Malaysia

Workers’ champion Balasubramaniam shares MTUC journey

Having served organisation for 40 years, he is now one of its vice-presidents

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 01 May 2023 12:21PM

Workers’ champion Balasubramaniam shares MTUC journey
The Malaysian Trades Union Congress is the oldest organisation representing Malaysian workers. – Tahir Saleng Facebook pic, May 1, 2023

KUALA LUMPUR – The Malaysian Trades Union Congress (MTUC) is the oldest organisation representing Malaysian workers and among its roles today is to promote equality, improve workers’ living standards, and create a better and safer working environment for its approximately 500,000 members.

In conjunction with Labour Day today, A. Balasubramaniam who has served MTUC for 40 years and is now its vice-president, shares his journey in campaigning for various workers’ issues, including the implementation of a minimum wage, raising the retirement age from 55 to 60, the five-day work week, and the Occupational Health Safety Act 1994. 

According to Balasubramaniam, he has attended several workshops, seminars, courses, and meetings organised by international unions including the International Labour Conference in Geneva.

“In June 1980, when I was a tally clerk in one of the ancillary companies which operated in the port area, I joined a workers’ union representing tally clerks called the Union of Employees in Port Ancillary Services Suppliers (Unepass), which is an affiliate of MTUC.

“I raised several issues with the union leadership regularly and seeing this, some of the leaders encouraged me to contest in the union election as an office-bearer.

“I stood to contest as a member of the Unepass executive committee (exco) in September 1982 and won to become one of the six exco members,” said Balasubramaniam, now aged 63.

In view of his young age at that time, the leadership also encouraged Balasubramaniam to attend a MTUC youth committee meeting where he was identified as a potential candidate to actively participate and who was capable of contributing more.

The Malaysian Trades Union Congress’ A. Balasubramaniam says he has attended several workshops, seminars, courses, and meetings organised by international unions including the International Labour Conference in Geneva. – ituc-csi.org pic, May 1, 2023
The Malaysian Trades Union Congress’ A. Balasubramaniam says he has attended several workshops, seminars, courses, and meetings organised by international unions including the International Labour Conference in Geneva. – ituc-csi.org pic, May 1, 2023

He was an active member of the MTUC exco youth committee from 1982 to 1990, and later became its secretary at its Youth Convention in 1990 before he won the youth committee chairman post unopposed in 1992 and by virtue of this, he became an MTUC vice-president. 

Sharing further, he said he led a delegation of 65 union youth leaders to participate in the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) youth rally held in Seoul in 1994.

The Port Klang-born activist was later elected as the chairman of the youth committee of the ICFTU and had the privilege of chairing the world meeting.

“A motion was proposed in that meeting to cap the age limit for youth representation either at the age of 35 or 40, the majority voted in favour of 35 and it remains in ICTFU as the age limit to date,” he added.

Later, Balasubramaniam became a general council member from 1994 to 2004 representing Unepass, MTUC vice-president in 2004, and MTUC deputy secretary-general in 2016 before he was re-elected as MTUC vice-president in 2022.

Besides MTUC, he also served in the National Wage Consultative Council as a workers’ representative from 2013 to 2020 and was a board member of Malaysian Productivity Corp for 12 years.

Balasubramaniam had also been active in the industrial court representing workers for various cases such as dismissals, trade disputes, collective agreement, retrenchment, and those involving migrant workers for almost 20 years.

In conjunction with Labour Day, Balasubramaniam called on workers to join forces to strengthen trade unions in the country. – Bernama, May 1, 2023

Related News

Malaysia / 3mth

Don’t penalise workers for Penang water cut, says MTUC

Malaysia / 7mth

Not the time to re-introduce GST, says MTUC

Opinion / 8mth

Decrease of labour income share to 32% is shocking –  Labour Law Reform Coalition

Malaysia / 9mth

Make progressive wage reality for workers’ future welfare: MTUC

Malaysia / 10mth

Enforcement of RM1,500 minimum wage can ease workers’ burden: MTUC

Malaysia / 11mth

MTUC moots demerit system for AirAsia over delayed flights

Spotlight

Malaysia

Malaysia drops to 107th spot in press freedom rankings

Malaysia

Zaid urges govt to open higher learning institutions to non-Bumi

Malaysia

Guan Eng, 2 others to go on trial after failed bid to strike out case

Perlis MB told to 'clear the air' to reassure investors

Malaysia

Saravanan takes dig at unity govt while stumping for it

By Ravin Palanisamy

Malaysia

MPs call for better traffic system after scrapping of PJD Link

By Noel Achariam

You may be interested

Malaysia

Sabah hospitality industry offers plenty of jobs but little stability

By Jason Santos

Malaysia

DNB board to meet next week, new 5G direction to follow

Malaysia

After years of delay, Sarawak labour laws to be amended to match peninsula's

By Stephen Then

Malaysia

RTD issues immediate recall of 600 Omoda 5 Chery SUVs

Malaysia

Penang mulls raising wages of civil servants

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Single border agency from May 1, says Anwar

Malaysia

Public sector reform must follow salary hike, politicians say

Malaysia

Malaysia drops to 107th spot in press freedom rankings