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tons of money

🔗Christopher Bailey <chris@...>

6/2/2004 5:27:34 PM

>
> . . . the Iraqi citizens will
> make tons of money, . . . .
>

Currently, most Iraqis make $60 a MONTH. With the privatization of. .
everything. . . of course some will become millionaires, but I'm sure
that for the most part, most will remain making that kind of a salary.

You might say. . "but they can form unions". . .

Think again:

___________________________________________________________________
U.S. Arrests Iraq's Union Leaders

by David Bacon

IRAQ
BAGHDAD, IRAQ (12/10/03) -- US occupation forces in Iraq escalated their
efforts to paralyze Iraq's new labor unions with a series of arrests this
weekend. On Saturday, a convoy of ten humvees and personnel carriers
descended on the old headquarters building of the Transport and
Communications Workers union, in Baghdad's central bus station, which has
been used since June as the office of the Iraqi Workers Federation of
Trade Unions. Twenty soldiers jumped out, stormed into the building, put
handcuffs on eight members of the Federation's executive board, and took
them into detention.

"They gave no reason at all, despite being asked over and over," says
federation spokesperson Abdullah Muhsin. Soldiers painted out the name of
the federation on the front of the building with black paint. Because the
new Iraqi unions lack basic resources like office furniture and machines,
there was little to confiscate in the building. "But we did have a few
files, and they took those," Muhsin adds. Ironically, the office had
posters on the walls condemning terrorism, which soldiers tore down in the
raid. Although the eight were released the following day, there was no
explanation from the Coalition Provisional Authority for the detentions.

The bus station raid followed the detention of two other trade union
leaders on November 23 -- Qasim Hadi, general secretary of the Union of
the Unemployed, and Adil Salih, another leader of the organization. Hadi
has been arrested twice before by occupation troops, for leading
demonstrations of unemployed workers demanding unemployment benefits and
jobs. In the latest raid, CPA troops said they'd found two guns in the
union's office, which was only permitted to have one. Hadi explained that
the organization has been the subject of threats and fatwahs by Iraqi
religious parties, and needs weapons for self-defense, since US troops are
unable or unwilling to provide security.

The two were released after being detained for a day.

Both union groups have been organizing Iraqi workers for months. The Iraqi
Workers Federation of Trade Unions held a convention in Baghdad last June,
at which it established unions in twelve industries. The Unemployed Union
belongs to the Workers Unions and Councils group, which has also been
organizing since last summer.

The wave of union organizing going on in Iraq is a product of the
desperate conditions of the country's workers. As many as seven million
people, according to the Union of the Unemployed, or seventy percent of
the workforce, have no jobs, go hungry, and are even homeless. Although
Congress appropriated $87 billion for reconstruction, Dr. Nuri Jafer, the
deputy minister of Labor and Social Affairs admits he can find "no country
willing to fund our plans" for a minimal system of unemployment benefits.
Reconstruction is invisible in Baghdad. Work may be proceeding on
pipelines and ports for oil exports, but huge piles of war rubble lie
untouched in city streets.

US funding in Iraq pays for an overwhelming military presence, and the
transformation of the Iraqi economy. Both are intended to make the country
attractive to foreign investors. In an October 8 phone press conference,
Thomas Foley, director for private sector development for the Coalition
Provisional Authority, announced a list of the first Iraqi state
enterprises to be sold off, including cement and fertilizer plants,
phosphate and sulfur mines, pharmaceutical factories and the country's
airline. On September 19, the CPA published Order No. 39, which permits
100% foreign ownership of businesses, except for the oil industry, and
allows the transfer of profits outside the country.

Iraqi workers view the prospect of the privatization of their workplaces
with dread, fearing the sell off will bring massive layoffs. The manager
of the Al Daura oil refinery, Dathar Al-Kashab, predicted that with
privatization "I'll have to fire 1500 [of the refinery�s 3000] workers. In
America when a company lays people off, there's unemployment insurance,
and they won't die from hunger. If I dismiss employees now, I'm killing
them and their families."

At the refinery, as in most factories, those with jobs work 11 and 13 hour
shifts for a salary of $60 a month. They have no safety shoes, goggles,
masks or other protective gear. The Iraqi Workers Federation of Trade
Unions helped the refinery�s workers organize a union and elect its
leaders, and have done the same in other industries. In Basra workers have
formed a central labor council, and have mounted protest demonstrations.
The Workers Unions and Councils group has helped workers elect committees
in the State Leather Industry plant, the largest shoe factory in the
Middle East, and the Mamoun Vegetable Oil enterprise, among others.
Whenever these new unions try to talk with the plant managers, however,
they're told that a law decreed by Saddam Hussein in 1987 forbids workers
in state-owned enterprises (where the majority of Iraqis work) from
forming unions. The CPA is still enforcing this law. Another order issued
by the CPA on June 6 threatens that anyone who "incites civil disorder"
will be detained as a prisoner of war under the Geneva Convention. The
recent arrests are the latest incidents in this effort by the occupation
authorities to suppress unions.

The anti-union campaign lays bare the economic purpose of the occupation
-- the privatization of the enterprises that employ most workers. While
suppressing unions, international conferences take place in Washington and
London every week, at which these assets are put on sale. At one recent
conference, ExxonMobil, Delta Airlines and the American Hospital Group all
expressed interest. Since new foreign owners can be expected to cut labor
costs by laying off workers, resistance at the worksite has been made
illegal by laws banning unions and the arrest of their leaders.
In an additional step to make investment attractive, the CPA is holding
down the wages of Iraqi workers. The $60 a month received by most
employees was the same salary paid under Saddam Hussein, but the bonuses,
profit-sharing payments, and subsidies for food and housing were ended
when the occupation began, resulting in a drastic cut in income. "The
coalition forces control the finances, and our wages," says Detrala
Beshab, president of Al Daura's new union.

Iraq's new labor movement is determined to stop the sell off of worksites,
the loss of jobs, and the prohibition of unions and strikes. Jassim
Mashkoul, the IFTU's director for internal communications, laments that
"at the beginning, we thought our situation might get better, since we got
rid of Saddam Hussein. But it hasn't improved." According to another
federation leader, Muhsen Mull Ali, who spent two long stints in prison
for organizing unions, "our responsibility is to oppose privatization as
much as possible, and fight for the welfare of our workers."
But to the Bush administration and the occupation authority, this activity
is a crime.

🔗kraig grady <kraiggrady@...>

6/2/2004 5:34:28 PM

Christopher Bailey wrote:

> >
> > . . . the Iraqi citizens will
> > make tons of money, . . . .

I missed who posted this but not on this planet.

Chomsky pointed out how those central american countries that these Neo cons
point to as economic success have 50% of the children near starvation. But
they have malls that are open 24 hours a day.

>
> >
>
> Currently, most Iraqis make $60 a MONTH. With the privatization of. .
> everything. . . of course some will become millionaires, but I'm sure
> that for the most part, most will remain making that kind of a salary.
>
> You might say. . "but they can form unions". . .
>
> Think again:
>

good article CB!

>
> ___________________________________________________________________
>

-- -Kraig Grady
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island
http://www.anaphoria.com
The Wandering Medicine Show
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