EABL chief executive Charles Ireland (right) and finance director Tracey
Barnes at a past press briefing. Top executives of the brewer,
including its CEO, have moved to court to stop their arrest and
prosecution Saturday for defying the Ministry of Labour on payment of
terminal dues. Photo/FILE
By GALGALLO FAYO
In Summary
- Group managing director and CEO Charles Ireland, finance director Tracey Barnes and supply chain director Christian Von Der Heide had been given until Friday by the ministry to pay 57 workers or face arrest.
- The employees were attached to EABL’s subsidiary Central Glass Industries (CGI) before their transfer to a human resources outsourcing firm, prompting them to seek the help of the ministry to claim their retirement dues from the listed brewer.
- The Ministry of Labour on August 27 found EABL had breached employment laws and indicated the criteria the brewer should use to settle the dues.
Top executives of the East Africa Breweries Limited
(EABL), including its CEO, have moved to court to stop their arrest and
prosecution Saturday for defying the Ministry of Labour on payment of
terminal dues.
Group managing director and CEO Charles Ireland,
finance director Tracey Barnes and supply chain director Christian Von
Der Heide had been given until Friday by the ministry to pay 57 workers
or face arrest.
The employees were attached to EABL’s subsidiary
Central Glass Industries (CGI) before their transfer to a human
resources outsourcing firm, prompting them to seek the help of the
ministry to claim their retirement dues from the listed brewer.
The company objected to ministry’s directive and
opted not to appeal the pay order in court, setting up its top
executives for arrest and prosecution.
Thursday, the EABL executives moved to the
Constitutional Court on grounds that their rights would be infringed in
the event of their arrest.
Justice Mumbi Ngugi referred the matter to the
criminal division, implying the dispute does not border on
constitutional breaches.
This means the brewer’s top managers will have to seek direction from the criminal division to forestall their arrest Saturday.
“Orders restraining the respondents…from causing
or effecting the arrest of any of the petitioners directors including
Charles Ireland, Tracey Barnes, Christian Von Der Heide, Joe Mureithi
and arraigning or charging them in court,” reads the order sought by
EABL.
Mr Mureithi is the general manager of CGI, which
is owned fully by EABL and manufactures the glass bottles used for
packaging beer as well as containers for other companies in East and
Central Africa.
The suit has been filed by EABL and CGI and it lists the Commissioner of Labour and Labour Office as the respondents.
The dispute was triggered by the transfer of the
workers from CGI to an outsourcing firm Sheer Logic Management via
another firm.
The Ministry of Labour on August 27 found EABL had
breached employment laws and indicated the criteria the brewer should
use to settle the dues.
The ministry said the EABL unfairly terminated the
workers’ contract when it transferred them to Philmar Enterprise, which
in turn moved them to Sheer Logic.
The brewer claimed that it had sent an objection
to the ministry that was not addressed until it received the order to
settle retirement dues on October 30 within seven working days.
It was meant to pay the staff annual leave, days worked and not paid, severance pay, and pay in lieu of notice.
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