Right to self-determination (art. 1)
1. Information concerning this article is set out in paragraphs 1 to 14 of
the Russian Federation's periodic report submitted in 1994 pursuant to article
40 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (hereinafter
referred to as "the Report").
* The second periodic reports submitted by the Government of the USSR concerning rights covered by articles 6 to 9 (E/1984/7/Add.7), 10 to 12 (E/1986/4/Add.14) and 13 to 15 (E/1990/7/Add.8) were considered by the Sessional Working Group of Governmental Experts at its 1984 session (E/1984/WG.1/SR.9-10) and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights at its 1987 session (E/C.12/1987/SR.16-18) respectively.
** The information submitted by the Russian Federation in accordance with
the guidelines concerning the initial part of reports of States parties is
contained in the core document (HRI/CORE/1/Add.52/Rev.1).
Guarantee of rights (art. 2)
2. With a view to the gradual and comprehensive fulfilment of its obligations
under the Covenant, Russia has since 1991 been developing new approaches to
this matter based on the need to amend legislation in connection with its
transition to a market economy. In this context, various concepts and programmes
are being developed at the federal and local levels in respect of individual
aspects of the application of legislation to ensure that the rights embodied
in the Covenant can be exercised fully in the country.
3. Guarantees of equal rights and the inadmissibility of discrimination among
people in Russia are described in the Report, and specifically in paragraphs
15-40.
4. Russia is a party to the ILO Employment Policy Convention, 1964 (No. 122)
and the ILO Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention, 1958 (No.
111) and regularly submits reports concerning their implementation.
5. Russia participates in cooperation with a view to development and is taking
steps to promote the realization of economic, social and cultural rights.
In this connection, the task of ensuring human rights and development is being
tackled in the light of the relevant provisions of the Vienna Declaration,
adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights in 1993. It is on this basis
that Russia participates in United Nations bodies dealing with human rights
problems (specific examples can be given of the way Russia uses the advantages
offered by cooperation for development purposes).
6. In recent years a number of useful cooperation projects have been implemented
in conjunction with UNDP and the specialized agencies of the United Nations
system (UNESCO, WHO, UNIDO and ILO). Specifically, seminars have been organized
with ILO on labour standards, the development of small enterprises, vocational
training policy problems, on the role of trade unions in a market economy
and on social partnership in labour relations; work is also being done on
demonstration projects with a view to increasing employment in the Ivanovskaya
and Tulskaya oblasts.
7. Assistance to countries in transition (including Russia) constitutes a
new aspect of international cooperation for development. Russia's cooperation
with the International Monetary Fund and IBRD is of particular importance
for the solution of the economic and social problems that arise in the transition
to a market economy (the total inflow of resources from these two agencies
amounting to $6 billion).
Equal rights of men and women (art. 3)
8. Basic data on this question are set out in the Report, Russia's national
report to the Fourth World Conference on Women entitled "Action for Equality,
Development and Peace", and also in the Russian Federation's fourth periodic
report on the implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of all forms
of Discrimination against Women, which was submitted to the United Nations
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women in September
1993 within the time-limit specified.
Interpretation of the provisions of the Covenant (art. 5)
9. Information on this matter is presented in paragraphs 59-62 of the Report.
The right to work (art. 6)
10. The basic guarantee of the right to work is contained in article 37, paragraph
1, of the Constitution, which states "Labour shall be free. Everyone
shall have the right freely to use his (her) labour skills and to choose the
type of activity and occupation".
11. This right is also guaranteed by a series of legislative provisions in
the Russian Federation's Labour Code, which was considerably amended in 1992
(when the drafting of the new code was begun) and in the Law on employment
in the RSFSR of 19 April 1991. Various provisions on the subject are also
contained in the Law on enterprises and entrepreneurial activities of 25 December
1990, the Law on collective labour agreements of 11 March 1992, in the Regulations
on attracting and using foreign labour in the Russian Federation (approved
by the Presidential Decree of 16 December 1993), in the Presidential Decree
on State supervision and monitoring with a view to ensuring compliance with
the Russian Federation's labour and labour safety legislation of 4 May 1994,
etc.
12. The status of persons sentenced to compulsory labour is governed by legislation,
including the Law on establishments and bodies applying punishment in the
form of deprivation of liberty of 21 July 1993 and the internal regulations
of such establishments.
13. Certain aspects of the State's protection of the right to work in Russia
are dealt with in the Report in connection with the question of equal rights
and legal remedies (paras. 41-51), freedom from slavery (paras. 109-116) and
access to public service (para. 279).
14. Conditions in Russia's labour market are described in the Russian Federation's
national report on population problems submitted to the Cairo Conference on
Population and Development. A federal programme for 1994 to promote employment
in the Russian Federation was drawn up with a view to the application of the
constitutional guarantee of the right of protection against unemployment (art.
37, para. 3 of the Constitution) and in accordance with Government Order No.
1152 of 6 November 1993 concerning the social and economic situation in the
Russian Federation as well as the measures being taken to launch the first
stage of the programme of the Council of Ministers and Government of the Russian
Federation for 1993-1995 entitled "Development of reforms and stabilization
of the Russian economy". This programme presents a detailed description
of the situation and the nature of the action to be taken over the near term.
The recommended steps to be taken to boost employment at a time when enormous
numbers of workers are being laid off were approved by Government Order No.
99 of 5 February 1993, which describes what is to be done to achieve this
goal and sets out a programme of job creation. The general method of calculating
the number of persons seeking suitable jobs is described in the Regulations
on the registration of the unemployed and circumstances in which unemployment
benefits are paid, which were approved by Government Order No. 788 of 17 November
1992 in accordance with Presidential Decree No. 723 of 2 July 1992 on measures
to provide assistance to citizens who have lost their jobs and wages (income)
and are recognized as being unemployed on the basis of the established procedure.
15. A federal migration programme, approved by Government Order No. 119 of
15 February 1994, has also been drawn up and is being carried out. This programme
sets out specific measures aimed at creating conditions conducive to the creation
of jobs for persons who have been forced to migrate and to the integration
of refugees into the communities in which they have settled, with a view to
enabling them to achieve levels of self-sufficiency comparable to those enjoyed
in that area.
16. Comparable guarantees applicable to members of the armed forces are contained
in article 10, entitled "The right to work", of the Law on the status
of members of the armed forces.
17. The serious problems being encountered in the field of judicial labour
relationships are explained by the fact that the economic changes that have
taken place are insufficiently reflected in labour legislation and in the
procedures governing its application. Certain provisions are contradictory
and there are a large number of omissions, the main one being the lack of
any clear definition of the legal nature of the labour relationships that
arose after the restoration of private property.
18. The importance of labour relationships is explained by the fact that 48
per cent of the total population (71 million persons) is employed in the national
economy. Of this number, 36.5 million work in the State sector, 20.9 million
in the private sector and 12.7 million in enterprises of the mixed ownership
type (figures furnished by Russia's State Committee on Statistics for 1993).
In other words, about 40 per cent of all workers are employed in the non-State
sector at the present time.
19. Two negative trends affecting labour relationships emerged during the
period under review, namely, an increase in the number of labour rights violations
and diminished verification of compliance with such rights.
20. Checks carried out by the procurator's office indicate that 10,800, 12,200
and 13,300 violations of labour rights occurred in 1991, 1992 and 1993 respectively.
Moreover, court statistics reveal that the number of court cases involving
labour matters amounted to 107,800, 110,700 and 91,600, also in respect of
these three years. New forms of massive labour rights violations have become
widespread.
21. One such violation consists in failure to pay wages on time and has become
common throughout the country. Delays in the payment of wages constitute a
violation not only of article 96 of the Labour Code but also of the ILO Protection
of Wages Convention, which has been ratified by our country. The most serious
situation prevails in the defence, mechanical engineering, chemical and other
branches of industry, as well as in construction and in the budget sector.
At the beginning of 1994, the total amount of wages in arrears was almost
800 billion roubles for the country as a whole. Workers in 24,000 enterprises
failed to receive their wages on time.
22. This type of labour rights violation is due to economic as well as administrative
and legal factors. Among the former, the most important is the crisis in the
settlement of accounts between enterprises and, in the case of the budget
and subsidized branches, delays in the appropriation of funds for which provision
has been made in various budgets. The main administrative and legal factor
concerns the way in which funds are at present transferred from the accounts
of enterprises - taxes and payments to the budget being deducted from the
account without acceptance and payments in respect of wages not being recorded
as having priority, so that enterprises are left without money to pay them.
23. Another violation which, since the spring of 1992, has assumed enormous
proportions involves compulsory leave without pay or with partial pay. This
practice is provided for neither by legislation nor in wage rate agreements,
and in point of fact is a form of concealed unemployment. In a number of cases,
compulsory leave without pay constitutes a method of forcing the worker to
quit at his own request in order to avoid payments connected with his dismissal
in the context of staff reductions and provided for in article 40, paragraph
3 of the Labour Code. According to figures provided by the Labour Institute's
Labour Monitoring Centre, this violation occurs above all in light industry
and mechanical engineering enterprises, where the proportion of concealed
unemployment is considerably above the average in the branches analysed by
the Centre, amounting to no less than 20 per cent. In general, the Employment
Service calculates that, at the beginning of 1994, concealed unemployment
affected about 4 to 5 million persons.
24. The massive violations of labour rights described above have the effect
of increasing social tensions in society and foment collective labour disputes,
which in some cases degenerate into strikes. According to the State Committee
on Statistics, strikes occurred in 288 organizations in the first quarter
of 1994, namely, 10.3 times more often than in the corresponding quarter of
1993. The main reason behind such strikes was failure to pay wages.
25. In the overwhelming majority of such cases the courts found that these
strikes (among those they examined on the basis of actions brought by the
administrations of enterprises) were illegal from a formal standpoint (non-compliance
with articles 2-4 of the Soviet Socialist Republic's Law on the settlement
of labour disputes that make it mandatory to conduct a preliminary investigation
of the disputes that have arisen at a general meeting of the workforce, by
a reconciliation commission or through arbitration).
26. According to figures presented by the Ministry of Justice of the Russian
Federation, 250 (95.1 per cent) of the 263 strikes referred to the courts
were found to be illegal in 1992; the corresponding figures for 1993 were
62 out of 68 (91 per cent).
27. Collective labour disputes occurred at 1,113 enterprises and organizations
in various branches and regions in 1993.
28. Owing to the difficulty of eliminating the reasons behind collective labour
disputes and the absence of suitable machinery for their settlement, the vast
majority of such disputes become more serious and prolonged.
29. Violations of the rights of workers at the time of hiring or dismissal
have become extremely common. A practice that has become widespread at private
enterprises (including those with foreign capital participation) but is encountered
even more frequently in State enterprises, is the conclusion of labour agreements
whose conditions, in violation of article 5, paragraph 1 of the Labour Code,
place workers in a position worse than that provided for by labour legislation.
As a rule, conditions at variance with the legislation in force involve questions
of dismissal: provision is made for the absolute right of employers to dismiss
workers, swingeing conditions if the worker quits on his own initiative (obligation
to work for a specific period without dismissal, extension of the period of
advance notice of dismissal, and financial penalties if the worker quits on
his own initiative), as well as for the possibility of transferring the worker
in an arbitrary manner. Workers at State and former State enterprises are
frequently forced to accept fixed-term contracts instead of contracts of unlimited
duration, or fixed-term contracts when they are hired, in violation of article
17, paragraph 2 of the Labour Code.
30. The main reason why a worker is willing to go along with discriminatory
hiring practices is explained by the attractive wage level (at private enterprises)
and fear of losing his job. For this reason, the number of actions brought
for the restoration of the violated rights of workers in private enterprises
is small in comparison with the total number of workers they employ. According
to the Ministry of Justice, 840 such claims were granted in 1993. During the
same period, the courts restored the rights of 47,250 workers in State enterprises
and organized societies.
31. The most widespread abuses involve the illegal cancellation of labour
contracts because of staff reductions. Typical violations in this connection
include the absence of an agreement with the trade union body (art. 35 of
the Labour Code) and failure to comply with time-limits in violation of article
34 of the Labour Code offering the possibility of taking into account a worker's
preferential right to keep his job. There are also violations of article 40,
paragraph 2 of the Labour Code, which states that a worker must be given two
months' notice of dismissal against receipt and be offered alternative work
at the same enterprise.
32. Labour legislation providing benefits and guarantees to specific categories
of working women, young persons and the disabled is frequently violated. In
a number of regions (Mordoviya, Kirovskaya oblast) women with young children
were made to do overtime and assigned work they are not allowed to do. At
6 out of each 40 enterprises verified by the Moscow procurator's office, it
was found that pregnant women were made to work at night and also dismissed
on the initiative of the administration. As a result of continuing discrimination
against women at the time they are hired, the number of disabled working women
declined by 80,000 in 1991-1992.
33. Labour safety conditions have also deteriorated recently in that industrial
injuries are increasing throughout the country and labour safety monitoring
is non-existent.
34. According to the Ministry of Labour, an average of about 1,600 accidents
occur, 27 persons die, and 55 persons are injured and become disabled every
day. In 1993 over 400,000 workers were injured, and of this number 8,000 died.
The worst conditions prevail in enterprises with non-State forms of ownership.
35. The absence of legal regulations governing labour safety in private sector
enterprises, the inaccessibility of such enterprises to supervising and monitoring
bodies, the lack of a reporting system for labour conditions and industrial
accidents, and the incompetence of managers result in the violation of the
constitutional right to work in conditions meeting safety requirements. Very
often industrial injuries, including those resulting in death, are not investigated.
36. The existing system for the registration and winding-up of enterprises
fails to establish the responsibility of the legal person for injury caused
to a healthy worker in cases when the consequences of an injury or occupational
disease become apparent only after the enterprise had been wound up.
37. In many cases the enterprise refuses to pay compensation for injury caused
to a worker's health. In 1992, according to figures supplied by the Ministry
of Justice, the courts granted 90 per cent (22,007 out of 24,451) of claims
for the payment of compensation for injuries incurred; the corresponding figure
for 1993 was 91 per cent (12,046 out of 15,993).
38. The type of violations described above are by no means exhaustive of the
wide range of labour rights violations.
39. The decline in the extent of supervision exercised over compliance with
labour rights and labour legislation is to a large extent due to the changing
role of the trade unions in the system of labour relations. Previously, the
State's function of supervising and monitoring compliance with labour legislation
was delegated to the centrally-managed system of trade unions. The legal inspections
which constituted part of their functions were at that time carried by a number
of State authorities (issue of instructions binding upon management, imposition
of fines, etc.). As a result of the emergence of new "alternative"
trade unions and the loss by the Federation of Independent Russian Trade Unions
(FIRTU) of its monopoly, as well as the dispersion of monitoring activities
among various bodies due to the extremely unfortunate rewording of article
244 of the Labour Code, the function of exercising supervision and control
over compliance with labour legislation is now virtually non-existent; this
has created a situation conducive to the violation of labour rights, particularly
in the non-State sector of the economy.
40. Neither State bodies nor the trade unions possess information about the
true extent and nature of violations in the private sector. Such information
is not available even to the central committees of trade unions for workers
in medium and small businesses, which are supposed to protect the rights of
workers employed in the private business sector. This situation suggests that
the expansion of the non-State sector of the economy may be accompanied by
a corresponding increase in the number of violations of the labour rights
of workers in this sector if steps are not taken in time to prevent this from
happening.
41. The situation is further aggravated by the fact that a number of enterprises
are whittling away the rights of trade unions, refusing to recognize new,
"alternative" trade unions and even attempting to dissolve trade
union organizations on the decision of organs of the workforce by reference
to article 235, paragraph 1 of the Labour Code, according to which the workforce
independently determines and regulates the forms and conditions of work at
the enterprises of organized societies.
42. The fact of the matter is that the establishment of the non-State sector
of the economy wrought radical changes in relationships between the State,
trade unions and entrepreneurs. Employers and trade unions emerge as distinct,
and frequently confrontational parties in labour relations. For this reason,
the State should assume the functions of arbitrator and supervisor. And this
explains why the question of establishing a single State federal labour inspectorate
is of an urgent nature.
43. A number of thorny problems are raised by efforts to give effect to the
right to protection against unemployment. The number of persons registered
with the employment service for each vacancy increased from two in July 1993
to three in December. Moreover, the average period of unemployment doubled
(from three to six months). At the beginning of 1994, a total of 835,000 unemployed
were registered with the employment service.
44. Yet this figure, which is relatively small in terms of the size of the
country, fails to reflect the actual state of affairs, since the process of
releasing workers is held in check by concealed unemployment. Across the board
application of the law on bankruptcy, which is necessary if the economy is
to be revitalized could increase the number of unemployed to over 3 million.
45. Moreover, according to the Labour Monitoring Centre, concealed unemployment
at most enterprises is not used to recycle and retrain workers so that rational
use can be made of their services in future. For this reason, in a context
of mass unemployment, there is a danger that jobs will not be found for them
since, from an employment standpoint, they will be unsuitable.
46. Although the subordinate bodies of the employment service view the situation
optimistically and are taking various steps to mitigate the consequences of
mass lay-offs, the measures they entail - judging by the report of the Federal
Employment Service - are still being drawn up. The procurator's office notes
that, in a number of regions, employment services are unable to forecast the
labour market accurately, to build up a reliable data bank in time, and fully
to implement measures designed to protect the population against unemployment,
and are making inadequate use of possibilities of providing the unemployed
with paid jobs on public works projects.
47. Questions of specific State assistance for the unemployed, geared to their
social needs, are assuming particular importance in the context of rapidly
increasing inflation. On 1 January 1994, about 550,000 (66 per cent) of the
total number of persons recognized as being unemployed were receiving unemployment
benefits. In December 1993, the average benefit was 16,000 roubles - an amount
that is far from assuring minimum living standards.
48. All this indicates that society and the State are inadequately prepared
to solve the social problems that are inevitably raised by mass unemployment.
49. The problem of employment for young persons is particularly acute. Under
existing labour legislation, the minimum age of employment is 16 years (exceptionally,
15 years). However, the Law on Training permits the placement by training
institutions of minors who have reached the age of 14. The absence of any
clear-cut regulations governing labour relations for this age group, the lack
of interest shown by enterprises in hiring persons from this group, and the
ineffectual assistance provided by the State in placing such persons results
in the illegal use of their labour by commercial enterprises. Semi-legal work
in such enterprises violates their legal rights and interests and, in a number
of cases, has the effect of involving minors in forms of organized crime.
For this reason, the Ministry of Labour proposed a number of measures to the
Government; one was to prohibit the placement of minors from schools in the
absence of confirmation that they had been hired or were to attend vocational
training courses, and another was to require educational bodies to monitor
the placement of minors from schools on reaching the minimum age for employment.
This matter has not yet been settled however.
50. In the light of the above, the President's Commission on Human Rights
submitted a recommendation supporting the proposals of State bodies (Ministry
of Labour of the Russian Federation, the courts and the procurator's office)
and trade unions for the adoption of a number of urgent measures designed
to ensure compliance with the labour rights of citizens, including:
The establishment and strengthening of a system for monitoring compliance
with labour legislation and labour safety;
The preparation and adoption of new labour legislation as well as laws on
collective labour disputes, a living wage, social insurance, social security
and the status of trade unions;
The amendment of the existing Laws of the Russian Federation on employment
in the Russian Federation, on collective agreements (assistance in developing
a system for the collective regulation of labour relations as an effective
means of protecting the rights of workers in the context of developing a market
infrastructure), the Penal Code, the Law on Training and of legislation on
compensation for workers who have suffered industrial injuries;
The ratification of the ILO Convention laying down international standards
in respect of the generally-recognized rights of workers under contract; and
The improvement of procedures for establishing that a person is unemployed
and for calculating employment.
51. It is generally understood in Russia that, owing to the difficulty of
going over to a market economy, particular importance must be attached to
international assistance if the right to work is to be fully realised. In
this connection, those segments of the population that are suffering the most
and above all persons who have been forced to migrate should be the first
to be able to count on the assistance of other States and international organizations
in a spirit of solidarity and burden-sharing. For example, the International
Organization for Migration is drawing up a "Migration for Development"
programme for the organized settlement of migrants on a permanent basis entailing
the use of self-financing arrangements to resettle and install migrants and
to find jobs for them. Russia is also, in cooperation with the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, drawing up a number of measures
in this connection to protect the right to work of refugees and persons who
have been forced to resettle.
The right to the enjoyment of just and favourable
conditions of work (art. 7)
52. This right is guaranteed in article 37, paragraph 3 of the Constitution, which reads:
"Everyone shall have the right to work in conditions which meet safety
and hygiene requirements, and to receive remuneration for labour without any
discrimination whatsoever and not below the minimum wage established by federal
law, as well as the right of protection against unemployment."
According to article 78 of the Labour Code, the minimum wage does not include
additional payments and increments or bonuses and other financial incentives.
53. The labour protection legislation of 6 August 1993 guarantees the worker's
right to labour protection and establishes uniform procedures for the regulation
of labour protection matters between the employer and workers at enterprises,
establishments and organizations, regardless of the form of ownership, and
is also intended to create working conditions that protect the lives and health
of workers in the course of their work. An Interdepartmental Labour Protection
Commission has been set up to implement the provisions of this legislation.
54. Yet the actual labour protection situation in Russia is a source of concern
owing to failure to comply with legislation and its inadequate requirements,
the fact that production equipment is wearing out at an alarming rate and
the increase in the number of accidents. An analysis of the labour situation
and its future prospects are contained in the Government's Basic Social Policy
Concepts for 1994 (Order No. 474 of 6 May 1994).
55. The creation of safe workplaces that do not endanger the health and lives
of workers is one of the urgent and priority tasks that has to be tackled
in the development of the labour sector, above all at the level of individual
enterprises. Extremely unfavourable conditions have emerged in this sector.
About 30 production workers meet their deaths each day and over 50 are disabled.
Moreover, approximately 400,000 accidents occur every year at enterprises.
The amount paid out by enterprises in the form of compensation for accidents
and occupational diseases exceeds 40 billion roubles a year. Injuries occur
two to four times more frequently than in the developed countries of Europe.
56. Enterprises are reducing (and in the private sector very often not appropriating)
funds to ensure labour safety. In the Russian Federation as a whole, about
3.5 million persons are employed in workplaces not meeting safety requirements
and over 5 million work in conditions where they are exposed to harmful industrial
substances.
57. Monitoring data in respect of the enterprises inspected indicate that
problems connected with working conditions and labour protection are reaching
an extremely critical stage in the industrial sector as a whole, as well as
in other branches of the national economy. In the first half of 1993, for
example, there was more than one industrial injury per 100 workers at microbiological,
transport and building materials enterprises.
58. This is because enterprises have not done enough to improve labour conditions
and protection. Production and labour discipline is slipping and the amounts
earmarked for the improvement of production technology and labour protection
are declining. Labour protection services have been done away with at many
enterprises and branches, no economic incentives have been created to motivate
enterprises to improve labour and production conditions, and insufficient
attention is being paid to monitoring compliance with labour legislation.
59. The State labour protection system has been virtually destroyed and bodies
which previously dealt with labour protection matters are ineffectual. The
corresponding services of ministries, departments, concerns and associations
have been reduced to a minimum and even completely done away with. The technical
labour inspectorates of trade unions do not have access to private, cooperative
and other enterprises with non-State forms of ownership. Newly organized trade
unions have no labour protection bodies. The financing of labour protection
measures is being drastically reduced and material support for them is dwindling.
Yet at the same time enormous amounts are being spent to finance various benefits
and to compensate workers employed in dangerous conditions, such amounts considerably
exceeding expenditure on the elimination of the dangers encountered in production.
60. The recent splitting-up of social insurance funds among the large number
of trade union associations deprives citizens of various insurance guarantees
and increases social tension. The absence so far of any State system for ensuring
the application of social and labour guarantees is resulting in massive violations
of labour legislation, particularly in the non-State sector of the economy.
61. The basic labour protection legislation of the Russian Federation, introducing
economic machinery to regulate the labour protection activities of enterprises,
was adopted in 1993 and a draft State programme for the protection and improvement
of working conditions drawn up. Steps are also being taken to draft new and
redraft existing legislation and other enforceable enactments to reflect the
new social and economic conditions and production relationships that have
been created and to provide workers with better industrial clothing and footwear
and other personal protection items. A State labour protection system is being
created, comprising the Russian Federation's federal and republican units
as well as the territorial, regional and other administrative and territorial
units of the State labour protection service, the network of research institutes
responsible for the scientific implementation of the labour protection decisions
adopted and the State Labour Protection Inspectorate responsible for monitoring
compliance with labour protection legislation, standards and regulations.
62. Presidential Decree No. 850 of 4 May 1994 on State supervision and the
monitoring of compliance with the Russian Federation's labour and labour protection
legislation states that, pending the adoption of the law on the State labour
inspectorate, State supervision and monitoring of compliance with labour and
labour protection legislation is to be effected by the Federal Labour Inspectorate
attached to the Ministry of Labour and its subordinate State labour inspectorates
in the republics, territories, regions, towns of federal importance, autonomous
oblasts, autonomous okrugs, districts and towns.
63. The social insurance system for workers is being reorganized in order
to provide social guarantees to persons working under contract and to develop
forms of social insurance on an agreed basis. The compilation of a list of
persons paying insurance premiums is to be speeded up. The new social insurance
system is to be used as a basis for the development of an accident and occupational
disease insurance system.
64. The stability of the minimum wage is ensured by regular reviews and indexation
to the rate of inflation. Of fundamental importance in this respect is the
Subsistence Level Law, which calls for a gradual increase in social guarantees
(minimum wage and minimum pensions) up to the subsistence level.
65. The subsistence level, which constitutes the official criterion of poverty
in Russia, is calculated using the method recommended and approved by the
Ministry of Labour in 1992. These calculations are based on the standard statistical
method, according to which the cost of a consumer basket is determined on
the basis of minimum consumption (this basket was calculated by the Nutritional
Institute of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences and evaluated by WHO),
expenditure on non-food items and services, as well as taxes and compulsory
payments based on the outlays of 10 per cent of all protected families. In
June 1994 the minimum wage amounted to 17 per cent of the subsistence level
(34 per cent in December 1993). On 1 July 1995 the minimum wage was raised
from 14,620 roubles to 20,500 roubles.
66. The social and labour situation reflects the fact that, in 1992, during
the first stage of the radical economic changes being made, the main emphasis
was placed on improving the country's financial condition and achieving macroeconomic
stabilization. Social problems, notwithstanding the adoption of a number of
stop-gap measures, were relegated to second place. This inevitably entailed
considerable social expenditure. However, the decline in the standard of living
of the majority of the population and the aggravation of conditions in various
branches of the social sector proved to be more far-reaching and prolonged
than anticipated.
67. The structure of consumption is deteriorating in that expenditure on foodstuffs
in relation to total consumer expenditure rose by 8 per cent in comparison
to 1991. Yet at the same time consumption of meat, fish, milk, sugar, confectionery
products and fruit declined by 10 to 20 per cent. The overall calorific value
of foodstuffs consumed in 1993 reached the 1991 level. However consumption
of more valuable protein products continued to decline and that of less nutritious
carbohydrates increased. The share of products of animal origin in the total
amount of products consumed declined from 35 per cent to 31 per cent.
68. Wage differentials became more pronounced - without justification in many
cases - between various branches, categories of workers and areas of the country.
Whereas up to 1991 the wages of 10 per cent of the most highly paid workers
were about four times those of the lowest paid, the differential at the end
of the year was 16. The gulf between the wages of workers in the State-funded
and non-State-funded sectors widened. Only in December 1992, with the introduction
of the Unified Wage Scale and an increase in wage rates for the first category
above the minimum wage level, social guarantees in the non-State-funded sector
and the basic rate for the taxation of the wage fund, was it possible to alleviate
the situation to some extent. However, the unregulated increase in wages in
the non-State-funded sector is considerably hampering the solution of this
question.
69. The number of impoverished persons has increased. Approximately one-third
of the population whose incomes could be accounted for lived below the subsistence
level - a concept developed by the Russian Ministry of Labour to provide,
in the context of the economic crisis, a provisional yardstick for measuring
the minimum permissible level at which the essential needs of individual population
groups are satisfied. The increase in the number of persons who were badly
off was paralleled by various processes that resulted in the erosion of the
middle classes. This increase in the number of poor brought about the depletion
of regional funds for selective social assistance. The question of creating
such funds arose in a number of regions.
70. One of the main steps taken by the Government to mitigate the social situation
was to review periodically (about once per quarter) the minimum wage, pensions,
allowances, wage rates and wage scales of persons employed in the State-funded
sector. The measures adopted at the federal level were supplemented by various
others adopted in the regions, particularly in respect of children, the disabled
and low-income families. Social assistance funds were created for this purpose.
All these measures helped to reduce social tensions to some extent. Yet the
situation became more difficult during the course of the year, social problems
accumulated, became more serious and persisted longer than anticipated.
71. In view of the situation prevailing in 1992, the Government adopted the
Basic Social Policy Concepts for the Russian Federation in 1993, which heralded
the transition to a comprehensive and integrated State policy in the social
and labour spheres. The following main social policy goals and priorities
were defined for 1993, taking into account economic development prospects
and on the basis of the steps taken to stabilize the economy:
Prevention of any further reduction in levels of living;
Greater State assistance for the most socially disadvantaged population groups;
Prevention of mass unemployment, which will not be allowed to rise above socially
acceptable levels;
Improvement of labour relations and their impact on production;
Creation of a sound basis for the gradual improvement of the material circumstances
and working conditions of various segments and groups of the population.
72. Measures aimed at attaining these goals were reflected in the general
agreement concluded between all-Russian trade union associations, employers
and the Government for 1993, in the plans of government activities, and in
measures to implement the Presidential Decree of March 1993 on urgent measures
to stabilize levels living in the Russian Federation in 1993 and that of April
1993 on supplementary measures to protect labour rights in the Russian Federation.
73. The minimum wage and wage rates in the first category of the Unified Wage
Scale for persons employed in the State-funded sector were raised every quarter
to stabilize levels of living. Similarly, social allowances and compensatory
payments to families with children and certain other categories were increased,
pensions were indexed to price changes, an arrangement for making compensatory
payments to pensioners was introduced, and the material circumstances of members
of the armed forces and their families were considerably improved. The pension
system for members of the armed forces was reformed, and reduced public transport
fares were introduced for badly-off persons living in areas of the far north
and similar areas, as well as in other distant regions.
74. A variety of factors, such as the unwieldiness of the Russian tax system,
which is regulated by almost 800 instruments adopted by the Ministry of Finance
and the Tax Service, and the excessive nature of taxes call for its reorganization.
The Government is considering the draft of new tax legislation, conscious
of the fact that the tax base has to be broadened, privileges done away with
and a solution found to a number of problems connected with tax collection
and monitoring compliance with tax legislation. It is intended to protect
the interests of persons with low incomes by increasing the income level at
which no taxes are paid to the equivalent of two minimum wages per month.
A supplementary 2-5 per cent federal income tax on natural persons is being
introduced and taxation of members of the armed forces is being restored.
Moreover, it is proposed that interest on bank deposits should be taxed. These
changes are not of a far-reaching nature.
75. The increase in the income of the population and the wages of workers
more or less corresponded to the increase in consumer prices in 1993. In the
third and fourth quarters of 1993, however, price increases began to outstrip
the increase in incomes.
76. The general situation remains rather complex. A number of trends, common
to all countries experiencing the economic crisis, are apparent in the social
sector. The main ones include a decline in the living standards of a considerable
proportion of the population, a sharp increase in differences between the
material circumstances of its various component segments and a contraction
of social services, and particularly health, educational and cultural services.
The living standards enjoyed by various segments of the population remain
extremely varied. A rapid redistribution of incomes is taking place to the
advantage of a small group of citizens, and income differentials are growing.
77. During certain months of 1993, the incomes of 27-35 per cent of the population,
and especially those of families with children, pensioners and persons working
in State-funded organizations were below the subsistence level. The incomes
of the 10 per cent of the most well off were 10 times larger than those of
the 10 per cent of the least well off, as against 7.5 to 8 times at the end
of 1992 (the intermediate 10 per cent of best paid workers earned 27 times
more than the worst paid workers at the end of 1993).
78. The measures taken by the Government to stabilize levels of living in
1993 brought about a slight improvement in incomes in comparison with 1992.
Certain changes took place in the structure of consumer expenditure in 1993.
Following the substantial increase in the proportion of expenditure on foodstuffs
observed in 1992 (from 38.4 per cent in 1991 to 47.1 per cent in 1992), it
declined slightly to 46.3 per cent. Consumption of sugar, vegetable oil and
potatoes increased by 3 to 8 per cent. Measures to maintain the incomes of
badly-off segments and groups of the population as well as periodic increases
in the wages of persons employed in organizations financed under the budget,
were taken within certain limits that made it possible gradually to reduce
inflationary pressures due to increases in income.
79. Steps were also taken to promote employment in the event of possible mass
lay-offs, and measures adopted to ensure the vocational rehabilitation of
the disabled and to find jobs for them. The Russian Federation's Laws on refugees
and on enforced migration were brought into force. The Russian Federation's
Law on State guarantees and compensation for persons working and living in
areas of the far north and similar areas was also adopted. In May 1994, the
Government adopted Order No. 431 on measures to provide employment should
a critical situation arise on the labour market in various regions of the
Russian Federation.
80. Regional administrative bodies were given a greater say in the implementation
of social policy. Programmes for the social protection and support of segments
of the population which, owing to reasons beyond their control, find themselves
in difficult straights, have been drawn up in most regions and are being carried
out.
81. Considerable income differentials are apparent at the regional level.
Average per capita income in the Magadanskaya oblast is 3.5 times higher than
the average for the Russian Federation, but in the Voronezhskaya and Penzenskaya
oblasts it is two-thirds of the average Russian level. The redistribution
of cash incomes from the western and southern regions to the northern and
eastern regions is gradually taking place. These differentials are to a great
extent explained by prevailing regional differences in the cost of living.
A study and analysis of living standards reveals that monthly minimum living
standards were the highest in the far eastern, northern and west Siberian
regions. One of the most expensive towns in the country is Moscow, where the
prices of basic goods and services considerably exceed those in other towns
of the European part of Russia, the central regions and the southern part
of Siberia.
82. Minimum wages and category 1 wage rates of the Unified Wage Scale for
workers employed in the State-funded sector remain considerably below the
subsistence level. Even at the time these rates were reviewed, they were only
about 30-40 per cent of the subsistence level for an able-bodied person. The
relationship between minimum pensions and the subsistence levels of pensioners
was somewhat better (84-99 per cent at the time minimum pensions were increased).
However, this figure declined by 10-36 per cent in the course of each quarter
owing to increases in consumer prices.
83. In 1993, changes in wage levels in the non-State-funded sector of the
economy were influenced by a number of factors whose impact was clearly apparent
even in the first year of the economic reform. In the national economy as
a whole and in the overwhelming majority of its branches it proved impossible
to reverse the decline in the volume of output, which was due above all to
the disruption of economic relationships and the regularity of supplies, as
well as an increase in reciprocal indebtedness. The abandonment of previous
planning procedures in no way led to the emergence of suitable new ways and
means of promoting production efficiency in the context of changing economic
conditions of the market type. As a result, production efficiency in general
as well as specific indicators of efficiency, such as those in respect of
labour productivity, resource savings and the quality of production are matters
that no longer attract attention at enterprises. The relationship between
wages and labour efficiency is thereby destroyed, and wages cease to perform
their basic function of motivating workers and acting as a financial incentive.
84. An analysis of wage trends in 1993 by branches of industry reveals that
previous structural disproportions and wage differentials remained unchanged.
As in the past, the highest wages were paid to workers in the fuel and power
sector, the fisheries industry and metallurgy. This is quite obvious if their
wages are compared with average monthly wages in industry as a whole. In December
1993, for example, wages in the fuel and power sector were almost twice as
high as average wages in industry, almost 1.5 times higher than in the metallurgical
sector and 1.6 times higher than in the fisheries industry. The highest monthly
wages were those in the gas industry, where they were twice as high as in
the fuel and power sector as a whole. The lowest wages in production branches
are those in light industry where they are 59 per cent of the wage level in
industry as a whole, and in the mechanical engineering and metalworking industries
(71 per cent). Wages in the educational and health sectors in October amounted
to 58-65 per cent of average industrial wages.
85. Unjustified wage differentials at enterprises are apparent in the steadily
widening gap between the earnings of managers, specialists and workers. Managers
of enterprises earn 3-5 times more than specialists and 12-15 times more than
ordinary workers. Sample surveys of the earnings differentials of persons
employed indicate that the best paid earned 20-25 times more than the worst
paid.
86. In present conditions, increases in wages are to a great extent determined
not by the amount of work done and the end results of production but by changes
in consumer prices for goods and services. Wages are being deprived of their
rational basis, and possibilities of using economic incentives to increase
production efficiency and introduce market relationships are being undermined.
87. The new sectors of the economy that are emerging are for the first time
creating conditions conducive to the unrestricted mobility of workers between
various sectors according to market conditions. At the same time, however,
the transition to a system of employment that operates on the basis of market
principles is increasing the number and nature of the problems being encountered.
The annual average number of persons employed in various branches of the economy
declined in the first half of 1993 in comparison with the corresponding period
of 1992 by 2.5 million (by 4.1 per cent). Yet this reduction did not correspond
to the decline in the volume of production, since changes in the number of
persons employed in various branches of industry are determined above all
by wage levels: employment is increasing in branches where wages are considerably
above the average for industry as a whole (fuel and power sector) and declining
where wages are lagging (light industry, and the engineering and petrochemical
industries).
88. In the major branches of the economy the largest decline in employment
is taking place in science and its supporting industries, construction and
trade. On the other hand, significant growth is being maintained in the administrative,
credits and State insurance branches.
89. As in the past, the main way in which enterprises lose workers is through
staff turnover, the ratio between workers laid off and those who quit at their
own request being 1:11 at the end of 1993.
90. During 1993 enterprises lost 10.1 million workers as a result of lay-offs
and those leaving at their own request. The number of persons applying for
work with the employment service was five times lower. In the course of 1993,
12 million workers were taken on by enterprises, and during this period, the
employment service found jobs for 900,000 (7 per cent of the total). Moreover,
the ratio between the number of unemployed and the number of vacancies rose
up to January 1993, after which it began to decline. In August it stood at
1:6. In other words, the bulk of the labour market is beyond the control of
the employment service.
91. In present conditions, the extent of lay-offs is determined above all
by the desire of employers to ensure acceptable wage levels in the context
of increasing inflation.
92. The managers of a number of the enterprises covered by the survey are
doing everything in their power to keep their workforce. For example, they
are allowing workers to work part-time (incomplete day or week), to take unpaid
leave, etc. They are able to do this because the economic situation enables
them to shift the burden of steadily increasing production costs due to increases
in wages and the inefficient use of labour onto the consumer.
93. In 1993 the problem of choosing between real employment and unemployment
was pinpointed for the first time in enterprises.
94. According to the figures of the Russian State Committee on Statistics,
concealed unemployment is on the rise in enterprises and organizations. At
the end of 1993, about 4 million persons, or over 5 per cent of the total
number employed, were working a shortened day or week or were on leave on
the initiative of management.
95. The increase in so-called concealed unemployment is one of the most serious
and dangerous consequences of the social and economic crisis in the country.
This is because, in certain circumstances, concealed unemployment can rapidly
become real unemployment.
96. The total number of persons without work and actively seeking jobs as
well as those not working full time (potential unemployment) at the end of
1993 was 8.1 million, or 11.4 per cent of the economically active population.
Of this number, 4.1 million (5.5 per cent) can be classified as unemployed
using estimates based on ILO methodology. According to the figures of Russia's
Federal Employment Service, 835,000 persons or 1.1 per cent of the economically
active population are officially recognized as being unemployed at the present
time.
97. Radical changes in the State's tax and credit policy could upset the existing
balance and lead to a catastrophic rise in real unemployment.
98. The solution of the employment problem at individual enterprises depends
on the effectiveness of the existing system for the training, retraining and
advanced training of production workers. An analysis of what is being done
at industrial enterprises reveals a patchy pattern in this connection. During
the first half of 1993 between 6 and 18 per cent of workers employed by enterprises
in the building materials, local industry, chemical and food industry sectors
received training or retraining. These figures were even lower at enterprises
in the mechanical engineering, ferrous metallurgical and transport sectors.
99. Not all employers have yet understood the need to break out of the situation
prevailing in production branches by upgrading the vocational skills of their
workers so that they can be used in the near future to bring about structural
changes and increase efficiency. The federal programme being drawn up at the
present time to assist enterprises in training their production workers will
be based on the solutions found to this problem at specific enterprises in
Russia and abroad. Under this programme, traditional centralized measures
will be abandoned and the task of gathering information about and disseminating
experience with the organization of labour, production and management assigned
to a semi-State body, namely, the Staff Development Association (taking into
account the experience and with the assistance of the German REFA).
100. The social partnership system has not yet developed fully in Russia.
This is explained above all by legislative shortcomings, the absence of real
owners, the fact that the trade unions are not prepared to assume responsibility
for improving the efficiency of the workforces of enterprises, as well as
the inadequate coordination of the activities of the social partners. The
Law adopted by the Russian Federation on collective agreements is incomplete
and fails to offer the possibility of providing the necessary social guarantees
in labour relationships.
101. At the federal level, the All-Russian Association of Trade Unions, employers
and the Russian Government recognized, in a general agreement covering 1993,
that the tasks that had to be tackled as a matter of priority included preventing
a decline in production and strengthening the State's ability to regulate
processes that could stabilize the social and economic situation. Yet machinery
for the implementation of these tasks has yet to be devised at the branch
level. It is therefore proposed to amend legislation regulating the social
partnership system, to define more clearly the status of the tripartite commissions
and of representatives of workers and employers (unions and associations but
not ministries).
102. A system for the timely settlement of collective labour disputes is being
introduced. Services of this kind have been organized at the federal level
and in 11 regions of Russia.
103. Information on what is being done to promote equal opportunities for
promotion is contained in Russia's National Report submitted to the Fourth
World Conference on Women: "Action for Equality, Development and Peace".
104. Guarantees of the right to rest are embodied in article 37, paragraph
5, of the Constitution, which states that "Everyone shall have the right
to rest. For those working under labour contracts the duration of work time,
days of rest and public holidays and annual paid leave established by federal
law shall be guaranteed". These matters are dealt with in chapter V,
entitled "Rest", of the Labour Code. The right of servicemen to
rest is governed by article 11, entitled "Duty hours and the right to
rest", of the Law on the status of members of the armed forces and also
in connection with freedom of conscience and religion dealt with in article
8 of this Law.
Trade union rights (art. 8)
105. Guarantees of the right of association in trade unions are embodied in
article 30 of the Constitution:
"1. Everyone shall have the right of association, including the right
to establish trade unions for the protection of their interests. The freedom
of activity of public associations shall be guaranteed.
"2. Nobody may be compelled to join any association or to stay there."
This right is given effect in accordance with the USSR Law of 9 October 1990
on public associations in the USSR, which is in force in Russia, and with
the Order of 25 January 1991 of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR on the registration
of the statutes of political parties, trade unions and other public associations
in the RSFSR.
106. The activities of trade unions are also governed by the Labour Law and
specifically by chapter XI, entitled "Trade unions. Participation of
workers in the management of enterprises, establishments and organizations",
as well as by other labour legislation. For example, the Law on collective
agreements and the Law on trade unions of 11 March 1992 grant trade unions
the right to participate in collective bargaining on behalf of workers with
a view to the preparation, conclusion and amendment of collective agreements.
107. The Basic Social Policy Concepts of the Government of the Russian Federation
for 1994 are intended to define more clearly the status of tripartite commissions
that are prepared to improve their efficiency and to create machinery for
taking into account constructive proposals submitted by the partners in drawing
up enforceable enactments regulating labour relationships.
108. Special conditions governing participation in trade union activities
have been laid down for certain categories of persons. For example, under
article 9, paragraph 2, of the Law on the status of members of the armed forces,
servicemen can be members of public associations not pursuing political objectives
and participate in their activities when not on duty.
109. Guarantees of the constitutional right of workers to strike is now embodied
in the USSR Law on procedures for the settlement of labour disputes, which
was brought into force on 20 May 1991. This Law establishes procedures for
the settlement of collective labour disputes connected with the introduction
at enterprises, establishments and organizations of new or the amendment of
existing social and economic labour and housing conditions, the conclusion
and implementation of collective agreements and other agreements between the
administrations of enterprises, establishments and organizations on the one
hand and the workforce or trade union on the other.
110. Limitations of this right can be imposed only in accordance with the
Law. For example, strikes may be prohibited for the duration of a state of
emergency under article 22 (g) of the Law on states of emergency.
111. Russian legislation contains no restrictions concerning the formation
of national federations or confederations of trade unions.
The right to social security (art. 9)
112. This right is guaranteed in article 39 of the Constitution:
"1. Everyone shall be guaranteed social security for old age, in case
of illness, disability and loss of the bread-winner, for the bringing up of
children and in other cases specified by law.
"2. State pensions and social benefits shall be established by law.
"3. Voluntary social insurance, the creation of additional forms of social
security and charity shall be encouraged."
113. Chapter XI of the Labour Code, entitled "State social insurance";
which makes such insurance compulsory for all workers, indicates how premiums
are to be paid, the types of protection provided under State social insurance
and procedures for the payment of allowances and pensions.
114. Presidential Decree No. 667 of 6 April 1989 on the main features of State
policy concerning compulsory insurance, adopted on the basis of the Law on
insurance, indicated a number of conditions in this respect and specifically
the priority to be attached to those forms of compulsory insurance which are
directly intended to protect the rights and freedom of the individual and
citizen, as guaranteed by the Constitution.
115. Parliament has adopted a decision on the creation of a federal medical
insurance fund and approved the Statute of the territorial compulsory medical
insurance fund.
116. As regards social security coverage in the event of temporary incapacity,
workers receive benefits from the State social insurance fund if they are
temporarily incapable of working (art. 239, para. 1 of the Labour Code of
the Russian Federation). Temporary incapacity benefits are paid in respect
of illness, occupational or other injuries, including off-the-job injuries,
and also if the worker concerned is caring for a sick member of his family,
and in cases of quarantine and when artificial limbs have to be provided (first
part of art. 239 of the Labour Code). Conditions governing the payment and
amount of benefits from the State social insurance fund are laid down in article
240, paragraph 1 of the Labour Code.
117. A law of this nature has yet to be adopted in the Russian Federation.
What is applied at the present time is the legislation of the former USSR
on basic conditions for paying benefits under the State social insurance system,
approved by the Order of the Council of Ministers of the USSR and the All-Union
Central Council of Trade Unions of 23 February 1984, as subsequently amended
and supplemented, and the Regulations on the payment of benefits by the State
social insurance system, approved by the Order of the Presidium of the All-Union
Central Council of Trade Unions of 12 November 1984.
118. Benefits in respect of temporary incapacity to work are, as a rule, paid
if the right to such benefits was acquired during the period of employment,
including the probationary period and the day of dismissal (art. 3 of the
basic conditions). These benefits are paid from the first day of the worker's
incapacity until he is capable of working again or up to the establishment
of invalidity by an Industrial Disease/Injury Commission of Experts, even
if the worker was discharged at that time (para. 9 of the basic conditions).
In certain cases, however, the period during which benefits are paid in respect
of temporary incapacity is reduced. For example, benefits in respect of off-the-job
injuries are paid beginning on the sixth day of incapacity. On the other hand,
if the injury is the result of a natural disaster (earthquake, flood, hurricane,
etc.) or an anatomical abnormality of the victim, benefits are as a rule paid
for the entire period of incapacity (para. 14 of the basic conditions).
119. Manual and office workers employed on a seasonal and temporary basis
are paid benefits in respect of temporary incapacity due to industrial injuries
or occupational diseases in the normal manner, although benefits in respect
of temporary incapacity due to other causes are paid for a period not exceeding
75 calendar days (para. 22 of the basic conditions).
120. Allowances for persons caring for a sick family member are paid for not
more than three calendar days. This period may be extended only in exceptional
cases, depending on the seriousness of the illness of the family member and
household circumstances, but for not more than seven calendar days in all.
121. Allowances for persons caring for a sick child below the age of 14 are
paid during the period when the child needs care, but for not more than 14
calendar days (para. 18 of the basic conditions).
122. Benefits payable in respect of temporary incapacity due to an industrial
injury or occupational disease are equivalent to the full wage and in other
cases between 60 and 100 per cent of the wage, depending on the length of
uninterrupted service, the number of under-age children and other circumstances
(art. 239, para. 2 of the Labour Code).
123. Minimum benefits in respect of temporary incapacity are fixed at 90 per
cent of the minimum wage (art. 239, para. 3 of the Labour Code).
124. The relationship between the level of benefits in respect of temporary
incapacity and the length of service and other circumstances is specified
in the basic conditions for the payment of benefits under the State social
insurance system. For example, under article 35 of these conditions, apart
from cases of industrial injury and occupational disease, benefits in respect
of temporary incapacity amounting to 100 per cent of the wage are paid to
workers with uninterrupted service of eight and more years; to the disabled
of the Patriotic War veterans and other disabled persons on an equal footing;
to workers responsible for the maintenance of three or more children under
16 years of age (if students, under 18 years of age), with the exception of
workers whose period of continuous service was interrupted because they were
fired during the previous eight years for the commission of offences which,
under the law, are grounds for dismissal.
125. Benefits amounting to 80 per cent of the wage are paid to workers with
uninterrupted service of five to eight years. Those with uninterrupted service
of up to five years receive 60 per cent of their wage.
126. In June 1994 the Government approved procedures governing the payment
of allowances to able-bodied persons who are not employed but care for persons
who are incapable of working. These allowances amount to 60 per cent of the
minimum wage.
127. Maternity benefits in the amount of the full wage are paid during the
entire period of maternity leave, both before and after the birth (art. 240
of the Labour Code). According to article 165 of the Labour Code, maternity
leave begins 70 calendar days before the birth (86 days before in cases of
a complicated birth and 110 in the case of the birth of two or more children)
and 70 calendar days after the birth.
128. Unemployment benefits. Able-bodied persons without work and not receiving
wages (labour earnings), living in the territory of the Russian Federation,
registered with the Russian Federation's State Employment Service, looking
for suitable jobs and prepared to take on such jobs are recognized as being
unemployed and therefore entitled to State-guaranteed material support in
the form of unemployment benefits.
129. The procedures for determining the amount of the unemployment benefit
and conditions and times of its payment, for extending the period during which
the benefit is paid, as well as cases in which its payment is interrupted
or stopped, are set out in articles 33-38 of the RSFSR Law of 19 April 1991
on employment in the Russian Federation, as subsequently amended (Gazette
of the Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR and the Supreme Soviet of
the RSFSR, 1991, No. 18, p. 565, 1992, No. 34, p. 1974).
130. A condition that has to be satisfied before a person is recognized as
being unemployed and before unemployment benefits are calculated and paid
is that he must have registered with the unemployment service in the place
where he lives with a view to seeking suitable employment. Matters connected
with the payment of unemployment benefits are dealt with in greater detail
in the Regulations on the registration of unemployed persons and conditions
for the payment of unemployment benefits, approved by the Government Order
of 17 November 1992 (Collection of Enactments of the President and Government
of the Russian Federation, 1992, No. 23, p. 1966). In accordance with these
Regulations, the decision to pay unemployment benefits is taken by the employment
centre at the same time as it recognizes the person concerned as being unemployed
on the basis of his personal declaration (art. 19 of the Regulations). Unemployment
benefits are paid not less than twice a month provided that the unemployed
person re-registers and not less than twice a month at the times indicated
by the employment centre (art. 26 of the Regulations).
131. The amount of the unemployment benefit varies, depending on the category
of the person recognized as being unemployed in accordance with established
procedure. For example:
A person discharged by an enterprise for any reason (including disabled persons
in group III) during the 12 months preceding the beginning of unemployment
and having had during this period paid work lasting not less than 12 calendar
weeks on the basis of a full working day (week), or on the basis of a shortened
working day (week) equivalent to 12 calendar weeks of full working days, will
receive unemployment benefits for the first three months in the amount of
75 per cent of his wage during the last two months at his most recent place
of work, 60 per cent during the next four months, and subsequently 45 per
cent; in no cases, however, are the unemployment benefits paid less than the
minimum wage fixed by the legislation of the Russian Federation or higher
than the average wage in the republic comprising the Russian Federation, territory,
oblast, autonomous oblast, autonomous okrug and the towns of Moscow and St.
Petersburg;
A person dismissed by an enterprise for any reason but not having had paid
work for 12 weeks during the 12 months preceding his unemployment will receive
unemployment benefits equivalent to the minimum monthly wage fixed by the
legislation of the Russian Federation;
Persons seeking employment for the first time or endeavouring to find work
after a prolonged (over one year) interruption, receive unemployment benefits
equivalent to the minimum wage fixed by the legislation of the Russian Federation
(para. 28 of the Regulations).
132. The period for which unemployment benefits are paid may not exceed a
total of 12 calendar months during a period of 18 calendar months, except
in the cases provided for by the Russian Federation's Law on employment in
the Russian Federation (art. 35 of the Regulations). The payment of unemployment
benefits may be interrupted or terminated only for the reasons indicated in
these Regulations.
133. As regards compensation by employers for impairment of the health of
workers in the performance of their work, employers are responsible, under
the legislation of the Russian Federation, for any impairment of the health
of workers as a result of industrial injuries. Grounds for liability, forms
of compensation, procedures for the examination of the statements of victims
and the payment of compensation for the impairment of their health are set
out in the Civil Code and the regulations on compensation payable by employers
for the impairment of the health of workers as a result of industrial injuries,
occupational diseases or other work-related injury to their health, approved
by the Order of 24 December 1992 of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation
(Gazette of the Congress of People's Deputies of the Russian Federation and
the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation, 1993, No. 2, p. 71).
134. As regards the grounds for the employer's liability for the impairment
of a worker's health, the above-mentioned Regulations state that the employer
is required to compensate in full the injury caused to the health of a worker
in the performance of his work if such work is particularly dangerous (art.
454 of the Civil Code), if he is unable to demonstrate that the injury was
caused by an act of God or the victim's negligence. If the impairment of the
worker's health was not due to particularly dangerous working conditions,
the employer is not required to pay compensation provided that he proves that
the injury was not caused by his fault (art. 3 of the Regulations).
135. An industrial injury is regarded as being caused by the fault of the
employer (art. 3, para. 2 of the Regulations) if it occurred as a result of
failure to provide healthy and safe labour conditions (failure to comply with
regulations concerning labour protection, safety measures, industrial health,
etc.) - article 4 of the Regulations.
136. If gross negligence on the part of the victim contributed to the injury
or aggravated it, the compensation payable is reduced by an amount corresponding
to the degree of negligence of the victim. In cases of gross negligence on
the part of the victim and absence of any fault on the part of the employer
when he is regarded as liable regardless of fault (art. 3, para. 1 of the
Regulations), the amount of the compensation is also reduced accordingly.
In this case refusal to pay compensation for any injury caused is not countenanced.
137. The conclusions reached by the trade union committee of the enterprise,
establishment, organization or by another representative body authorized for
this purpose by the workers are taken into consideration in determining the
extent of the victim's negligence.
138. Joint responsibility is not applicable in respect of additional forms
of compensating for any injury incurred, in the payment of lump-sum benefits
or in compensating for injury in connection with the death of a breadwinner
(arts. 7, 21, 24, 27 and 29 of the Regulations).
139. Reparation for an injury consists in the payment to the victim of a sum
of money equivalent to his wage (or a proportion of his wage), depending on
the degree of incapacity brought about by the industrial injury; compensation
for additional expenses; the payment, in specific cases, of a lump sum; and
the restitution of moral injury (art. 8 of the Regulations).
140. The amount of money payable as compensation for an injury, compensation
for additional expenditure and the lump sum payable under these Regulations
may be increased by agreement between the parties or on the basis of a collective
agreement (art. 10 of the Regulations). The amounts payable as compensation
for injury must be indexed to the rise in the cost of living in accordance
with the procedure laid down by law. If the minimum wage is increased by the
central authorities all the amounts payable as compensation for wages are
increased in proportion to the increase in the minimum wage (art. 11 of the
Regulations).
141. The pension legislation of the Russian Federation provides for the payment
of labour and social pensions.
142. Labour pensions are fixed in relation to a person's labour or other socially
useful activity. These pensions are of the following kind:
Old-age pensions (depending on age);
Disability pensions;
Pensions paid in the event of the loss of the breadwinner; and
Pensions paid at the end of a term of service.
143. Old-age pensions are established either on a general basis or a preferential
basis (in connection with particular working conditions or with work in the
Far North). Old-age pensions fixed on a general basis are payable to men at
the age of 60 with a total length of service of not less than 25 years and
to women at the age of 55 with a total length of service of not less than
20 years. Old-age pensions fixed on a preferential basis (a lower pensionable
age and a shorter total length of service) are payable to certain categories
of persons such as disabled veterans and other comparable disabled persons,
disabled persons in group I (for reasons of eyesight), and others. Old-age
pensions based on particular working conditions (entailing a reduction in
the normal statutory pensionable age) are fixed for certain categories of
persons working underground, in harmful conditions, in hot shops, doing work
that is more intensive and difficult than usual, etc.
144. Pensions in connection with work in the Far North are payable to men
at the age of 55 and to women at the age of 50, provided that they have worked
not less than 15 calendar years in regions of the Far North or not less than
20 calendar years in comparable regions and have a total length of service
of 25 and 20 years respectively.
145. Old-age pensions are payable in the amount of 55 per cent of the wage
and in addition are increased by 1 per cent of the wage for each full year
of the total length of service in excess of that giving entitlement to a pension.
The amount of the pension cannot, however, exceed 75 per cent of the wage.
146. The minimum pension payable in respect of a total length of service equivalent
to that giving entitlement to the pension was 19,000 roubles a month on 1
May 1994.
147. The maximum pension payable in respect of a total length of service equivalent
to that giving entitlement to a full pension was fixed at three times the
minimum old-age pension level, i.e. 57,000 roubles from 1 May 1994, and pensions
payable in connection with underground work, work in harmful conditions and
hot shops were fixed at 3.5 times that level, i.e. 66,500 roubles from 1 May
1993.
148. Minimum and maximum pensions are increased by 1 per cent for each full
year of the total length of service exceeding that giving entitlement to a
pension, but by not more than 20 per cent.
149. Increments in addition to the old-age pension are payable:
In respect of care for a pensioner if he is a disabled person in group I,
if, in the opinion of the medical establishment, he requires constant outside
care (assistance supervision) or if he has reached the age of 80; and
In respect of dependants who are unable to work and do not receive a pension
of any kind. Increments in respect of dependants who are unable to work are
paid to pensioners who are not working.
150. The legislation in force provides for the payment of normal disability
pensions, namely, disability pensions payable as a result of an industrial
injury or occupational disease and disability pensions as a result of ordinary
illness. Disability pensions payable in respect of an industrial injury or
occupational disease are paid regardless of the length of service. Disability
pensions in respect of ordinary illness are payable only if the person concerned
has worked for a certain period of time before his disability occurred, and
depending on his age.
151. The pensions of disabled persons in groups I and II amount to 75 per
cent of their wage and those of persons in group III to 30 per cent of their
wage, although in no case may the pension be less than the minimum pension
payable namely, 19,000 roubles (the minimum old-age pension level) from 1
May 1994 to disabled persons in groups I and II, and 12,664 roubles (two thirds
of the minimum old-age pension) to disabled persons in group III.
152. The maximum disability pensions for persons in groups I and II are fixed
at the maximum old-age pension level which, from 1 May 1993, was 57,000 roubles,
and disability pensions for persons in group III are set at the minimum old-age
pension level, namely, 19,000 roubles.
153. The minimum and maximum disability pensions for persons in groups I and
II are increased by 1 per cent for each full year of the total period of service
exceeding that giving entitlement to an old-age pension, but by not more than
20 per cent.
154. Increments in addition to the disability pensions of persons in groups
I and II are payable:
In respect of care provided to a disabled person in group I or who, in the
opinion of a medical establishment, requires constant outside care (assistance,
supervision) or if he has reached the age of 80. The increment amounts to
two thirds of the minimum old-age pension, namely, 12,664 roubles from 1 May
1994; and
In respect of dependants who are unable to work do not receive a pension of
any kind. In this case the increment is also 12,664 roubles, except where
it is payable to a dependant who is unable to work and is a disabled person
in group III. The increment for a dependant of this kind is 9,500 roubles
(one half of the minimum old-age pension).
155. The legislation in force provides for the payment of a pension in respect
of the loss of the breadwinner on a general basis if his death occurred as
a result of an industrial injury, an occupational disease or ordinary illness.
A pension in respect of the loss of the breadwinner as a result of an industrial
injury or occupational disease is payable regardless of the breadwinner's
length of service. The pension payable in respect of the loss of a breadwinner
as a result of ordinary illness is fixed in relation to the period for which
the breadwinner worked (and depending on his age). Pensions payable in respect
of the loss of a breadwinner are fixed at 30 per cent of the breadwinner's
wage for each family member who is unable to work, and for each child who
has lost both parents or a single mother at 1.5 times the minimum old-age
pension, namely, 28,500 roubles from 1 May 1994.
156. The minimum pension payable in the event of the loss of a breadwinner
to each family member who is unable to work was 12,664 roubles from 1 May
1994 (two thirds of the minimum old-age pension). The maximum pension is fixed
at the minimum old-age pension level, namely, 19,000 roubles from 1 May 1994
for each family member who is unable to work.
157. An increment is payable in addition to a pension for the loss of a breadwinner
in respect of providing care for a pensioner if he is a disabled person in
group I, requires constant outside care (assistance, supervision) in the opinion
of a medical establishment, or has reached the age of 80. The legislation
in force also provides for the payment of a pension on the basis of the number
of years worked. These pensions are payable to persons performing specific
types of work:
Work at underground or opencast mines;
Work in civil aviation and in aircraft testing;
Teaching in schools and other children's establishments;
Medical and other work entailing the protection of public health;
Artistic activities in theatres and other premises providing visual entertainment;
and
Work on fishing vessels (river and sea-going vessels).
158. Pensions payable at the end of a term of service to workers employed
at underground or opencast mines are fixed at 75 per cent of the wage. Those
payable at the end of a term of service to other categories of workers are
fixed at 55 to 75 per cent of their wage, depending on the number of full
years worked. The minimum pension payable at the end of the term of service
is fixed at the minimum old-age pension level, namely, 19,000 roubles from
1 May 1994. The maximum pension is equivalent to three minimum old-age pensions,
namely, 57,000 roubles from 1 May 1994, and for persons employed in civil
aviation and aircraft testing to 3.5 times the minimum old-age pension, namely,
68,500 roubles from 1 May 1994. The minimum and maximum pensions are increased
by 1 per cent for each full year worked (or of services rendered) in excess
of the number giving entitlement to the pension, but by not more than 20 per
cent. No increments are added to pensions payable at the end of a term of
service.
159. The Russian Federation has no schemes for the payment of additional pensions.
Presidential Decree No. 1077 on non-State pension funds was adopted on 16
September 1992, and a number of enactments on implementation procedures are
being drawn up.
160. There are no population groups that are not entitled to a pension.
161. The following enforceable enactments concerning the right to a pension
were adopted during the 1993-1994 period:
The Russian Federation Law on pensions for the parents of deceased servicemen
called up to do their military service (on the right to a pension - owing
to the loss of the breadwinner - of the parents of a person called up to do
his military service) was adopted on 21 May 1993;
The Russian Federation Law on the payment of pensions to citizens leaving
the Russian Federation to take up permanent residence abroad (on the right
to receive abroad pensions payable in the territory of the Russian Federation
in the event of departure from the Russian Federation) was adopted on 2 July
1993;
The Presidential Order on increasing pensions in accordance with article 110
(g) of the Law of the RSFSR on State Pensions in the RSFSR for citizens born
before 31 December 1931 (on increasing by 50 per cent the minimum old-age
pensions of this category of citizens) was adopted on 10 December 1993; and
The Federal Law on the amendment of article 110 of the Law of the RSFSR on
State Pensions in the RSFSR (on increasing minimum old-age pensions by 100
per cent for inhabitants of the blockaded city of Leningrad) was adopted on
10 June 1994.
Protection of the family (art. 10)
162. In accordance with articles 7, 19 and 38 of the Constitution of the Russian
Federation, the family, mothers and children in the Russian Federation are
protected by the State; men and women in the family have equal rights and
obligations; and the State provides support for motherhood, fatherhood and
childhood.
163. The basic enforceable enactment which at the present time regulates marriage
and family relationships is the Code on Marriage and the Family of the RSFSR,
adopted on 30 July 1969, according to which care for the family is one of
the State's most important tasks.
164. Under the Russian Federation's civil legislation, full legal capacity
is acquired when a person reaches legal age, namely, 18. Minors of 15 to 18
years of age (from 14 years of age in the draft of the new civil code) have
the right to conclude civil law contracts with the permission of their parents,
adoptive parents or guardians, but can independently make deposits with credit
agencies and use such deposits in accordance with the law (arts. 13 and 14
of the Civil Code of the RSFSR). The age of marriage is 18. However, in the
cases provided for by law it can be lowered, but by not more than two years.
In such cases full legal capacity is acquired at the time the marriage is
celebrated (art. 11 of the Civil Code of the RSFSR and art. 15 of the Code
on Marriage and the Family of the RSFSR).
165. The mutual consent of the future spouses is required before a marriage
can be contracted. If this condition is not satisfied the marriage is declared
null and void by the courts (arts. 15, 43 and 44 of the Code on Marriage and
the Family of the RSFSR).
166. Legislation on marriage and the family as well as civil legislation has
to be brought up to date in the context of changing social and economic relationships;
steps are already being taken to draft new legislation on marriage and the
family. The Government of the Russian Federation has set up a commission to
coordinate activities connected with the implementation of the Convention
on the Rights of the Child and the Universal Declaration on the Protection
and Welfare of Children in the Russian Federation. This commission has examined
various questions such as measures to make good shortcomings and improve procedures
governing the adoption of Russian children by foreign citizens, the legal
protection of children and the status of the family in the Russian Federation.
167. Progress is being made with the drafting of an order of the Government
of the Russian Federation on the approval of procedures for the adoption of
orphans and children, deprived of the care of their parents who are citizens
of the Russian Federation, by the citizens of other States, as well as provisions
on entrusting Russian children deprived of parental care to the citizens of
other States for adoption.
168. Other studies are also being carried out in this sphere (protection of
the rights of minors in the event of the alienation of privatized housing
etc.) in connection with the improvement of juridical, marital and family
relationships.
169. Further information on this subject is contained in the report on the
status of the family in the Russian Federation, prepared in 1994 by the National
Council for the Celebration of the International Year of the Family in the
Russian Federation and the Russian Federation's national report on population
problems (see para. 199 of this report).
The right to an adequate standard of living (art. 11)
170. The guarantees in this connection are set out in article 7 of the Constitution:
"1. The Russian Federation shall be a social State, whose policies shall
be aimed at creating conditions which ensure a dignified life and free development
of man.
"2. The Russian Federation shall protect the work and health of its people,
establish a guaranteed minimum wage, provide State support for family, motherhood,
fatherhood and childhood, and also for the disabled and for elderly citizens,
develop a system of social services and establish government pensions, benefits
and other social security guarantees."
171. The most serious feature of the present economic situation of Russia's
population is the sharp drop in the real incomes of the majority and the decline
in levels of living that this and other factors have brought about.
172. The population's money savings have lost virtually all their value. This
situation is particularly hard on pensioners as well as the population of
the northern regions of the country. Moreover, the problem of indexing the
savings deposits of the population has not yet been solved.
173. Another characteristic feature of the present period are the huge income
differentials between segments of the population. In 1993 the number of people
with an aggregate per capita income below the officially established subsistence
level remained stubbornly stable (up to 30 per cent). Moreover, 5 per cent
of this 30 per cent is accounted for by families with incomes below the physiological
subsistence minimum. According to the calculations of Russia's State Committee
on Statistics, the subsistence level in January 1993 was 5,500 roubles; in
May 1993, 12,900 roubles; in February 1994, 54,800 roubles; and in March 1994,
60,400 roubles. In the first quarter of 1994, 25.2 million persons or 17 per
cent of the population had incomes below the subsistence level. The position
of the unemployed among persons with minimum incomes is particularly difficult.
Official records of the number of unemployed have been kept in Russia since
1991. At the end of 1993, 836,000 unemployed were registered and of this number
64.7 per cent were receiving unemployment benefits. Over one third of the
unemployed had been laid off by enterprises, establishments and organizations
because of liquidation, reorganization and staff cuts; 71.9 per cent of the
unemployed were women and of this number 60 per cent had a higher and secondary
specialized education.
174. In 1993 average per capita real money incomes rose slightly in comparison
with 1992 - by 9 per cent according to the report of Russia's State Committee
on Statistics. Indirect confirmation of this increase (or at least of the
stabilization of average per capita real incomes) was offered by figures reflecting
an increase in the purchasing power of families with an average per capita
money income. In January 1992 a minimum consumer basket comprising 18 basic
foodstuffs accounted for 78 per cent of average money income, 53 per cent
in January 1993 and 28 per cent in December 1993.
175. Although average per capita real incomes rose by 9 per cent in 1993,
it should be borne in mind that the base year used was 1992, when levels of
living and incomes plunged owing to the liberalization of prices. A repetition
of 1992 would, more than anything else, have catastrophic consequences for
the country. For this reason it would be better to say that what happened
in 1993 was that incomes appeared to be stabilizing at the lowest possible
crisis level in a context of increasing social stratification.
176. The Basic Social Policy Concepts for the Russian Federation in 1994,
approved by Order No. 747 of 6 May 1994, were designed to provide social protection
for the most vulnerable segments of the population.
177. The attention of society as a whole is at the present focused on the
situation of the badly off (poor) segments of the population in Russia. The
official poverty criterion in the Russian Federation is the subsistence level
(51,700 roubles in January 1994).
178. The Russian Federation's Ministry of Labour has circulated to the various
regions methodological recommendations for calculating the subsistence level,
as well as a model regional programme for the social protection of the population.
These documents enabled the authorities to organize targeted social assistance
for badly off segments of the population.
179. An analysis of the distribution of the population by income levels reveals
that, at the present time, about one third of Russia's population consists
of families in which the income per family member is below the subsistence
level; in other words this proportion showed virtually no change in 1992-1993.
The subsistence level (the upper poverty threshold) for December 1993 was
fixed at 42,800 roubles per person per month. Some 33 million Russian citizens,
or 22 per cent of the population, are below this level. However, these figures
do not take into account incomes from a second job, foodstuffs grown at home
or services in the shadow economy. This situation is a source of concern for
Parliament, the Government and society alike.
180. Generally speaking, social assistance is provided to socially vulnerable
segments of the population whose aggregate average per capita family income
is below subsistence level, which is calculated each month. This category
includes large families; broken families; single pensioners; families with
disabled children; and pregnant women and nursing mothers. According to figures
obtained in a household survey carried out throughout Russia, the number of
poor households with children up to six years of age account for 40 per cent
of the total and large families with three and more children for 72 per cent
of the total.
181. Social assistance is provided mainly in the form of cash grants, assistance
in kind, free services etc.
182. A draft law on the subsistence level in the Russian Federation has been
drawn up and envisages a gradual increase in minimum State social guarantees
(minimum wage, minimum pensions, etc.) up to the subsistence level. This draft
law also enables citizens whose average per capita income is below the subsistence
level to request social assistance.
183. The most recent data for the Russian Federation as a whole are as follows:
SUBSISTENCE LEVEL
Total population: average per capita (thousands of roubles)
of whom:
Able-boded population Pensioners Children
1993
October 32.4 36.6 22.8 32.4
November 37.9 42.8 26.7 37.9
December 42.8 48.4 30.2 42.8
1994
January 51.4 58.0 36.2 51.3
February 56.6 63.7 39.9 56.9
No. of persons with cash incomes below:
the cost of a food consumer basket calculated during evaluation of subsistence
levelsubsistence level
MillionsAs a percentage of total populationMillionsAs a percentage of total
population
1993
October 45.030.318.9 12.8
November 49.133.020.6 13.8
December 32.922.214.0 9.5
1994
January 52.635.426.3 17.7
February 24.816.78.5 5.7
184. Statistical surveys conducted in 1993 show that the proportion of families
with incomes below subsistence level depended on the number of children in
a family: families with one child accounted for approximately 27 per cent;
with two children, 38 per cent; and with three or more children, almost 63
per cent.
185. At a time of social and economic crisis and a decline in living standards,
there is a greater risk that poverty will affect families assuming considerable
financial responsibility for dependants, namely, large and one-parent families,
those with young and disabled children where one of the parents is not productively
employed as a result of looking after a young or disabled child, and the families
of refugees and persons forced to resettle.
186. Poverty and social alienation are characteristic of children whose parents
have an antisocial way of life (alcoholism, drug addiction, criminal tendencies,
and so forth), which is the greatest impediment to a child's development.
187. The country's social and economic policy for children is based on the
need to adopt preventive measures and steps to overcome the above shortcomings.
188. The main way to protect children is through the system of State allowances
for families with under-age children. In accordance with Decree No. 2122 of
the President of the Russian Federation of 10 December 1993, on improving
the system of and raising the rates of State social benefits and compensation
payments to families with children, a unified system of State allowances was
introduced on 1 January 1994, under which several kinds of State social benefits
and compensation already being paid to families with children were replaced
by a single monthly child allowance. The adoption of the Decree is one stage
in the creation of a single system of allowances for families with children,
provided for in the draft federal law on State allowances for citizens with
children. The Decree also makes provision for the payment of benefits for
children receiving a social pension or a pension in respect of the loss of
the breadwinner, which was not previously granted. A single monthly payment
is made for each child under the age of 16 (for each child attending a school
offering general education the benefit is payable until he or she has finished
studying). The benefit paid is equal to 70 per cent of the minimum wage for
a child up to the age of six, and 60 per cent for older children, and amounted
to 24 and 14 per cent respectively of a child's subsistence level in February
1994. For children in one-parent families (single mothers, families where
parents refuse to pay maintenance, and families of servicemen who have been
conscripted) child benefits are increased by 50 per cent.
189. Women, or surrogates, who have taken leave to look after a child of under
18 months receive a monthly allowance amounting to 100 per cent of the minimum
wage. Allowances are also paid on the birth of a child and for looking after
a sick child. Pensions are paid in respect of children who have lost their
breadwinner and disabled children. Children in a one-parent family following
a divorce have a statutory right to maintenance.
190. Since a life of poverty poses a threat primarily to children's health
due to a lack of food or a poor diet, it has been decided that milk products
should be provided free of charge to all children under two years of age.
All children under 3 years of age are entitled to free medicine, and children
from large families are entitled to medicine up to the age of 6, as are disabled
children up to the age of 16.
191. The law guarantees a child's right to free medical care as well as free
general basic education. Provision has been made for measures to ensure access
to the services of preschool establishments for families with children. Every
year, measures are taken, inter alia by earmarking additional budgetary resources,
to provide summer holidays for and improve the health of children, and above
all those from poor families, orphans and disabled children.
192. Measures have been adopted and are being implemented to provide social
and material support for large families, whose children receive free meals
in general educational establishments and are also entitled to clothing, free
travel on urban public transport and preferential access to cultural events
and culture.
193. A Federal Child Protection Programme and standards have been established
and are being supplemented in the light of specific poverty conditions in
various territories. In most cases, the territorial level of free and preferential
services for children and the number of recipients are considerably above
general federal standards. The activities of local administrations include
the implementation of measures to provide social protection on an individual
basis, including a special programme to support children from the poorest
families. Territorial programmes providing social support to families and
children are financed in part from humanitarian assistance resources.
194. In accordance with Presidential Decree No. 1338 of 6 September 1993,
a State system is being introduced in Russia to prevent the neglect of and
crime among minors and to protect their rights, as well as to promote the
social adaptation of children who, for one reason or another, have been neglected,
are victims of domestic violence or have committed a crime. Under this system
a network of specialized establishments is being developed within bodies providing
social protection for minors in need of social rehabilitation, namely, refuges
for minors, social rehabilitation centres for minors with deviant behaviour,
and centres providing assistance to children who are no longer in the care
of their parents.
195. In view of the need for an integrated approach to the solution of problems
of child poverty and providing children with a decent standard of living and
upbringing, a national medium-term strategy in this area must be drawn up.
196. In 1993 a great deal of attention was paid to the nature of the organizational
and legal decisions needed to implement the recommendations contained in the
concluding observations of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the
Child, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, in the Russian Federation.
197. An Inter-departmental Committee to coordinate activities connected with
the implementation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
and the World Declaration on the Survival, Protection and Development of Children
in the 1990s has been set up in the Russian Federation. Moreover, a National
Plan of Action for children in the Russian Federation has been formulated
with a view to developing a unified State policy.
198. The main objective of the Plan is to define - on the basis of the international
obligations Russia assumed by signing the World Declaration -the priority
goals and tasks that will ensure the survival, protection and development
of children in the 1990s, as well as the strategy and measures that have to
be adopted to strengthen the social and legal protection of children, and
guarantee their constitutional right to survival, protection and development.
199. On 1 June 1994, 1,482,900 citizens without paid work, including 1,219,300
unemployed were registered with the State Employment Service. For May, the
number without paid work was 23,400 higher than the previous month, while
the number of unemployed rose by 39,400.
200. The number of persons laid off by enterprises, organizations and establishments
account for 25.8 per cent of those without paid work.
201. In May 1994, the State Employment Service found work for 80,200 Russians,
17 per cent of job seekers being placed within 10 days of approaching the
Service. Unemployed citizens accounted for 76 per cent of those for whom jobs
were found.
202. In May 1994, 17,400 Russians were engaged on paid public works projects,
which is 30 per cent more than in May 1993.
203. In May 1994, the State Employment Service enabled 52,600 citizens to
acquire a new occupation (specialized field), namely, 2.1 times more than
in February 1993.
204. In February 1994, 9,100 unemployed persons took advantage of the right
to take early retirement.
205. On 1 June 1994, the State Employment Service had 347,200 vacancy listings,
of which 85 per cent were for manual and 15 per cent for non-manual jobs.
The number of vacancies declined by 6.9 per cent for February 1994.
206. In February 1994, 828,000 citizens received unemployment benefits.
207. The President and the Government are devoting special attention to the
question of the social protection of servicemen. Presidential Order No. 203-RP
of 27 March 1993 approved the Programme of priority measures to be taken by
the State to strengthen the social protection of servicemen who have been
demobilized, as well as members of their families, in the context of economic
and military reforms. An Inter-departmental Commission on social questions
relating to servicemen and their families has been set up, and is seeking
to coordinate regulations governing the social protection of military pensioners
in the framework of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and with
the Baltic countries.
208. Among the impoverished members of the population, the homeless are in
need of special protection and support. The total number of homeless in the
country rose by approximately 40,000 (statistics are not kept) after the provisions
of the Criminal Code making vagrancy and begging an offence were repealed
in 1991. This dangerous social development has considerably complicated the
situation as regards sanitation and hygiene. Presidential Decree No. 1815
of 2 November 1993 on measures to prevent vagrancy and begging indicates a
number of measures to be taken as a matter of urgency. Specifically, the Decree
states that vagrants and beggars may be identified, detained and handed over
to militia agencies in social rehabilitation centres.
209. At a time of an extremely severe economic crisis in Russia, the right
to have enough to eat is in serious danger. In order to guarantee that right
in 1993, Russia imported foodstuffs and agricultural raw materials (not including
textiles) at a cost of US$ 5,950,000,000, which represents 22.2 per cent of
the total cost of imports for that period.
210. An analysis of the prevailing situation by the State Committee on Sanitary
and Epidemiological Supervision reveals another trend that has gathered momentum
in the past year, namely, an increase in the number of poor-quality products
supplied to Russia from abroad. This is true not only of the so-called bulk
goods trade, over which there is absolutely no control, but also of products
supplied to Russia on the basis of official contracts. In this regard, the
activities of the Russian Consumers' Confederation, a public body, are of
importance. Over 6 per cent of all imported goods fail to meet hygiene requirements
and more than 50 per cent fall short of microbiological standards. It is significant
that poor-quality foodstuffs have started to arrive not just from China, Taiwan
and Viet Nam, as in the past, but also from European countries. In 1993, for
example, botulism was caused by Italian tinned meat from the "Montana"
firm, poor-quality "Semilak" and "NAN" milk blends from
Holland were rejected, as were "Bebitel" tinned vegetables from
Hungary, and so forth. Yet appeals by domestic agricultural producers to close
the Russian market to western foodstuffs cannot be heeded because the quality
of domestic products is even worse. Research carried out by the State Committee
on Sanitary and Epidemiological Supervision revealed that in 1993 between
1.5 and 23 per cent of samples of various kinds of foodstuffs contained morbific
bacteria, eggs of intestinal worms, and considerable amounts of pesticides,
toxins or antibiotics. Twelve per cent of the dairy products, 15 per cent
of the fish and 7 per cent of the meat were substandard. This poor quality
of agricultural products is explained not only by failure to comply with technological
requirements on their arrival and when in storage, but also by contamination
of the land on which they are grown or produced. The heavy metal content alone
exceeds permissible levels in one quarter of Russia's agricultural land.
211. The expansion of the retail trade system and its regulation are the responsibility
of local authorities. For example, under Order No. 729-RP of the government
of Moscow on measures to promote street trade (hawking), adopted in May 1994,
organizations and enterprises selling doughnuts, pies, ice cream, chebureks
(meat pasties), and hot and cold drinks from barrows and handcarts are exempt
from paying for authorization to do so and for a hawking permit. Enterprises
wishing to engage in this kind of trade will have to obtain a single licence
for all their outlets and agree with the Prefecture on where they are to be
located. The Prefects of the administrative areas are required to decide immediately
where hawkers' barrows may be positioned.
212. Additional information on this subject can be found in the Russian Federation's
national report on problems affecting the population.
213. With a view to regulating agricultural production and supplying the population
of Russia with foodstuffs, agrarian reforms have been carried out since 1991
to promote the creation of peasant farms and enable peasants to enjoy effective
ownership of their land. The Presidential Decree of 27 December 1991 on urgent
measures to implement land reforms in the RSFSR called upon existing agricultural
enterprises to reorganize themselves in 1992, favourable conditions being
offered for the creation of farm holdings. According to official statistics,
19,700 collective farms and State farms -more than three quarters of the total
- had been re-registered by the beginning of 1993. Approximately 7,000 of
farm workers preferred to retain their former status. Three hundred publicly-held
joint-stock companies, 8,600 limited partnerships and partnerships with limited
liability and 1,700 agricultural cooperatives were set up. It would be an
exaggeration to say that, in practice, there are any major differences between
these bodies from an organizational and legal standpoint. Their statutes make
a distinction between individual shares in property and land and establish
the right to a general share or joint ownership of property, as well as the
right to collective share ownership or joint ownership of land. The legal
status of the new organizational and legal forms of agricultural enterprises
has thus been considerably standardized. Clarification of their legal status
may facilitate the adoption of legislation on agricultural cooperatives and
economic companies and associations.
214. The Presidential Decree of 27 October 1993 on the regulation of land
relationships and the development of agrarian reform in Russia will undoubtedly
act as an additional stimulus in this respect. However, no actual agrarian
reform measures have yet been formulated, and the process of acquiring practical
experience in implementing the legislation in force in the light of the approval
of new forms of entrepreneurial activity in the agro-industrial sector and
the optimization of production structures in the context of a market economy
is continuing. Government Decision No. 324 of 15 April 1994 on agrarian transformations
in the Nizhegorod region recommended that agricultural enterprises should
undertake a land privatization programme and reorganize themselves, and that
the relevant management bodies and authorities should take past experience
into account when they drafted land and agrarian legislation. The system for
assigning plots of land to citizens is being improved. To this end, a number
of measures removing various restrictions, such as those applicable to horticulture
and allotments, have been adopted pursuant to the Presidential Decree of 23
April 1993. Moreover, the Government Decision of 30 May 1993 introduced regulations
governing the purchase and sale of plots of land by citizens of the Russian
Federation.
215. The draft of the new land code of the Russian Federation has been drawn
up and was submitted to the State Duma for consideration in June 1994. It
consolidates the rights of citizens and legal entities to land, as well as
the right to own land; the rights, obligations, guarantees and protection
of owners, landowners and persons using land; land grant procedures; civil
transactions involving plots of land; the conditions and procedures relating
to the economic use of land granted; and establishes the rules for and limits
of what may be done in particularly valuable and protected areas.
216. The right to housing is guaranteed by article 40 of the Constitution:
"1. Everyone shall have the right to a home. Nobody may be arbitrarily
deprived of his (her) home.
"2. State government bodies and local government bodies shall promote
housing construction and create conditions for exercising the right to a home.
"3. Low-income citizens and other citizens mentioned in law who are in
need of a home may receive it either free of charge or for an affordable payment
from State, municipal and other housing funds according to the norms established
by law."
217. It may be said that family housing conditions have remained unchanged
since 1990. From 1985 to the present, the amount of new housing financed by
all sources declined by a factor of 1.5.
218. The average amount of housing space available to the population is increasing
slowly. In 1993, average per capita housing space in Russia was 17.1 square
metres as against 16.4 in 1990.
219. The number of families whose housing conditions have improved is declining
steadily. Whereas there were 1.3 million such families in 1990, there were
1.1 million in 1991, 950,000 in 1992 and 900,000 in 1993.
220. At the beginning of 1994, there were 9.1 million families on the waiting-list
for improved housing, namely, 18 per cent of all families (as against 20 per
cent in 1990). The slight decline in the total number in 1993 in comparison
with 1990 and 1991 is explained by the fact that less departmental housing
was being built (a drop of 24 per cent in 1992 compared with 1991).
221. The availability of family housing varies from region to region. The
housing situation is particularly difficult in the Tyumensk region, where
37 per cent of the total number of families are on the waiting-list; in the
Republic of Komi (30 per cent); the Sakhalin region (28 per cent); the Yakut-Sakha
Republic and Mari El, the Kaliningrad Region and Sankt Peterburg (each 27
per cent). The situation is better in the Republics of Kalmykia and Adygeya
(7 per cent in each), Buryatia and Altai (9 per cent each) and Moscow (12
per cent).
222. The right to housing is governed by the Housing Code of 24 June 1983,
which was amended and supplemented by the Law of 6 June 1991 in connection
with the adoption of the Law on the privatization of the housing stock of
the RSFSR. On the one hand, all citizens have the right to own their own home,
and on the other the privatization of apartments in housing which is in a
dangerous condition is forbidden by Federal law. The list of houses in a dangerous
condition is approved by the local authorities. The Moscow list was approved
by Order No. 1640-RM of the Prefect of the Central Administrative Area.
223. The basic principles governing the exercise by Russian citizens of the
constitutional right to housing in the new social and economic conditions
are set out in the Law on the basis of federal housing policy, the Decrees
of 10 June 1994 on housing credits, on the issue and use of housing certificates,
and on measures to ensure the completion of unfinished dwelling-houses. A
new code of housing legislation is in the pipeline.
224. In accordance with article 72 of the Constitution, housing legislation
is the joint responsibility of the Russian Federation and its constituent
entities. However, the latter retain wide powers with regard to the protection
of housing rights, which is particularly appropriate in an emerging housing
market. Presidential Decree No. 442 of 9 April 1993 on measures to protect
citizens' rights to housing is of importance in this respect.
225. Local executive bodies have been granted broad rights in this area. For
example, the government of Moscow has taken additional steps to strengthen
regulations governing the housing market in Moscow. It is pointed out in Order
No. 252-RM that numerous cases had recently come to light of citizens falling
victim to fraud, violence or threats by criminal elements in connection with
transactions involving the sale, donation or exchange of accommodation, and
that there is evidence that such citizens have been liquidated. In this connection,
the Mayor of Moscow entrusted the Department of Internal Affairs of Moscow
and the Committee on Social Protection with the task of compiling, within
a month, a list of categories of citizens requiring the protection of the
municipal authorities during the privatization and alienation of accommodation.
If citizens so desire, the Municipal Housing Department and organizations
authorized by that Department will sell their apartments subject to their
right either to continue living in them for life or to be offered alternative
accommodation. Should such citizens conclude a real estate transaction on
the basis of a written authorization, the decision on the alienation of the
accommodation will be taken in the light of the views of special public commissions.
226. Furthermore, the Chief Directorate of Internal Affairs (GUVD) of Moscow
has been given two months to establish a branch of the criminal police to
combat crime connected with privatization and related housing transactions.
It was also decided that the licensing of commercial bodies dealing with paperwork
connected with the alienation of accommodation would be introduced in the
very near future.
227. A housing information and reference system (IS) has been set up in Moscow.
Its main task is to solve the problem of supplying information to State bodies
responsible for the housing market. The system amalgamates existing data banks
and supplies commercial bodies with operational and reliable information on
the housing market. Such information will also be made available to Muscovites
wishing to improve their housing conditions.
228. It is important that existing independent data banks should be able to
interact under the new system. At present, for organizational and technical
reasons, hardly any exchanges of information take place between the numerous
local systems. Existing data banks are therefore not used very effectively.
So far no data bank possesses complete and reliable information on office
premises, communal apartments, hostels or changes in the structure of the
housing stock.
229. The emergence of the housing market has led to frantic activity among
the many real estate companies. And yet information service link-ups between
them are hampered for the very reason mentioned above.
230. Information systems providing information on apartments for sale must
protect the buyer from dishonest operations such as the sale twice over of
housing or the sale of an apartment that is mortgaged or has been attached.
Health protection (art. 12)
231. One of the main aspects of the social policy of the State, which is trying
to ensure the well-being of the people and a high standard of living concerns
the protection of citizens' health and improvement of public health services
in general. In recent years the Executive and the Legislature have, therefore,
been paying particular attention to the task of drafting legislation to regulate
public health-care relationships, as envisaged in Decision No. 1 of the Congress
of People's Deputies of the RSFSR of 21 June 1990.
232. In 1992 alone, six basic laws of the Russian Federation and three decisions
of the Supreme Soviet on health protection and the organization of the public
health system were either adopted in final form or on first reading. Several
laws have been drafted and are awaiting adoption. The President promulgated
five decrees. More than 22 decisions intended to resolve new health-care problems
and to reform the health service have been brought into force by the Government
of the Russian Federation.
233. In view of the crisis being experienced by the public health system as
a result of management over-centralization, a considerable decline in State
financing, inadequate material and technical equipment and the resulting decline
in the quality of medical care and the services provided, considerable system-wide
restructuring and reform is essential. Yet the health system and health care
cannot be reformed without a new legislative basis reflecting an approach
that is radically different from previous ones. The new health protection
legislation, tailored to today's needs, will therefore be based not simply
on the Republic's existing laws, but also on the international instruments
designed to protect the rights of the individual and of citizens that have
been ratified by the Russian Federation.
234. The conceptual basis of health protection legislation reflects an integrated
approach, implying the interdependence of all relevant elements, namely, a
pleasant environment, safe working conditions, sound and safe foodstuffs,
and medical and social assistance.
235. Constitutional health-care guarantees are contained in article 41 of
the Constitution:
"1. Everyone shall have the right to health protection and medical care.
Medical care in State and municipal health institutions shall be rendered
to citizens free of charge and at the expense of the appropriate budget, insurance
premiums and other proceeds.
"2. In the Russian Federation, federal programmes for the protection
and improvement of the health of the public shall be financed, measures shall
be taken to develop State, municipal and private health-care systems, and
activities shall be encouraged which contribute to the improvement of human
health, the development of physical education and sport, and ecological, sanitary
and epidemiological well-being.
"3. The concealment by officials of facts and circumstances which pose
a threat to the life and health of people shall result in liability according
to federal law."
236. The basic health protection legislation of the Russian Federation (adopted
on first reading) is the fundamental instrument in this sphere that not only
codifies existing laws but also lays down new guidelines for the development
of the public health-care system as a whole and the impact of new economic
conditions on medical work. One of the main features of this basic legislation
is the priority it attaches to the rights of the individual and citizens with
regard to health protection over all other values and to the goal of striking
a balance between the interests of the individual and society.
237. Laws have also been adopted or are being drafted with a view to giving
effect to the provisions of the basis legislation. These laws, such as those
on medical insurance, the sanitary and epidemiological well-being of the population,
psychiatric assistance and guarantees of citizens' rights when such assistance
is provided, the transplant of human organs and (or) tissue, donated blood
and its components (adopted on first reading on 20 January 1993), the pathological/anatomical
service and research in the Russian Federation (draft), and AIDS prevention
(draft), are having the effect of organizing various kinds of medical work
and assistance to citizens, and are establishing the liability of institutions
and their staff for violations of regulations. The introduction of a new source
of financing for the health system, namely, medical insurance, is of major
importance.
238. The Government is arranging the adoption of the measures required to
give effect to this legislation. For example, the Government Decision on measures
for psychiatric assistance to and the social protection of persons suffering
from psychiatric disorders was adopted in connection with the Law of 25 May
1994 on psychiatric assistance and citizens's rights when such assistance
is provided.
239. In extending the range of rights and guarantees of compliance with them,
it became essential to make a distinction between the notions of "health
protection" and "public health care". Health protection, as
a broader concept, is ensured by political, economic, legal, social, medical,
sanitary and hygiene measures, as well as measures to prevent epidemics, which
are carried out by the authorities, State and non-State enterprises, establishments
and organizations. Public health care is a component of health protection,
and is designed to provide medical and social assistance to the State system,
as well as private and municipal systems, as guaranteed by the Constitution.
240. The main innovation consists in the humanization of health protection
legislation by the strengthening of rights and guarantees of its application,
both for citizens and individual groups of the population when receiving medical
and social assistance as well as for professionals working in this area. Particular
attention is paid to the rights of individual groups which include the least
protected segments of the population, such as the disabled, middle-aged and
elderly citizens, persons with psychiatric disorders and other socially significant
illnesses.
241. For the first time ever, this legislation defines the competence of the
Russian Federation, its constituent Republics, territories and regions, and
grants the constituent entities of the Federation and local authorities the
freedom and right to make their own decisions on health protection matters
in the area under their jurisdiction. The laws comprising this legislation
establish the legal basis for decentralization and specify the rights of the
enterprises, establishments and organizations under the Ministry of Health,
the latter's sole remaining functions being monitoring and coordination.
242. The laws confirm the existence of State and private systems and recognize
all forms of ownership and their role in providing health care in a market
economy.
243. The rights embodied in these laws and based on the Declaration of human
rights and freedoms include, in particular, the right to choose a doctor and
medical establishment, to reliable information on the state of one's health
and risk factors, and to refuse or agree to treatment, and are backed up by
the necessary guarantees. They envisage the establishment of a market of medical
services and regulation of the main areas and types of medical activity.
244. With regard to the right of servicemen to health protection and medical
care, article 16 (3) of the Law on the status of servicemen states that family
members of officers, including those discharged because they have reached
the age limit, for health reasons or as a result of organizational and staffing
measures and whose total length of service amounts to 20 years or more as
well as their dependants, are entitled to free medical care in army medical
establishments. The conditions for enjoyment of this right are set out in
Directive No. D-48 of 12 May 1993 issued by the Minister of Defence. The families
of deceased servicemen are also entitled to benefits under the legislation
in force.
245. The humanization of health protection measures is also apparent from
the fact that, for the first time, the law ensures the legal and social protection
of persons providing medical and social care, namely, medical and pharmaceutical
workers. They enjoy a broad range of vocational and social rights, together
with benefits that take account of the nature of their work. Yet the guarantees
provided for by legislation cannot be effective unless standards in respect
of the defence of legal rights and the monitoring and supervision of health
protection legislation implementation are clearly defined and unless liability
is established for any violations of rights in this area. The laws in question
are designed to ensure that decisions on these matters are taken in a democratic
manner and imply State and public monitoring of compliance with rights and
the implementation of legislation.
246. In general, this new Russian legislation reflects a completely novel
approach to the task of protecting the health of citizens of the Russian Federation
and organizing public health care with a view to improving the quality of
life and levels of living of Russians.
247. An analysis carried out by Russia's Health and Epidemiological Supervisory
Committee (HESC) reveals that, in the present difficult economic and social
development context, health and epidemiological conditions in the Russian
Federation as a whole are regarded as unsatisfactory, and their negative impact
on the health of the population is becoming increasingly evident. The task
of supplying the population with good-quality drinking water, meeting health
and hygiene standards, presents the most thorny problem of all. The quality
of the food consumed by the population, as well as their diet, is deteriorating.
A considerable proportion of the population lives in an environment where
the atmospheric content of substances harmful to their health permanently
exceeds permissible threshold concentrations. The random and uncontrolled
burial of toxic industrial and household waste constitutes a health danger,
and the sense of responsibility displayed by management bodies in the performance
of their functions entailing labour protection, cleaning up the environment
and ensuring the quality and safety of production is declining. The incidence
of occupational and infectious diseases is increasing.
248. Over 60 million persons in Russia have to put up with excessive noise
or vibration, electromagnetic fields and atmospheric pollution, and almost
half of the country's population consumes poor-quality water. Although in
1993 atmospheric emissions declined by 10 per cent in comparison with 1992,
this improvement had virtually no effect on the condition of the environment.
The number of towns in which air pollution is more than 10 times the maximum
permissible concentration (MPC) remained unchanged at 84, and in nine towns
the concentration of harmful air-borne substances was more than 50 times the
MPC.
249. As in the past, the environment is being affected to an increasing extent
by motor vehicle emissions. The proportion of such emissions in the total
amount of pollution produced is steadily increasing, and in 158 towns they
exceed industrial emissions. Motor vehicles accounted for over 80 per cent
of all emissions in 36 towns. Nothing is being done to solve the problem of
disposing of industrial waste. At the present time, 2 billion tonnes of toxic
waste is being kept at authorized storage sites but more than twice that amount
is disposed of at random or, putting it plainly, in unauthorized dumps. The
total amount is increasing by 70 million tonnes per day. And yet the Russian
Federation has only two sites where industrial toxic waste is treated and
buried. There are only seven waste treatment plants and two incinerators in
the entire country and they dispose of only 4.5 per cent of the total amount
of solid household waste. No new plants are being constructed.
250. Over 5 million persons, or 17 per cent of the number employed, are working
in unacceptable conditions. As a result, more than 10,000 persons came down
with occupational diseases last year, which is almost twice the number recorded
in the mid-1980s although less than in 1992 when, according to HESC's figures,
about 11,000 cases were recorded. Apart from these figures, which have remained
virtually unchanged during the past three to five years and therefore indicate
that health and epidemiological conditions have not improved, the following
facts give an idea of what has been happening recently. In the first place,
there has been a decline in the number of persons suffering from infectious
diseases - from 40 million in 1992 to 30 million in 1993. Yet this substantial
drop - by one quarter - in the number of persons infected is explained not
by a sharp improvement in the health of the population but by inadequate medical
statistics. In the present context of changing economic conditions, when increasing
numbers of people are working not for the State but for themselves, a medical
certificate on the basis of which sick leave can be taken and which at the
same time serves as a means of keeping track of the number of sick has lost
its attraction for many persons who no longer request it. For this reason,
the decline in the number of persons recorded as suffering from infectious
diseases no longer gives a true picture of the incidence of disease. In 1992,
19,500 persons died of infectious and parasitic diseases; the corresponding
figure for 1993
was 25,500.
251. One of the main features of 1993 was the explosive increase in the incidence
of diphtheria and venereal diseases. The number of persons suffering from
diphtheria increased almost fourfold in comparison with 1992 and, according
to incomplete data, 388 persons died. Moreover, according to experts, the
death toll could have been much higher had HESC and the Government not taken
urgent measures that made it possible if not to put an end to, then at least
to mitigate the crisis. Efforts to deal with diphtheria are also hampered
by various factors of a non-medical nature. For example, 40 per cent of those
who died of this disease were homeless.
252. As to venereal diseases, the number of persons suffering from syphilis
alone doubled in 1993. There were twice as many cases of gonorrhoea as dysentery,
and totalled almost a third of a million. It may be added that, in 1993, an
additional 99 persons were found to be HIV-positive, namely, one third more
than in 1992, and that a further 14 persons came down with AIDS.
253. It is becoming increasingly difficult to provide the population with
medicines. There is an acute scarcity of broad-spectrum antibiotics, analgesics,
cardiovascular drugs and other medicines on the market. The privatization
of pharmacies has, according to some, resulted in higher prices for drugs,
some of which cost up to 20,000 roubles a packet. It is also becoming difficult
to obtain medicine on the basis of subsidized prescriptions, since the polyclinics
which issue them fail to repay their debts to pharmacies owing to lack of
funds. In February 1994, for example, the Health Protection Committee of the
St. Petersburg municipality was 3.2 billion roubles in debt to medical establishments
despite the existence of subsidies for the purchase of drugs (as the indigent
well know) for over 2 million persons. The managers of pharmaceutical enterprises
say that failure to take steps to prevent a reduction in the amount of drugs
produced in the country and lack of State support have led to a sharp reduction
in the extent to which the population is being provided with medicines of
Russian origin, to the closing of most enterprises and to dependence on foreign
markets. The situation is also due to economic factors of another kind. For
example, the introduction of an excise duty on ethyl alcohol resulted in a
fivefold increase in its price and subsequently increased the prices of preparations
by two to four times. The financial position of pharmaceutical plants has
also deteriorated sharply. Proposals to correct the situation are being considered
by the President and by the Government.
254. The problem of providing the population with sound health and epidemiological
conditions must be solved by the Government in association with federal ministries
and other federal bodies at the executive level,
as well as the executive bodies of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, in the framework of an appropriate purpose-oriented
State programme. The HESC of the Russian Federation, the Russian Ministry of Health and Ministry of the Medical Industry as well as the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, together with appropriate federal ministries and other federal executive bodies, giving effect to Decree No. 468 of 20 April 1993 of the President of the Russian Federation on urgent measures to protect the health of the population of the Russian Federation, drew up a State programme for 1994-1996 of urgent measures to ensure sound health and epidemiological conditions, and measures to prevent infectious and non-infectious diseases and to reduce the incidence of premature death among the population (approved by Government Order No. 158 of 28 February 1994).
255. This programme was elaborated in the light of the provisions of the law
on sound health and epidemiological conditions, the basic legislation of the
Russian Federation on the health protection of citizens and the programme
of the Russian Federation's Government for 1993-1995 on the development of
reforms and stabilization of the Russian economy, as well as other relevant
instruments.
256. Specifically, a special anti-AIDS federal programme was drawn up and
submitted to the State Duma for approval, and the Government of the Russian
Federation approved special federal programmes entitled "Prevention by
vaccination" and "Protection of the territory of the Russian Federation
against the entry and propagation of particularly dangerous infectious diseases
affecting human beings, animals and plants, as well as toxic substances".
257. Similar action is being taken by the territorial health and epidemiological
services of the Russian Federation.
258. The complexity of the task of providing the population with sufficient
food increased even further in 1991-1994, and the situation must be monitored
by local authorities which have to take steps to improve supplies of foodstuffs.
For this reason, the Moscow administration in 1993 signed an agreement with
prefectures, food and vegetable wholesalers and farms producing fruit and
vegetables under which subsidies were introduced for such farms. Moreover,
the Food Resources Department of the Government of Moscow each year specifies
the amount of vegetables that is to be placed in storage to ensure an uninterrupted
supply for the inhabitants.
The right to education (arts. 13 and 14)
259. Reflecting the democratic processes taking place in our country, the
right to education was embodied in Law No. 3266-1 of 10 July 1992 on education.
Indeed, the entire educational policy of the State is based on democratic
and humanistic principles, as is obvious from article 2 of the Law on principles
of State policy in the field of education, which proclaims:
The humanistic nature of education;
The priority accorded to universal values;
The protection, by the educational system, of national cultures and regional
cultural traditions in the framework of a multinational State;
Education accessible to all;
The democratic and State-public administration of education, etc.
260. Generally speaking, the democratization of education is a twofold process
that entails the granting and protection of the constitutional right of citizens
of the Russian Federation to education and the establishment of legal guarantees
of the free functioning and development of the system of education in the
country.
261. According to article 43 of the Constitution, State guarantees of the
right of citizens of the Russian Federation to education (art. 5 of the Law)
facilitate the task of extending and protecting the constitutional right of
citizens of the Russian Federation to education.
"Citizens of the Russian Federation within its territory are guaranteed
the possibility of obtaining education regardless of race, nationality, language,
sex, age, health, social, material and official status, social origin, place
of residence, attitude to religion, convictions, membership of a party or
criminal record.
"The State guarantees citizens of the Russian Federation a free basic
general education and, on a competitive basis, free vocational training in
State and municipal educational establishments to citizens who have acquired
a basic education."
262. The State defrays, in full or in part, the living expenses of citizens
in need of financial assistance during the period of their education.
263. Citizens displaying outstanding ability are assisted by the State in
obtaining an elitist education.
264. It is worth mentioning that the State satisfies not only the educational
requirements of ordinary members of society but also those of handicapped
citizens for whom special educational arrangements are made.
265. The fact that education is financed by the State and municipalities (art.
40 of the Law) constitutes the basic guarantee that citizens will receive
an education corresponding to State educational standards.
266. The right of citizens to obtain higher and postgraduate education corresponding
to State educational standards is ensured by providing citizens who have passed
an examination and have enrolled in an educational establishment with a State
education grant (non-reimbursable, reimbursable in part or reimbursable) (art.
42 of the Law).
267. Citizens are entitled to a general basic education in their mother tongue,
but may also select the language of instruction subject to the possibilities
offered by the educational system.
268. The State provides assistance, in accordance with international accords
and agreements, to persons belonging to one of the nationalities of the Russian
Federation and living outside its territory in acquiring a basic general education
in their mother tongue. The language aspect of educational policy is governed
by article 6 of the Law, which reflects the provisions of the RSFSR Law of
25 October 1991 on the languages of the nationalities of the RSFSR (see, in
particular, chapter II of this Law). The following social guarantees of the
right of citizens to education are designed to solve this problem.
Citizens of full legal age have the right to choose the educational establishment
and the type of education they desire;
Students in all educational establishments have the right to an education
corresponding to State educational standards, etc. (part V, arts. 50 and 52
of the Law).
269. The various legal provisions embodied in the Law on education, and specifically
in section II entitled the system of education, section III entitled the administration
of the education system, and section IV entitled financing of the education
system reflect the desire to ensure the unhampered functioning and development
of the educational system.
270. The Russian Federation proclaims education to be a priority area (art.
1 of the Law) and State guarantees to that effect are set out in article 40
of the Law.
271. The State is under an obligation each year to appropriate funds to meet
educational requirements and establishes tax benefits designed to promote
the development of education. Specifically:
Educational establishments, regardless of their organizational and legal nature
are, in respect of their statutory non-entrepreneurial functions, exempt from
the payment of all kinds of taxes as well as payment for land;
In order to promote investment in education, the State has established a special
system of tax benefits for enterprises, establishments and organizations,
regardless of their organizational and legal nature, as well as natural persons
including foreigners investing in the development of the Russian Federation's
system of education;
The State grants tax benefits to the owners of immoveable property rented
to educational establishments.
272. The activities of State and municipal educational establishments
are governed by standard regulations applicable to various types and
forms of educational establishment, approved by the Government of the Russian Federation and by statutes drawn up on the basis of such regulations (art. 12 of the Law). For example, regulations on the conduct of final examinations in State general and specialized and non-State secondary educational establishments are applicable to final school examinations this year. The complete text of this document was published in the Educational Bulletin of May 1994.
273. As in the past, Russian (composition) and mathematics (algebra) are required
subjects for all students. The school itself decides which examinations are
not compulsory. A selection may be made from among authorized subjects. Training
in labour practices at in-service training production establishments constitutes
an exception. Vocational training may be counted as a final examination only
if the actual exam is conducted during the period of State examinations and
if the student receives a certificate stating that he is authorized to work
in his specialized field. And even so the school itself is entitled to refuse
the student's request to have his vocational training exam counted as a final
examination. The school may not dispense students from sitting an examination
in any general subject.
274. No fewer than five examinations must be sat; the maximum number is not
indicated. This applies to ordinary schools, but students in specialized schools
have to take one additional compulsory examination, namely, in their specialized
field.
275. Various aspects of the statutes of educational establishments which are
not regulated by law are drawn up and adopted by the establishments themselves
(art. 13 of the Law).
276. The subjects taught at an educational establishment are indicated in
its curriculum which is drawn up, adopted and taught independently by that
establishment (art. 14 of the Law).
277. Subject to the restrictions laid down by law and in its statute, an educational
establishment may, in connection with its educational activities, independently
select and assign staff and engage in scientific, financial, economic and
other activities (art. 32 of the Law). Educational establishments have the
right to engage in the entrepreneurial activities specified in their statutes
(art. 47 of the Law).
278. With a view to ensuring that the changes being made in various areas
of education are of a democratic and humanistic nature, the Ministry of Education
has compiled personalized guidelines for the development of education. The
underlying idea was to keep the reform of teacher training and retraining
updated so as to enable teachers to use the subjects they taught to promote
the development of students.
279. New teacher-training programmes have been developed in all fields in
order to provide teachers with sound training in their special subjects as
well as practical training in teaching methods, distinctions being made between
various levels of education. Special attention in these programmes is paid
to the creation of conditions enabling the student himself to decide which
educational path he wishes to follow, his freedom of choice being increased
still further by the fact that the possibilities open to him increase at each
subsequent stage of his education. Specialized inter-university centres, continuous
teacher-training schemes and regional centres for the development of education
have been created to give effect to this new educational pattern.
280. The Law also specifies the rights, social guarantees and privileges of
the staff of educational establishments (art. 55 of the Law). Their staff
are entitled to participate in management and to protect their professional
honour and dignity. Teachers have the right, in the performance of their professional
functions, freely to choose and use methods of teaching and education, teaching
aids and materials, text books and methods of evaluating the knowledge acquired
by students and pupils. Teaching staff enjoy the statutory right to a standard
six-hour working day and a shortened working week, extended paid holidays
and pensions on reaching pensionable age. The staff of educational establishments
are also granted other rights, social guarantees and advantages (art. 55 of
the Law).
281. With respect to article 13 (b) of the Covenant, it is to be noted that
there are 2,607 educational establishments offering secondary vocational training
in Russia; they are attended by 1,990,000 students, of whom 822,700 are boys
and 1,171,100 are girls.
282. Specialists with a specialized secondary education are playing an important
role in the social and economic development of the Russian Federation. At
the present time, some 22 million specialists
at this level are employed in the Republic's economy (about 31.3 per cent
of the total number of manual and non-manual workers). Most of these specialists (31.2 per cent) are employed in industry, as well as in the building sector (7.4 per cent), agriculture (8.3 per cent) and transport and communications (8.9 per cent).
283. Most specialists in the non-production sector are employed in the
health protection, physical culture and sports and social security
sectors (10 per cent), and in the educational, cultural and arts sectors (10.6 per cent).
284. Specialists with a specialized secondary education account
for 42.2 per cent of the total number of persons occupying managerial positions (those with a higher education account for 42.6 per cent); the corresponding figure for specialists of all levels is 46 per cent (42.2 per cent for specialists with a higher education).
285. In accordance with the State programme for the development of higher
education in the Russian Federation, a scheme for the training of specialists
at various levels is being drawn up, distinctions being made on the basis
of the nature and scope of educational and vocational curricula. This scheme
is in many respects structured in such a way as to include secondary specialized
schools.
286. In recent years, national secondary specialized schools have, as a result
of their historical orientation towards higher education (in management matters
as well), undergone major qualitative changes as regards the structure and
content of the teaching process, the training of specialists, staffing, the
development of democratic principles, self-management, etc.
287. This integration of higher and secondary specialized schools is continuing
at a rapid pace. The main reason for this convergence is the fact that the
specialized subjects they teach are the same; there are also similarities
between the qualifications of specialists with a higher or specialized secondary
education and of curricula and programmes, methodological and teaching materials,
the way in which practical training is organized, and the use of projects
during courses and for the diploma reflecting real-life situations. Another
factor is a close relationship with teaching methods used in schools offering
a higher education. In recent years technical institutes have been offering
an increasing number of specialized subjects, providing training, retraining
and advanced training for higher-level staff as well as various kinds of courses
such as those on management marketing methods.
288. Secondary specialized schools are increasingly becoming integrated in
schools offering a higher education, thereby creating, in conjunction with
technical institutes, various kinds of hybrid establishments, such as "higher
educational establishment/technical institute" or "higher educational
establishment/medical school". Moreover, secondary technical training
faculties are being organized within technical institutes. During the
past few years secondary specialized schools of a higher (advanced)
level - colleges providing training for junior engineers, junior doctors and other specialists - have been established at a rapid rate.
289. The strategy behind the development of the system of higher education
in the Republic is determined by social and economic processes in society.
The transition to a market economy calls for the creation of a system for
the training of specialists at many levels, comprising all interrelated educational
and vocational curricula and including existing levels of training in secondary
specialized schools (basic and advanced).
290. Article 6 of the Law states that citizens are entitled to choose the
language of instruction subject to the possibilities offered by the educational
system. The right of citizens to receive instruction in their mother tongue
is ensured by the establishment of the necessary number of educational establishments,
classes and groups, as well as the necessary conditions for their operation.
Matters connected with the teaching of the State languages of the Republics
comprising the Russian Federation are governed by the legislation of these
Republics. The State provides assistance in the training of specialists to
teach in the languages of Russian national groups which do not have a State
of their own.
291. The competitive aspect of secondary vocational education is governed
by the regulations on the acceptance of students by State and secondary specialized
schools in the Russian Federation, approved by Order No. 106 of 25 March 1993
of the Russian Ministry of Education.
292. A number of measures have been taken by the State in support of young
persons in order to provide them with greater social protection in the context
of the economic crisis.
293. The increase in the minimum wage was parallelled by an increase in the
amount of grants and subsistence allowances payable to students attending
higher vocational training establishments as well as students receiving secondary
and elementary vocational training, whose grants and allowances were fixed
as a percentage of the minimum wage.
294. Presidential Decree No. 443 of 12 April 1993 on urgent measures to be
taken by the State to support students and postgraduate students at higher
vocational training establishments fixed grants for students at State higher
vocational training establishments at the level of the statutory minimum wage,
namely, 20,500 roubles, and grants for postgraduate students at twice the
minimum wage; allowances to compensate for the rising price of foodstuffs
were also increased to 2 per cent of the statutory minimum wage, calculated
on a per capita per day basis (the increase for students at secondary and
elementary vocational training and general educational establishments was
1.5 per cent under the Russian Federation's Law No. 5432-1 of 14 June 1993).
295. In accordance with Presidential Decree No. 1110 of 30 May 1994 on increasing
the amount of compensation payments to certain categories of citizens, monthly
compensation payments were increased, from 1 July 1994, to 50 per cent of
the minimum wage for students at higher and secondary vocational training
establishments and for postgraduate students having interrupted their work
in production to take courses at higher vocational training establishments
and scientific research establishments on sabbatical leave for medical reasons.
At the present time actual student income amounts to 32,000 roubles per month,
and their expenses are three to four times greater.
296. Decision No. 275 of 4 April 1994 of the Government of the Russian Federation
on measures to organize summer holidays for children and adolescents in 1994
was adopted with a view to organizing summer holidays and a period of rest
for children and adolescents in the context of the country's difficult social
and economic situation.
297. Access to higher education is based on competitive examinations. Education
is financed by the State budget.
298. A continuous supplementary vocational training system is being created
under the Russian State Committee for Higher Educational Establishments.
299. This system is highly democratic and informal:
It is accessible to any specialist of any age and of any level of training
wishing to improve his qualifications or to retrain,
The training it offers is of various kinds, from one-day seminars to courses
of two years;
Participants play an active role in determining the content and nature of
their training, the choice of teacher and the subjects of the final exams;
and
Training can be provided during the day, in the evenings or by correspondence.
300. The present supplementary vocational training system in Russia can handle
2 million persons per year, but according to available estimates such training
is required by 8 to 10 million persons per year.
301. The salaries of teachers in the supplementary vocational training system
are paid out of the State budget.
302. The system enjoys the moral and legal backing of the State and is basically
subsidized by various branches of the economy. At the same time, efforts are
continuing, in conjunction with local administrations, to develop new forms
of retraining, training and advanced training for specialists and managers.
On the instructions of the Mayor of Moscow, the Moscow Higher School of Management
was established in 1994 in the Economics Academy attached to the Government
of Russia in order to retrain the staff of the government of the city, the
municipalities and administrative districts.
303. In recent years the salaries of teachers have been steadily declining
in relative terms, and at the present time are even below average wages in
industry.
304. Salaries in the supplementary vocational training system which were previously
low and stable have now reached a level which makes it difficult to provide
training for all applicants.
305. In 1994, compliance with the Law on education was verified by public
prosecutors in 19 regions of the country. The most common violations continue
to be connected with the acceptance, transfer and expulsion of students from
educational establishments.
306. Abolition of the previous procedure under which minors could be expelled
with the consent of Commissions for Minor's Affairs was interpreted by the
staff of many establishments as offering an opportunity for the mass expulsion
of difficult, objectionable and refractory children from school. During the
past two school years alone, 1,700,000 school-age children were thus deprived
of education for various reasons. There was a four-fold increase in the number
of drop-outs in Penzenskaya oblast, for example, and the number increased
twenty-fold in St. Petersburg. Very often the administrations of educational
establishments impose illegal sanctions for failure to observe the rules,
for example, as well as for poor grades. The principle of free general education
in State and municipal schools is also frequently violated. Public prosecutors
have come across a large number of statutes of educational establishments
which require payment for taking a course twice over, resitting examinations,
corrective classes, etc.
307. There has been a sharp increase in juvenile crime, and each year crimes
are committed by 60,000 persons below the age of criminal liability.
308. Refusal to accept children of 6 and 7 entitled to be first formers in
the school nearest to their home on the pretext that they are not ready to
start learning undoubtedly constitutes a violation of school law. Only lyceés
and gymnasia, namely, educational establishments according to whose statutes
particularly gifted children receive education, have the right to pick and
choose their students. In that connection, the Public Prosecutor's Office
has found that many statutes are in direct violation of the legislation in
force. In some cases, for example, they provide for the liability of parents
if their children break school rules, and stipulate fines for smoking, obscene
language and even for persistent failure to do homework.
309. The Public Prosecutor's Office has informed the Ministry that one half
of all schools are in need of capital repairs and that, in the Altay Territory,
one third of school buildings are completely unsuitable. There are 1.5 to
2 times more children in a class than in developed countries, and one out
of four pupils is taught during the second or third shift (8 out of 10 in
the Penzenskaya oblast). And yet the directors of schools rent out part of
school buildings to the prejudice of the education and upbringing of children.
310. For these reasons, the Minister of Education issued Order No. 179, under
which the statutes of educational establishments had to be brought into line
with the Law on education. The Minister prohibited the organization of competitions
for children entering the first form, the use of school premises for other
than educational purposes and the illegal expulsion of students, called for
the creation of psychological and medico-educational rehabilitation centres
and teaching and educational establishments of various kinds, and advised
teachers to develop club-type forms of work, various kinds of studies, discussion
groups and sports.
311. The attitude of State schools to religion is defined by the Russian Federation's
Laws on education and on freedom of religion.
312. Pursuant to article 9 of the RSFSR Law on the freedom of religion, the
State is required to respect the right of the child, his parents or surrogates
to choose, according to their convictions, forms and methods of moral and
religious education.
313. Citizens of the Russian Federation hold various religious beliefs. They
may be Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, etc. or profess no religion at all
because they are undecided or atheists, considering themselves agnostics and
temporal humanists. The State is required to respect the convictions of all
citizens in accordance with the constitutional principle of freedom of conscience,
providing that their convictions are not contrary to the law and do not affect
the rights and interests of other citizens. Preference for a certain body
of views on the part of the State would inevitably imply discrimination against
others and the emergence of a monopoly in matters affecting the spiritual
development of the individual. The State offers each citizen the possibility
of deciding what his beliefs are to be, as his own personal and private choice
in relation to the Government.
314. In sending their child to a State school, parents realize that it cannot
assume the task of inculcating in him the religious or atheistic beliefs of
their choice. This constitutes a guarantee that the school will not engage
in proselytizing in a manner unacceptable to both parents and children.
315. For these reasons, the Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation
adheres to the following principles in connection with the spiritual development
of the individual:
1. State bodies responsible for the administration of education are required
to comply with the principle of the separation of secular and religious education.
The secular nature of education in State educational establishments is one
of the basic principles of State education policy (art. 2 of the Russian Federation's
Law on education - Gazette of the Congress of People's Deputies of the Russian
Federation and Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation, 1992, No. 30, p.
1797). This means that religious or atheistic teaching of any kind is forbidden
in school. Education should promote mutual understanding and cooperation between
people, nations, various races, nationalities, and ethnic, religious and social
groups; it should also take into account the variety of different beliefs
in the world and contribute to the realization of the child's right to make
a free choice between various beliefs and convictions.
2. The teaching of religious concepts as well as religious practices and philosophy,
not accompanied by the performance of religious ceremonies and presented simply
by way of information, may be included in the curricula of State educational
establishments (art. 9 of the RSFSR Law on the freedom of education - Gazette
of the Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR and Supreme Soviet of the
RSFSR, 1990, No. 21, pp. 240 and 286). To this end, basic optional courses
on the history of religion, the religions of the world and religious practices
may be introduced in schools.
Rights in the field of culture and science (art. 15)
316. The Russian Federation has adopted and implemented appropriate legislation
and other legal instruments with a view to the implementation of the provisions
of article 15 of the Covenant. For example, under article 26, paragraph 2
of the Russian Constitution, every individual and citizen has the right to
a free choice of language, and under article 44 everyone is guaranteed freedom
of literary, artistic, scientific, technical and other types of creative activity,
and intellectual property is protected by law; moreover, everyone has the
right to participate in cultural life and to use cultural establishments,
and the right of access to cultural valuables. At the same time this article
places everyone under the obligation to preserve the country's cultural and
historical heritage and to protect historical and cultural monuments. Moreover,
according to article 18 of the Constitution, these human and civil rights
and freedoms have direct force and determine the meaning, content and implementation
of laws, the functioning of legislative and executive authority and of local
government, and are guaranteed by law. These rights, freedoms and obligations
constitute the basis of the legal status of the individual in the Russian
Federation and cannot be changed except in the manner specified by the Russian
Constitution.
317. With a view to the implementation of these human and civil rights and
freedoms in the Russian Federation, articles 71 and 72 of the Constitution
establish the basic principles of federal policy and federal programmes in
respect of the cultural development of the State, regulate intellectual property,
the protection of historical and cultural monuments and deal with general
questions of education, upbringing and culture.
318. In accordance with Order No. 69 of 21 January 1993 issued by the Government
of the Russian Federation, State policy in respect of culture, the arts, and
the protection and use of the country's historical and cultural heritage is
implemented by the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation on the basis
of international agreements and domestic legislation. The main instruments
in this respect are the basic legislation on culture of 9 October 1992, the
Russian Federation's Law of 15 April 1993, on the import and export of cultural
treasures, the Law of 9 July 1993 on copyright and analogous rights, the law
of 15 December 1978, on the protection and use of historical and cultural
monuments, etc.
319. In accordance with paragraph 3 (b) of the Order of 9 December 1992 of
the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation on procedure for the implementation
of the Russian Federation's legislation on culture, expenditure on culture
in 1993 is to be not less than 2 per cent of the federal budget; at the same
time, the basic legislation on culture proclaims the culture of various peoples
and other ethnic communities as well as their rights and freedoms in cultural
matters to be of equal value, the inalienable right of each person to cultural
activities, and accords priority to human rights in the field of cultural
activity over the rights of the State and its subordinate bodies, political
parties, etc. in this area; it also proclaims the right to a free choice of
moral, aesthetic and other values, and the right of access to cultural values;
the right to humanitarian and artistic education and to the choice of the
ways and means it is provided; the right to property in cultural matters;
the right of citizens to establish cultural organizations, establishments,
enterprises and public associations; the right to export the results of their
artistic work; and the right of various nationalities and ethnic communities
to preserve and develop distinctive cultural and national features and the
right to cultural and national autonomy. Moreover, foreigners and stateless
persons are accorded the same rights as Russian citizens in the sphere of
cultural activity.
320. The content of Russia's present legislation on culture is not uniform.
The organizational and legal status of the central administrative bodies of
the Russian Federation responsible for cultural matters has been defined in
various instruments. The following regulations were adopted in 1992-1993:
Regulations on the Ministry of the Press and Information of the Russian Federation
(approved by the Order of 11 June 1992 of the Government of the Russian Federation);
Regulations on the Cinematographic Committee of the Russian Federation (approved
by the Order of 6 January 1993 of the Government of the Russian Federation);
Regulations on the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation (approved
by the Order of 21 January 1993 of the Government of the Russian Federation);
and
Regulations on the Russian State "Ostankino" Radio and Television
Company (approved by the Decree of 2 April 1993 of the President of the Russian
Federation on guarantees of information stabilization in the activities of
the Russian State "Ostankino" Radio and Television Company).
321. The bodies responsible for the administration of cultural matters were
restructured in 1992-1993. Moreover, the Statute of the Russian Intellectual
Property Agency attached to the President of the Russian Federation (RIPA)
was approved by the Order of 15 July 1992 of the President of the Russian
Federation. RIPA is vested with broad regulatory powers in respect of the
protection of copyright and analogous rights and is an important element in
the federal system responsible for the administration of cultural matters.
However, the procedural problem of delimiting the competence of federal and
republican (republics comprising the Russian Federation) bodies in this area
has not yet been solved. RIPA's Statute contains no provisions defining the
status of the Agency's subordinate bodies set up in the Republics comprising
the Russian Federation.
322. Under the Basic Law of the Russian Federation, the Republics comprising
the Russian Federation are required to draw up laws and other legal instruments
regulating relationships in respect of intellectual property (art. 11 (i)
and art. 2 of the Agreement on the delimitation of areas of activity and competence
between the federal State authorities of the Russian Federation and the authorities
of the sovereign Republics comprising the Russian Federation). The Republics
are entitled to set up corresponding administrative bodies which would be
subordinate to two authorities, namely, the governments of the Republics comprising
the Russian Federation and RIPA. The federal Agreement does not exclude the
possibility of creating bodies forming part of the RIPA system and subordinate
to the Agency and the corresponding body of the krai or oblast administration,
the administration of an autonomous oblast, an autonomous district and the
towns of Moscow and St. Petersburg, providing that federal intellectual property
legislation or other laws of the Russian Federation provide for this form
of participation by constituent entities of the Federation in the exercise
of federal functions.
323. RIPA's functions as a supra-department vary, depending on the extent
of the powers of State authorities. RIPA has the right to issue, in accordance
with established procedure, instructions and interpretations which are binding
upon all legal and natural persons in Russian territory who are full owners
of intellectual property or who have been granted various powers by the owner.
However, RIPA's Statute specifies only the right of use, thereby excluding
the owner's other rights.
324. Russian legislation provides for civil administrative criminal liability
for violation of copyright, protects intellectual property and creates the
necessary conditions for scientific, literary and other intellectual activity.
Protection of these rights was improved with the adoption of the Russian Federation's
Law on copyright and analogous rights. Decree No. 1607 of 7 October 1993 of
the President of the Russian Federation on State policy in respect of the
protection of copyright and analogous rights played an important role in the
formulation and implementation of copyright legislation. The establishment,
by Russian authors, of the Russian Association of Authors, regarded as a cultural
organization, was approved by a Decree which stated that the Association was
under the patronage of the President of the Russian Federation. The basic
functions of the Association, whose Statute was registered by the Ministry
of Justice of the Russian Federation on 30 September 1993, are as follows:
Administration of the property rights of authors or their legal successors
on a collective basis if their exercise on an individual basis is difficult
(public performance, including radio and television, reproduction of recordings
by mechanical, magnetic or other means, reproduction of literary works, printing
of art works and decorative/applied art works in industry, reproduction of
audiovisual works or sound recordings recorded for own purposes, etc.);
Assistance to authors or their successors in connection with the transfer
of rights to the use of the scientific, literary and artistic works they have
produced as individuals; and
Representation of the legal interests of authors or their successors before
State and public bodies and organizations.
325. Active steps are being taken with a view to Russia's accession to the
Bern Convention.
326. In this way, Russia is creating a sound legal basis for the protection
of human rights in connection with scientific, literary and artistic activities.
327. A number of legislative and government measures have been adopted to
protect, develop and disseminate the sciences and to promote scientific progress
for the benefit of all.
328. A draft law on science has been drawn up in association with the Scientific
Sub-Committee of the State Duma of the Russian Federation. The principles
embodied in this draft law reflect the interests of civil society in Russia
and recognize the scientific community as one of the most important elements
of future civil society. The draft takes into account UNESCO recommendations
and has been drawn up in strict compliance with the international copyright
and intellectual property agreements signed by the Russian Federation.
329. The draft law, which deals in detail with matters of intellectual property
in the context of scientific activity and scientific copyright, recognizes
the right of scientists to refuse, for ethical reasons, to participate in
research that is dangerous to man and society, and states that scientists
are under an obligation to inform society (but not the State) of any dangerous
trends in the development of science. Moreover, it clearly delimits the area
of secret research and establishes a barrier against unjustified secrecy in
the case of individual types of scientific investigations.
330. The draft recognizes the right of scientists to organize and manage their
own research work, including the right to form research groups and scientific
organizations. In accordance with the draft civil code, which is almost in
final form, the draft law makes a clear-cut distinction between commercial
scientific enterprises and non-commercial scientific organizations.
331. Sources of financing for learned and scientific organizations are indicated
under the "financing" heading. In the opinion of the authors of
the draft law, a major role in reaching decisions on financing should be played
by the newly-established Higher Expert Council, which comprises representatives
of the scientific community. The system of State financing on a competitive
basis is being expanded - both in respect of individual scientists through
a system of grants as well as scientific organizations wishing to participate
in the implementation of State programmes.
332. The draft law also specifies the social protection arrangements made
for scientists during the transition to a market economy.
333. Generally speaking, the draft consolidates the rights of scientists and
creates conditions for their further development.
334. Parliamentary Order No. 4729-1 of 1 April 1993 on the Russian Academy
of Sciences defined the temporary basis on which the Academy is to function,
prohibited the privatization of its assets and granted a number of privileges
to scientific research establishments. Further measures aimed at the protection
and development of science, as well as questions of financing, training and
salaries, are dealt with in Presidential Decree No. 939 of 22 June 1993 on
State scientific centres in the Russian Federation and Government Order No.
1347 of 25 December 1993 on urgent measures to protect the activities of State
scientific centres in the Russian Federation.
335. Government Order No. 1348 of 25 December 1993 on measures to organize
scientific and technical information and publicity activities on the basis
of Russian science and culture centres abroad is intended to promote scientific
progress.
336. The Russian Fund for Fundamental Research, a self-managing State organization,
was established by Decree No. 426 of 27 April 1992 of the President of the
Russian Federation on urgent measures to protect the scientific and technical
potential of the Russian Federation. The Fund, which is directly subordinate
to the Government of the Russian Federation, is a non-commercial and non-profit
organization. The main function of the Fund, according to its Statute, is
to promote the development of fundamental research (financial support for
research projects, development of the material and technical infrastructure
of scientific organizations, projects for the creation of information systems
and data banks, organization of all-Russian and international scientific measures
with the participation of Russian scientists, and publishing projects). All
forms of support are provided by the Fund on a competitive basis, regardless
of the age, level of knowledge, rank or function of the scientist, the department
in which he works and the legal status of the scientific organization in question.