ZAGREB, Dec 19 (Hina) - Croatian President Stjepan Mesic said on Friday the ban prohibiting stores from working Sundays should not apply to every store, that this issue was excessively politicised, and that it was a question of
organising work.
ZAGREB, Dec 19 (Hina) - Croatian President Stjepan Mesic said on Friday
the ban prohibiting stores from working Sundays should not apply to
every store, that this issue was excessively politicised, and that it
was a question of organising work.#L#
Asked for a comment on International Monetary Fund (IMF) Mission to
Croatia chief Hans Flickenschild's statement that the IMF was against
the ban, Mesic said there were businesses where continuity needed to
be maintained and where production could not be discontinued. He
added, however, that employees working Sunday shifts should be paid
adequately and that there should be rotations. "It's a question of
organising work. I think this problem is being excessively politicised
and that it can be solved through good organisation."
Mesic said that not all businesses should or could be banned on
Sunday, that not even the Church was asking that, but added there were
businesses which did not need to work Sundays.
Under the new Trade Act, which goes into force on January 1, there are
new regulations for working on Sundays. The new provisions ban stores
whose premises exceed 200 square metres from being open on Sundays.
IMF Mission chief Flickenschild said earlier this week the IMF was
against the ban, which it felt would undermine free market
competition, introduce distinctions amongst businesses, might increase
unemployment, reduce revenue, sales, and ultimately GDP. He said the
IMF advised the incoming government against applying the Trade Act.
Flickenschild's statement met with numerous reactions, from Caritas
Croatia, the Franciscan Institute for the Culture of Peace, a number
of trade unions, and the Trade Guild of the Croatian Chamber of Crafts
and Trades. They called for the signing of a petition to ban stores
from being open Sundays.
(Hina) ha sb