Kathlyn Stone -- World News Trust
A 48-hour strike led by oil and gas
workers in Basra, Iraq, last week signals a growing impatience with the U.S. occupation of Iraq, said a spokesperson
for the Iraq Freedom Congress. The strike shut down the country's main refined oil pipeline.
The workers presented four demands
to the Ministry of Oil: higher pay, wages must
be paid when due, workers must be paid for overtime work and ambulances must be
provided to transport injured workers. About 350 oil workers and 200 gas
workers walked off the job the morning of Aug. 22.
"Their basic demands for higher
pay were met," said the IFC's Housan Mahmoud.
"If the government doesn't deliver on the rest of the demands, the strikes will
resume."
Mahmoud is a women's and labor
rights activist and chair of Iraq Freedom Congress Abroad, based in London.
The IFC is a movement led by unions
and human rights activists that is rapidly gaining in popularity among the
general population. It is modeled after the African National Congress, which
came into power following worldwide pressure to end the white minority rule of South Africa.
The IFC is calling for a democratic, secular alternative to both the U.S. occupation and political Islam in Iraq. The IFC is
also a major supporter of the strike.
"The government and its
administration have turned a blind eye to the demands raised by workers for
months. Therefore the workers were forced to resort to a strike to impose their
demands on the government and South Oil Company," according to Amjad Aljawhary, North American representative of the
Federation of Worker Councils and Unions in Iraq (FWCUI). Union spokespeople
said the strike "completely paralysed pumping oil from all Iraqi ports in Basra."
The lack of electricity, running
water and severe fuel shortages and widespread corruption have had an enormous
impact on people's daily lives. Growing violence claimed the lives of more than
1,000 Iraqis in July, according to icasualties.org. The IFC said the people have a right
through demonstrations and strikes to demand changes that will solve the
mounting problems.
"The strike is a very important development. It could
encourage others to start demanding a day of reckoning," said U.S. Labor Against
the War Co-Convenor Bob Muehlenkamp.
USLAW representatives have been communicating with the Iraq
Freedom Congress and union leaders in Iraq for more than two years. USLAW
organized a tour of some 20 U.S.
cities by Iraqi labor leaders in 2005 to increase direct dialogue with U.S. unions and
the general public. "They've been asking when the United States will leave and trying to
figure out how long to put it [the strike] off," said Muehlenkamp.
"Our job over here is to make sure the U.S. government
stays out of this," said Muehlenkamp. The brevity of the strike "leaves open
the possibility that the U.S.
government may have been involved in a strike-breaking activity," he said.
Underlying the struggles is the U.S. plan to transform the Iraqi
economy from publicly-owned to privately held. This holds true for the
publicly-owned oil industry that represents 70 percent of the Iraqi
economy. The march toward privatization and neglect of Iraq's
infrastructure contributes to massive unemployment, increased
insecurity and
violence, and a devastating impact on the average Iraqi working
family.
An American who is working to
establish an Iraq Freedom Congress chapter in the United
States said the corporate media in the United States is intentionally keeping Americans
in the dark about the existence of the Iraq Freedom Congress and the strong
labor movement in Iraq,
both now and historically. The struggle in Iraq is presented by the media as
an "either-or choice between the occupation and the resistance," said Martin
Schreader. "If a third option, the IFC, was known by those outside of
Iraq to be a real force, many of those who oppose the occupation, but
do not want to see the ‘resistance' come to power, would begin to think they
finally have a side in the conflict."
Schreader, who is on the U.S.-IFC streering
committee, thinks the IFC offers a rallying point for international opposition
to the war in Iraq.
Greater awareness of the democratic and secular movement that opposes violence
against civilians "would greatly erode the tenuous acceptance of the occupation
by large sections of the population. It would embolden those who abstractly
call for an immediate end to the occupation by giving them a rallying point.
Finally, it would strip the Right of its chief talking point against
withdrawal: if the United States
leaves, the ‘resistance' takes over," Schreader said.
"People don't realize that Iraq has a long history of
organized labor," Mahmoud said. Iraq's
labor movement began in the 1920s and ‘30s with the formation of the oil
workers and railway workers unions. Unions played an important role in the
Revolution of 1958 which set up the first popular Iraqi government, according
to USLAW.
While the Saddam Hussein government crushed the Iraq trade union movement in the 1970s -- by
murdering and imprisoning unionists, forcing union members underground or to
flee the country, and by taking away pensions -- labor leaders say workers have
not fared any better under the U.S.
occupation.
Most of the evidence points to worse working conditions under the
U.S.-backed government. Unemployment is about 70 percent nationally, and
attacks against union leaders have continued under U.S. occupation. Hadi Saleh, a
leader of the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unionists (IFTU), was assassinated in
January of this year, and Ali Hassan Abd, a member of the General Union of Oil
and Gas Workers (GUOW) was assassinated in February.
Members of the Federation
of Workers Councils and Unions of Iraq have been arrested and fired from their
jobs, along with members and leaders of the Union
of the Unemployed, according to the unions. In 2005, U.S. occupation forces arrested then
later released eight members of the IFTU's governing board, without providing
any explanation for their arrest
"For any workers, much less oil workers in Iraq, this
takes tremendous vision and courage," Muehlenkamp said.
Related reading:
AP: Iraq Oil Workers on Strike
Reuters:
Iraqi
oil workers end strike
Electronic Iraq: Labor and peace activists should unite in support of the courageous Iraq
southern oil workers strike
OpEdNews: Iraq
Freedom Congress Rejects Violence of Occupation and Insurgency
US Labor Against the War: Iraqi Labor Tour 2005
***
Kathlyn Stone is a Twin Cities,
Minnesota-based writer covering science, health policy, the economy and
international relations for general and professional audiences. She writes for
neurology publications and independent media including World News Trust, Twin
Cities Daily Planet, OpEdNews, Electronic Iraq, and The Pulse.

Last update : 01-08-2008 17:59
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