Dress code
circular suspended
The Public Administration
Ministry has suspended its decision to impose a dress code for state-sector
employees.
This came after Prime Minister
Ranil Wickremesinghe opposed the move to re-implement a 30-year old circular
which stipulates a dress code for public sector employees – shirt and trouser
or national costume for men and saree or osari for women.
Minister Ranjith Madduma Bandara
told the Sunday Times the decision was put on hold and the issue would be taken
up for discussion at the Government Parliamentary group meeting tomorrow to
reach consensus on the dress code.
“We will be taking into
consideration whether a dress code should be introduced or whether changes
should be brought to the existing circular,” he said.
A senior official of the Prime
Minister’s Office said the Prime Minister was of the opinion that the circular
would have to be changed if a dress code was to be implemented.
The Public Administration
Ministry had earlier decided to implement the dress code circular from
tomorrow, raising concern among thousands of employees who already used to a
particular dress than those stipulated in the circular.
Ministry Secretary J.J. Ratnasiri
earlier told the Sunday Times that the Presidential Secretariat had given its
consent to re-implement the circular issued in 1989 and accordingly they had
decided to go ahead with it.
He said the dress code was being
reintroduced to ensure that a common law was in place.
He said if changes were required
the Cabinet would have to make a decision.
The move to implement a dress
code came after a spate of incidents where there had been protests over wearing
of certain types of dress to public offices and schools. In one such incident,
a group of teachers had not been allowed to school on the grounds that they
were not dressed in saree, but instead wearing abayas.
However, in the event of the
implementation of the old circular, several female public sector employees who
do not wear the Saree or the Osariya also would have been force to change their
dress.
Ceylon Teachers Union General
Secretary Joseph Stalin said the government move to make the saree and osari
essential for working women in state sector was unfair.
He said that, in most public
institutions and in schools, there were women employees and teachers who came
dressed in skirt and blouse or an appropriate dress convenient for them.
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