2012.
Valencia
- 465. The complainants refer to: (i) six legal proceedings, two of which
have been terminated, at Magistrates’ Court No. 4 in Liria, Criminal Court No. 8 in
Alicante and Court No. 4 in Alicante; (ii) proceedings in Elche in which 19 persons are
accused of coercion; and (iii) the situation of seven trade unionists awaiting interim
assessment by the Public Prosecutor’s Office.
- 466. The complainants add that the various cases described demonstrate
patterns of investigation, prosecution and punishment which constitute an obstacle to
the full exercise of the right to strike and union activities as a whole. In this
regard, the complainants:
- – allege that almost all the actions being prosecuted
lack the element of violence or coercion, which is understood as implying a degree
of risk to the integrity of persons, property or installations. They state that the
demonstrations called by the most representative trade union organizations in Spain
do not entail any violence. According to the complainants, in the Airbus case, where
eight union leaders are accused of attacking members of the police forces, the acts
of which they are accused resulted from a police charge on hundreds of workers, of
whom several dozen sustained injuries. The police charge supposedly took place to
protect a worker who did not require medical attention. Since those supposedly
attacked were law enforcement officers, it is surprising that no attacker has been
identified or detained, and this is why the accusation has targeted the trade union
leaders. In the case of the conviction in Pontevedra, it is surprising that the
staining of swimming pool water and of a company manager’s suit should be classed by
the provincial court as acts of violence against persons and objects;
- –
denounce the generalized and unfounded accusations made in police statements of
criminal conspiracy and unlawful informational picketing, which can significantly
increase the criminal liability of the accused. The complainants assume that this
practice reflects criteria established by government agencies or the Ministry of the
Interior;
- – denounce the consistent focus on bringing charges against trade
union leaders whenever it proves impossible to identify the individual perpetrators
of alleged acts, and point to the Airbus case and the case in the Balearic Islands
as examples;
- – emphasize the key role of the Public Prosecutor’s Office,
whose position can vary significantly according to the local context, thus
generating great legal uncertainty. While numerous disputes do not lead to criminal
proceedings in many situations, in other cases a criminal charge is brought even
though the seriousness of the acts does not account for the conduct of the Public
Prosecutor’s Office. In this regard, the complainants point out that in only two
cases is the charge of coercion to strike accompanied by the existence of any kind
of injury. According to the complainants, the foregoing illustrates the lack of
consistent criteria applied in prosecutions concerning the crime of coercion to
strike, with insufficient consideration being given to the need to protect the
legitimate exercise of the right to strike. At times, the Public Prosecutor’s Office
initiates criminal proceedings merely on the grounds of words spoken, even when no
threat is uttered, as in the case of the conviction in Pontevedra; and
- –
allege that the courts of first instance and, at times, the provincial
(second-level) courts, attach insufficient weight to the legal rights in dispute,
failing to safeguard the right to strike and freedom of association and setting
aside the Supreme Court criteria which lead to a narrow interpretation of the crime
of coercion to strike. Lastly, they state that, despite their restrictive nature,
the Supreme Court criteria do not prevent article 315.3 CC from continuing to
classify strike action as an aggravating factor in criminal
liability.
- 467. The UGT provided additional information in a communication dated 31
October 2014. The complainant firstly states in general that the practices used to
criminalize trade union activity are not confined to the application of the Criminal
Code provisions concerning the crime of coercion to strike, but include the crimes of
assault, unruly behaviour and public disorder. It also alleges that the justice system
frequently moves very slowly, with some cases still unresolved after more than four
years. The complainant contends that the lengthy uncertainty of a case carrying the
threat of imprisonment affects the exercise of freedom of association and the right to
strike.
- 468. Turning to the subject of article 315.3 CC, the complainant asserts
that: (i) coercion to promote a strike was classified as a criminal offence in 1976 to
intimidate the still clandestine trade union organizations and the workers more actively
involved in organizing and carrying out strike picketing; (ii) this provision has
remained unaltered despite the progress achieved in the fundamental freedoms and rights
enshrined in the 1978 Constitution; (iii) for many years article 315.3 was not
implemented; and (iv) nevertheless, in order to curb the protests expressing public
discontent, the freedom of many trade unionists and union leaders is being endangered by
the application of a definition of crime which infringes the actual exercise of the
right to strike.
- 469. The complainant then provides details of specific cases of criminal
proceedings following on from strikes, in which article 315.3 CC was applied or where
other offences were involved. The complainant refers, firstly, to the case of Mr Carlos
Rivas Martínez and Mr Serafín Rodríguez Martínez, convicted for a crime against workers’
rights under article 315.3 CC, stating that: (i) the convicted workers took part in a
transport sector strike held in Vigo in April 2008 together with 70 other workers; (ii)
according to the indictment, the workers in question prevented the passage of several
lorries driven by workers who did not support the strike and threw objects and stones
which broke the window of one lorry; (iii) on the basis of article 315.3 CC both workers
were sentenced to three years’ imprisonment and a 12-month fine of €5 per day, a
sentence upheld by the Provincial Court of Pontevedra in a ruling of 4 December 2012;
and (iv) following the filing of a petition for clemency, in 2014 the courts granted
suspension of imprisonment pending decision on the petition.
- 470. Secondly, the complainant refers to the case of a trade union
leader, Ms María Jesús Cedrún Gutierrez, stating that: (i) during a strike called by
national trade unions on 29 March 2012, the trade union leader took part in an
informational picket at the entrance to the MercaSantander enterprise; (ii) according to
the indictment, she threw nails on the ground in front of vehicles that had stopped at
the informational picket; and (iii) she was sentenced on 27 March 2014 to a ten-day fine
for coercion under article 620.2 CC.
- 471. Thirdly, the complainant refers to the case of Mr José Manuel
Nogales Barroso and Mr Rubén Sanz Martín, stating that: (i) during the general strike of
30 March 2012, the two trade union representatives took part in an informational picket;
(ii) according to the charge, two members of the police verified that the members of the
informational picket, who had approached a bar to ask it to close, began to attack and
abuse workers in the bar, striking them with the banners they were carrying; (iii) two
bar workers and a police officer sustained injuries, recovery from which took four,
three and six days, respectively, although none of them was unable to carry out his
usual activities; and (iv) the two strikers were charged with coercion against the
rights of workers under article 315.3 CC, assault under articles 550, 551 and 552 CC,
and battery under article 617.1 CC; and (v) in 2012, each worker was sentenced to three
years and nine months’ imprisonment and a 15-month fine of €15 per day for coercion,
three years and three months’ imprisonment for assault, and a 50-day fine of €15 per day
for battery. In the light of the above factors, the complainant states that the report
of the Public Prosecutor’s Office contained no examination of the circumstances in which
the events took place and started from the preconception that the informational picket
was an unruly group of people using force and intimidation to threaten others’ freedom
to work, without taking into account the constitutional dimension of the picketing.
- 472. Fourthly, the complainant refers to the case of Mr Juan Carlos
Martínez Barros and Ms Rosario María Alonso Rodríguez, stating that: (i) during the
general strike of 28 September 2012, the two workers formed part of an informational
picket in the Cantabrian town of Reinosa; (ii) according to the wording of the judgment,
the workers padlocked the tax office so that its glass door had to be broken to allow
access, with services to the public interrupted for a whole morning; and (iii) the
workers were handed a 15-day fine for coercion.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 473. The Government indicates in its communications that although the ILO
Conventions referred to in the complaint - Conventions Nos 87, 98 and 154 - protect the
right to strike, this right is not absolute and it cannot be interpreted without
restrictions. The Government states that, in this respect, article 315.3 CC does not
penalize the free exercise of the right to strike but punishes the use of force or
violence to compel workers to take part in a strike. Thus this provision, which, as in
other countries, penalizes the obstacles to the freedom to work arising from strike
picketing, complies with the jurisprudence of the Spanish Constitutional Court and with
the doctrine of the Committee on Freedom of Association, both of which recognize that
the right to strike does not constitute an absolute right and that it should not give
rise to acts of violence or intimidation.
- 474. In this respect, the Government emphasizes that: (i) the Spanish
legal system fully respects the right to strike, which the Spanish Constitution
considers to be a fundamental human right (article 28); (ii) article 6 of Royal
Decree-Law No. 17/1977 on labour relations provides that workers on strike may publicize
it peacefully but that the freedom to work of those who do not wish to join the strike
must be respected; (iii) the Constitutional Court recognizes that the right to strike
involves requesting others to support it and to take part, within the legal framework,
in joint activities to that end and that the activity of so-called picketing by
strikers, entailing the provision of information and propaganda for other workers and
persuading them to join a strike or dissuading those who have chosen to continue a
strike, is an expression of the right recognized in article 28 of the Spanish
Constitution; (iv) the Constitutional Court is, however, adamant in asserting that the
right to strike and the activity of picketing have limits and that the abovementioned
right does not include the possibility of exercising moral violence of an intimidating
or coercive nature against others; and (v) the Constitutional Court has taken the
opportunity to clarify that conduct such as aggression, verbal abuse and the obstruction
of free access to an enterprise fall outside the scope of exercise of the right to
strike.
- 475. The Government states further that article 315.3 CC originates from
Act No. 23/1976 of 19 July 1976 which introduced former article 496 CC. Although the
Criminal Code underwent significant reform in 1995, the authors of the reform considered
that the actions regulated by former article 496 CC were sufficiently serious to be
retained in the Criminal Code. The intention of the legislature in 1995, reflected in
the three paragraphs of article 315, was to ensure a balance between the protection
provided for those opting to exercise their right to strike and that provided for those
deciding not to do so or not to do so any longer, by imposing identical penalties in all
cases involving coercion, whether aimed at preventing the exercise of the right to
strike or at forcing participation in a strike. The Government also points out that the
acts addressed by article 315.3 CC constitute a subtype of article 172 CC, which
criminalizes acts of coercion, imposing penalties ranging from six months’ to three
years’ imprisonment or a 12–24 month fine. In the Government’s view, the criminal
subtype in article 315.3 CC is justified inasmuch as coercion aimed at forcing workers
to go on strike jeopardizes the freedom to work, human dignity and the right to moral
integrity, which are rights and values protected by the Spanish Constitution
(articles 10, 15 and 35). The Government emphasizes, however, that since the right to
strike is fundamental, a judge must, in line with the doctrine of the Constitutional
Court, not only verify that all the factors described in article 315.3 CC are in place
but also, if there is doubt as to the interpretation of that provision, give it a narrow
interpretation to avoid unduly limiting the right to strike.
- 476. The Government states further that Organic Act No. 1/2015 of 30
March 2015 has mitigated the sentences applicable to the offence described. Whereas the
previous legislation prescribed a prison sentence of at least three years and a maximum
of four-and-a-half years, the reform reduced these penalties to a minimum prison term of
one year and nine months and a maximum of three years. In addition, as a result of the
reform, the judicial authority has the possibility to replace custodial sentences with
fines. The penalty for this offence is thus mitigated, while at the same time the judge
can decide between imprisonment or a fine, depending on the gravity of the offences and,
in particular, on whether or not violence was exercised in committing them.
- 477. Concerning the specific criminal proceedings referred to in the
complaint, after indicating that, owing to a lack of information from the complainants,
it was unable to conduct a detailed analysis of police actions in respect of all the
cases mentioned, the Government states that: (i) the armed forces and state security
forces are required under the Spanish Constitution to protect the free exercise of
rights and freedoms and guarantee public safety, a task assigned to them under Organic
Act No. 2/1986; (ii) although the majority of labour demonstrations relating to the
economic crisis that has affected the country in recent years have been peaceful,
exceptions have occurred in which the armed forces and state security forces were
obliged to intervene in order to eliminate violence and ensure the peaceful use of
public roads and spaces; and (iii) in all the cases cited in the complaint, criminal
proceedings were begun against specific individuals for failing to exercise the right to
strike in a peaceful manner, thus necessitating intervention by the law enforcement
bodies in order to protect, as appropriate, the right to free movement, the right to
work, the moral or physical integrity of individuals, or property.
- 478. With respect to the incidents that occurred at the Airbus company in
Getafe during the general strike of 29 September 2010, the Government states that: (i)
the national police force had to intervene to enable an employee to reach his place of
work and 11 police officers were injured during the operation, three having to be taken
to hospital; and (ii) the violence against the police reached such a pitch that two
officers surrounded by strikers had to fire warning shots into the air to drive away
their attackers.
- 479. Concerning the events that occurred in San Fernando (Cadiz) in 2012
during a workers’ protest at the Navantia enterprise, the Government states that: (i)
the demonstrators changed the itinerary provided to the authorities and headed off to
the local headquarters of the People’s Party of Spain; (ii) the demonstrators then
forced the entrance gate to the headquarters, making it necessary for the police to
intervene to prevent further damage; and (iii) the demonstrators responded to that
intervention with attacks on police officers and the chairman of the works committee
threw a microphone at a police officer, which led to his arrest.
- 480. The Government emphatically denies the existence of any criteria set
by the executive bodies of the Interior Ministry for the purpose of incriminating
workers and trade union representatives. The Government states that the trade union
organizations are fully recognized under the Spanish Constitution, and that therefore
the armed forces and state security forces are not governed by orders that a priori
regard trade union activity or informational picketing as illegal; rather, they are
merely performing their constitutional duties of defending the law and the rights and
freedoms of the people.
- 481. Likewise, the Government states that all the actions of the Public
Prosecutor’s Office are subject to the principle of legality, that it is obliged to
bring a criminal prosecution in all cases where it is established that criminal acts
have been committed, and that it acts objectively and with impartiality, subject only to
the rule of law.
- 482. Concerning the allegation contained in the complaint that criminal
proceedings target union officials on the sole grounds that they take the lead in labour
disputes, the Government states that: (i) it is at times difficult to determine who is
responsible for unlawful damage caused during a strike, and thus the trade union
organization to which the strikers belong, through its leaders, is required to answer
for the individual acts of its members, subject to the terms of article 5.2 of Organic
Act No. 11/1985 on freedom of association, which provides that a trade union is not
responsible for individual acts by its members, unless those acts are performed as a
regular part of representative duties or if it is proved that the members were acting on
behalf of the union; and (ii) trade union representatives are the persons who generally
lead informational pickets or demonstrations, which at times can entail violence, and it
is thus appropriate that those representatives are named in legal proceedings dealing
with violence, without prejudice to any further liability for such acts, which is
determined by judicial or administrative decision, as appropriate.
- 483. The Government also states that the application of article 315.3 CC
has not caused any problems for several decades and that the presentation of this
complaint results from a specific personal situation involving the sentencing of Ms
Carmen Bajo and Mr Carlos Cano to imprisonment of three years and one day, for ordering
an owner to close her premises during the general strike of March 2012. The Government
asserts that the two complainant organizations have made repeated efforts to prevent
these two individuals from going to prison, which, in the opinion of the Government,
limits the scope of the present complaint to a personal matter.
- 484. The Government denies the allegation concerning the non-application
of criminal legislation to strike movements prior to the current economic crisis and its
supposed use on a greater scale in recent years. By way of illustration, the Government
refers in its various communications to a non-exhaustive list of 11 judgments from 1997
(one), 1998 (one), 1999 (one), 2002 (one), 2004 (two), 2005 (one), 2006 (three) and 2009
(one) which involved the application of article 315.3 CC.
- 485. The Government also refers, again by way of illustration, to seven
judgments handed down between 2011 and 2015 in which the courts issued acquittals or at
least showed leniency with regard to the acts judged under article 315.3 CC. The
Government states that the examples both before and after 2010 demonstrate that the
judicial bodies are applying a restrictive interpretation of article 315.3 CC and that
that interpretation has not changed in recent years.
- 486. Lastly, the Government states that Spanish criminal law complies
fully with the Conventions and principles concerning freedom of association and that,
under the existing legal system in Spain, the basic right to strike is protected by
effective mechanisms, both in the regular courts and in the Constitutional Court through
the remedy of amparo. On the basis of the above, and since all the facts set out by the
complainants are awaiting judicial rulings, it is reasonable to request that the
examination of the present complaint be deferred until those rulings are given.
- 487. In its communications of 24 February and 9 May 2016, the Government
provides a copy of Judgment No. 57/2016 of 16 February 2016 of the Getafe Criminal
Court, concerning charges of offences against workers’ rights and offences of assault
and battery, brought against eight trade union leaders following incidents at the Airbus
company in Getafe during the general strike of 29 September 2010. The Government
emphasizes that the judgment: (i) declared the existence of acts of coercion by the
workers in support of the strike and the existence of acts of aggression to be proven;
(ii) acquitted two of the union leaders after the Public Prosecutor’s Office withdrew
the charges against them; and (iii) acquitted the other six on the grounds of
presumption of innocence, since no accusation against any of them for committing
specific acts was substantiated.
- 488. In its communication of 24 May 2016, the Government transmits the
position of the Spanish Confederation of Business Organizations (CEOE), the leading
employers’ organization in the country, on the content of the complaint. In its
communication, the CEOE relays a position similar to the one submitted by the Government
in relation to article 315.3 CC and its application by the Spanish courts, noting that
such provision is in full conformity with the comments of the Committee on Freedom of
Association and with the international Conventions ratified by Spain on the matter. The
CEOE states in particular that: (i) the revision of article 351.3 CC by Organic Act No.
1/2015, lowering the prison penalties applicable to those who coerce non-striking
workers, ensures that the penalties imposed are proportionate to the gravity of the
offences committed; (ii) it being a more favourable law, Organic Act No. 1/2015 is
applied to pending judicial proceedings, even if the acts committed took place before
its entry into force; (iii) the current regulation does not lead to any kind of legal
uncertainty and, in case it was, it is the courts that should undertake such assessment;
(iv) the number of sentences of the Spanish courts judging these matters are almost
inexistent, which demonstrates that there is no legal problem in this regard; and (v) as
to the alleged delay of the criminal proceedings concerning acts committed during strike
action, the CEOE notes the adoption on 5 October 2015 of Act No. 41/2015 on Criminal
Procedure to Streamline Criminal Justice and Strengthen Procedural Guarantees, which
sets out time limits for the judicial enquiry phase, so that the enquiry will not lead
to delays, contrary to what may have occurred in the past before the entry into force of
such Act.
- 489. The CEOE’s communication also contains information on the situation
of four persons that had been convicted to a three-year prison sentence as well as a
fine for the commission of a crime against the rights of workers pursuant to article
315.3 CC and who had requested a petition for clemency in 2014 (Ms María del Carmen Bajo
Crémer and Mr Carlos Cano Navarro, on the one hand, sentenced on 24 May 2013, and Mr
Carlos Rivas Martínez and Mr Serafín Rodríguez Martínez, on the other hand, sentenced on
9 May 2011). In this regard, the CEOE informs that: (i) the clemency petition files are
complete and pending resolution; (ii) while awaiting the clemency decision the persons
concerned are free; and (iii) in all cases, the convicted may request, in the execution
phase, the application of the more favourable Act.
The Committee’s conclusions
The Committee’s conclusions- 490. The Committee observes that the present case refers to allegations
of the suppression of the right to strike through criminal legislation and its
increasing use in recent years by the Spanish public authorities. In this regard, the
Committee notes in particular that the complainant organizations firstly allege that:
(i) article 315.3 CC provides for heavy prison sentences (from three years to four years
and six months) for those who, acting in a group or individually but in collusion with
others, coerce other persons to begin or continue a strike; (ii) given that there is a
general offence of coercion in the Criminal Code (article 172.1 CC) imposing much
lighter prison terms (six months to three years), Spanish criminal legislation, far from
protecting the fundamental nature of the right to strike, considers its exercise as an
aggravating factor in criminal liability; and (iii) the definition of the criminal
offence in article 315.3 CC is imprecise, resulting in its highly inconsistent
application and generating legal uncertainty.
- 491. The Committee notes that the complainants also allege that: (i)
recent years have seen a rise in labour and social movements opposing regressive labour
reforms. Article 315.3 CC and other provisions of criminal law (concerning offences
including assault, unruly behaviour and public disorder) are being used very broadly by
the public authorities to criminalize the exercise of the right to strike; (ii) in 2014,
a total of 81 penalty procedures or criminal prosecutions of this type had been
identified, a number of them resulting in sentences of several years’ imprisonment;
(iii) most of the strike movements that were, or are, the subject of criminal charges or
proceedings lacked any element of violence, with the Public Prosecutor’s Office and the
courts failing to attach sufficient weight to ensuring that the fundamental right to
strike is safeguarded; (iv) in most cases, the criminal charges target trade union
leaders, regardless of their actual conduct during the strike; and (v) many of the
criminal investigations are characterized by long delays, which have a deterrent effect
on the exercise of collective rights. Lastly, the Committee notes that, apart from the
81 cases reported in general, the complainants also refer in more detail to a series of
specific cases that they claim are characterized by heavy and disproportionate sentences
imposed by the courts or sought by the prosecution.
- 492. The Committee also notes the observations of the Government, which
state that: (i) although the ILO Conventions referred to in the complaint – Conventions
Nos 87, 98 and 154 – protect the right to strike, this right is not absolute and it
cannot be interpreted without restrictions; (ii) the Spanish legal system fully respects
the right to strike, which the Spanish Constitution considers to be a fundamental human
right; (iii) in line with the Committee on Freedom of Association’s positions, the
recognition of the fundamental nature of the right to strike does not mean that it
constitutes an absolute right, which is why protection of it does not extend to the use
of violence or coercion, or to the violation of other fundamental rights; (iv) article
315.3 CC fully reflects this position because, far from restricting the exercise of the
right to strike, it punishes the violation of highly important rights and freedoms, such
as the freedom to work and human dignity, that results from coercion; (v) the Spanish
courts interpret the provisions of article 315.3 CC in a restrictive manner; (vi) the
legislative reform of 30 March 2015 has resulted in the reduction of prison sentences
provided for in article 315.3 CC, from the pre-reform minimum of three years and maximum
of four and a half years to the current minimum of one year and nine months and maximum
of three years, with the alternative possibility of imposing a fine, thus preventing any
risk of disproportionate penalties for the abovementioned offence; (vii) there is no
widespread practice of criminalization of strike movements by the public authorities,
whether these be the law enforcement bodies, the Ministry of the Interior or the Public
Prosecutor’s Office; (viii) there are no grounds for stating that article 315.3 has not
been applied for decades and that the decision to use it systematically was taken in
recent years; (ix) in the specific cases highlighted in sufficient detail by the
complainants, acts of violence clearly occurred; and (x) there are actually
circumstantial and personal reasons behind the filing of the present complaint, namely
to prevent Ms Bajo and Mr Cano from serving the prison sentences handed to them after
they had ordered an owner to close her premises during the March 2012 general
strike.
- 493. In the light of the above factors, the Committee observes that the
main object of the complaint is article 315.3 CC concerning the crime of coercion to
begin or continue a strike. The Committee notes that, according to the complainants,
this provision stipulates excessively harsh penalties and its definition of punishable
conduct is imprecise, causing legal uncertainty and giving rise to disproportionate
sentences that fail to take into account either the particular characteristics of the
right to strike or the need to protect this fundamental right. The Committee also notes
the Government’s statements that the Spanish legal system recognizes that the right to
strike includes the possibility of organizing peaceful informational picketing, that
article 315.3 CC merely prohibits unlawful acts that infringe highly important rights
such as the freedom to work and human dignity, that the new version of the article
following a reform in 2015 has significantly reduced applicable prison sentences and
that, in compliance with the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court concerning
fundamental rights, the courts must interpret and apply article 315.3 CC restrictively
in order to avoid undue limitations on the right to strike.
- 494. The Committee observes that, in its revised version, article 315.3
CC provides that any persons who, acting in a group or individually but in collusion
with others, coerce other persons to begin or continue a strike shall be liable to
imprisonment of one year and nine months to three years, or to a fine of 18–24 months.
The Committee also observes that the offence categorized under article 315.3 CC is a
subtype of the generic offence of coercion provided for in article 172.1 CC, which
states that any person who, without being lawfully authorized, uses violence to prevent
another from doing something that the law does not prohibit or to force another to do
something, whether just or unjust, that he/she does not want to do, shall be liable to
imprisonment of six months to three years or to a fine of 12–24 months, according to the
severity of the coercion or the means used.
- 495. The Committee notes that article 315.3 CC is applied primarily in
the case of picketing action. The Committee underlines that it is important for criminal
provisions applicable to collective labour disputes to clearly define unlawful conduct
so as to ensure the legal certainty needed for stable collective labour relations. In
this regard, while noting the Government’s statement that the courts, in line with the
jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court concerning fundamental rights, interpret and
apply article 315.3 CC restrictively, the Committee observes that the amended version of
article 315.3 CC, despite being applicable only in the case of a strike and apart from
specific reference to the coordinated nature of the unlawful act, still fails to include
elements to define conduct constituting coercion in that context. Noting that the
complainants allege that the application of this provision is highly inconsistent, the
Committee requests the Government to invite the competent authority to review the impact
of the 2015 reform of article 315.3 of the CC and to inform the social partners of the
outcome of the review. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this
respect.
- 496. With regard to the allegedly disproportionate prison sentences
stipulated in the abovementioned provision, the Committee recalls the principle that
penal sanctions should only be imposed as regards strikes where there are violations of
strike prohibitions which are themselves in conformity with the principles of freedom of
association. All penalties in respect of illegitimate actions linked to strikes should
be proportionate to the offence or fault committed and the authorities should not have
recourse to measures of imprisonment for the mere fact of organizing or participating in
a peaceful strike [see Digest, op. cit., para. 668].
- 497. In this respect, the Committee notes, firstly, that a number of
judgments handed down between 2011 and 2015 are communicated by the Government in order
to demonstrate that the application of article 315.3 CC by the courts makes for an
appropriate response to the aggression and unlawful acts classified by this provision.
The Committee also observes that, since the submission of the complaint, a reform of
article 315.3 in March 2015 has led to the prison sentences stipulated under the
provision being reduced from a pre-reform minimum of three years and maximum of four
years and six months to a current minimum of one year and nine months and maximum of
three years. The Committee also notes that the fines provided for have also increased
from a minimum of 12 months and maximum of 24 months to a minimum of 18 months and
maximum of 24 months. The Committee takes special note of the Government’s assertion
that the revised version of the provision allows the judge to decide between a sentence
of a fine or imprisonment, depending on the seriousness of the offence and, in
particular, whether or not violence was used in committing the offence.
- 498. The Committee notes at the same time that: (i) the minimum prison
sentences and fines provided for in article 315.3 CC for the offence of coercion during
a strike (imprisonment of one year and nine months to three years or a fine of 18-24
months) remain heavier than the sentences imposed for the general offence of coercion
under article 172.1 CC (imprisonment of six months to three years or a fine of 12–24
months) and also longer than the minimum sentences for the general offence of coercion
when the exercise of a fundamental right is impeded (imprisonment of 18 months and one
day to three years), despite the fact that the complainants emphasize that the Spanish
Constitution does not include the freedom to work in the category of fundamental rights
(article 35 of the Constitution); (ii) the text of the provision fails to provide
criteria to distinguish offences punishable by imprisonment from those subject to a
fine; and (iii) although the Committee notes, in most of the specific cases referred to
by the complainants and the Government, that the prison sentences imposed by the courts
were for acts of coercion accompanied by physical violence, it observes that in at least
one case (the sentencing of Ms Carmen Bajo and Mr Carlos Cano to imprisonment of three
years and one day) no mention is made of the convicted persons committing acts of
physical violence.
- 499. In the light of the above factors, the Committee requests the
Government to invite the competent authority to also review these issues.
- 500. With regard to the allegation that, in recent years, the public
authorities have been making extensive use of criminal law to criminalize the exercise
of the right to strike, the Committee notes the complainants’ statement that they have
identified 81 penalty procedures or criminal prosecutions under way in 2014 which, in
most cases, do not involve acts of violence. The Committee also notes that the
Government, after referring to judgments predating 2010 that applied article 315.3 CC,
denies that there is any widespread practice of criminalization of strike movements by
the public authorities, whether these be the law enforcement bodies, the Ministry of the
Interior or the Public Prosecutor’s Office. While emphasizing that it lacks the
necessary information to be able to ascertain whether the alleged practice exists, the
Committee notes that the Government does not deny the existence of a large number of
prosecutions and criminal proceedings under way relating to the exercise of the right to
strike. In this regard, the Committee, while recalling that the principles of freedom of
association do not protect abuses consisting of criminal acts while exercising the right
to strike [see Digest, op. cit., para. 667], trusts that full consideration will be
given to the fact that the frequent recourse to criminal proceedings in the area of
collective labour relations does not help maintain a stable and harmonious system of
labour relations.
- 501. Concerning the allegation that neither the Public Prosecutor’s
Office nor the courts are subject to binding criteria for taking account of the impact
on freedom of association when formulating charges and prosecuting offences arising from
informational picketing, the Committee observes that both the complainants and the
Government recognize the contribution of the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court
and the Supreme Court in this regard. In the light of the numerous cases involving
informational picketing pending in the courts, the Committee trusts that the position of
both courts will be widely disseminated.
- 502. With respect to the allegation of the arbitrary targeting of trade
union representatives when formulating charges and issuing convictions for disputes
arising from altercations or incidents during a strike, the Committee notes the
Government’s statements that: (i) trade union representatives generally lead
informational pickets or demonstrations, and it is thus appropriate that they are named
in legal proceedings dealing with violence, without prejudice to any further liability
for such acts; and (ii) it is at times difficult to determine who is responsible for
unlawful damage caused during a strike, and thus the trade union organization is
required to answer for the individual acts of its members, subject to the terms of
Organic Act No. 11/1985 on freedom of association, which provides that a trade union is
not responsible for individual acts by its members, unless those acts are performed as a
regular part of representative duties or if it is proved that the members were acting on
behalf of the union.
- 503. In the light of the Government’s response, and since bringing
charges for an offence solely on the basis of a person’s trade union office could result
in a situation of anti-union discrimination, the Committee emphasizes that criminal
charges brought against any worker, whether a union representative or not, for an
offence committed during a strike, should be based on specific evidence pointing to the
involvement of that person in the alleged offence. Noting that the complainants claim
the existence of numerous cases of trade union leaders being charged for alleged
offences committed during strike movements, the Committee trusts that the aforementioned
principle will be fully respected.
- 504. As regards the alleged delays in many ongoing criminal proceedings,
which could have a deterrent effect on the exercise of freedom of association and the
right to strike, while noting the absence of comments from the Government in this
regard, the Committee takes note that the comments of the CEOE transmitted by the
Government indicate that the adoption of Act No. 41/2015 on Criminal Procedure to
Streamline Criminal Justice and Strengthen Procedural Guarantees, which sets out time
limits for the judicial enquiry phase, will allow to avoid delays in the criminal
proceedings relating to acts committed during strike actions. Recalling that respect for
due process of law should not preclude the possibility of a fair and rapid trial and, on
the contrary, an excessive delay may intimidate the employers’ leaders concerned, thus
having repercussions on the exercise of their activities [see Digest, op. cit., para.
103], the Committee trusts that the criminal proceedings under way relating to the
exercise of the right to strike and referred to in the present complaint will be settled
as quickly as possible. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in
this regard.
- 505. As regards the allegations made in the complaint concerning specific
cases of supposed criminalization of the right to strike, the Committee observes firstly
that a significant number of cases referred to by the complainants did not contain
sufficient detail to allow their individual identification and analysis. The Committee
will therefore not pursue its examination of these allegations.
- 506. With respect to the charges of offences against workers’ rights and
offences of assault and battery brought against eight trade union leaders following
incidents that occurred at the Airbus company in Getafe during the general strike of 29
September 2010, the Committee notes the Government’s statement that the Getafe Criminal
Court, in its judgment of 16 February 2016, after establishing that acts of coercion and
aggression had occurred, acquitted the accused on the grounds of presumption of
innocence, since no accusation against any of them for committing specific acts had been
substantiated.
- 507. With regard to the call for prison sentences of nine months, 14
months and two years and three months for three workers from the Navantia enterprise for
major offences of public disorder and dangerous assault and a minor offence of battery
during a strike in San Fernando (Cadiz), the Committee notes the Government’s statement
that the demonstrators forced the entrance gate to the headquarters of a political
party, necessitating police intervention to prevent further damage, and that the
demonstrators responded to that intervention with attacks on police officers, with the
chairperson of the works committee throwing a microphone at one of the police officers,
which led to his arrest.
- 508. Regarding the sentencing of Ms Carmen Bajo and Mr Carlos Cano, on
the basis of article 315.3 CC, to imprisonment of three years and one day for ordering
an owner to close her premises during a general strike, the Committee notes the
complainants’ claim that the two individuals did not commit any violent acts and that
the courts merely found that they had verbally abused the owner of the premises and had
defaced the premises with stickers and graffiti, causing damage amounting to €767. The
Committee also notes that the Government merely states that the two complainant
organizations have made repeated efforts to prevent these two individuals from going to
prison, which, in the Government’s opinion, limits the scope of the present complaint to
a personal matter. Observing that, unlike in previous cases, the Government does not
refer to acts of physical violence committed by Ms Carmen Bajo and Mr Carlos Cano, and
noting that both were sentenced to long prison terms, the Committee requests the
Government to indicate the specific grounds that led to the imposition of the sentences
concerned. Taking note of the CEOE’s communication, indicating that both persons are
currently free as they await a decision on their clemency petition, the Committee
requests the Government to keep it informed of the evolution of the situation of Ms
Carmen Bajo and Mr Carlos Cano.
- 509. As to the situation of Mr Carlos Rivas Martínez and Mr Serafín
Rodríguez Martínez, the Committee takes note of the information provided in the CEOE’s
communication, noting that both workers, sentenced to three years of prison in 2011
pursuant to article 315.3 CC, are currently free, awaiting a decision on their clemency
petition. In these conditions, the Committee requests the Government to keep it informed
of the evolution of the situation of Mr Carlos Rivas Martínez and Mr Serafín Rodríguez
Martínez.
- 510. The Committee notes that the Government has not provided
observations on the situation of Ms María Jesús Cedrún Gutierrez, Mr José Manuel Nogales
Barroso, Mr Rubén Sanz Martín, Mr Juan Carlos Martínez Barros, Ms Rosario María and Mr
Alonso Rodríguez, referred to in the UGT communication of 31 October 2014, who received
varying sentences under article 315.3 CC. The Committee requests the Government to send
its observations on this matter as soon as possible.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 511. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The Committee
requests the Government to invite the competent authority to review the impact of
the 2015 reform of article 315.3 of the CC and to inform the social partners of the
outcome of the review. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in
this respect.
- (b) The Committee requests the Government to indicate the
specific grounds that led to the sentencing of Ms Bajo and Mr Cano to imprisonment
of three years and one day and, noting that they are currently free, awaiting a
decision on their petitions for clemency, the Committee requests the Government to
keep it informed of the evolution of their situation.
- (c) Noting that Mr
Carlos Rivas Martínez and Mr Serafín Rodríguez Martínez are currently free, awaiting
a decision on their petitions for clemency, the Committee requests the Government to
keep it informed of the evolution of their situation.
- (d) The Committee
requests the Government to send its observations on the situation of Ms María Jesús
Cedrún Gutierrez, Mr José Manuel Nogales Barroso, Mr Rubén Sanz Martín, Mr Juan
Carlos Martínez Barros, Ms Rosario María and Mr Alonso Rodríguez. The Committee
trusts that the ongoing criminal proceedings relating to the exercise of the right
to strike referred to in the present complaint will be settled as quickly as
possible. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this
regard.