Charges Dropped Against Egyptian Trade Union Leader

An Egyptian court late last month closed the case of workers’ rights advocate Kamal Abbas, who was sentenced in absentia to six months imprisonment earlier this year on charges he insulted a state executive.

Abbas, general coordinator of Egypt’s Center of Trade Unions and Services (CTUWS), was accused of insulting acting Egyptian Trade Union Federation (ETUF) President Ismail Ibrahim Fahmy while Fahmy was speaking at a June 2011 International Labor Organization (ILO) event.

The global labor and human rights communities protested Abbas’s sentence, and the CTUWS expressed its “thanks and deep gratitude” for international solidarity and support.

 

10 Injured in Violent Attack on Tunisian Trade Union

Ten people were injured today after they were attacked by a mob of men wielding knives, sticks and rocks at the Tunisian Labor Federation (Union Générale Tunisienne du Travail UGTT) in the capital, Tunis.

As trade unionists held an overnight vigil to commemorate the 1952 assassination of Farhat Hached, UGTT founder and first general secretary, hundreds attacked the union’s offices, injuring participants, including two members of UGTT’s executive board. The attack was captured on amateur video.

“Today’s attack perpetrated against the UGTT is a second assassination of Farhat Hached,” said UGTT General Secretary Hassine Abassi, speaking on Shems FM, the UGTT radio station.

“The UGTT was never attacked like this during the time of (former presidents) Ben Ali or Bourguiba. We hold the current government responsible for this violence.”

Following the attacks, thousands of union members and supporters, including Solidarity Center staff, gathered in the city center and marched to Hached’s tomb to stand in solidarity with those injured and to denounce violence in a democratic society that respects values of equality and social justice.

UGTT’s offices were attacked in October, and union members and supporters rushed to barricade the doors. No one was injured. In June, the three regional UGTT office were damaged after being firebombed.

Hached was brutally murdered by a colonialist militia, a key event in Tunisia’s passage to independence.

The UGTT was recently honored by the AFL-CIO and received the George Meany-Lane Kirkland Human Rights Award for its fundamental role in supporting and sustaining the democratic uprising that took place in Tunisia in 2011.

Bahrain: Trade Unionist Released from Prison

Jalila Al-Salman, acting president of the Bahraini Teachers’ Association, was released from prison Nov. 25, according to Education International (EI). Jalila, who was jailed in March 2011, was serving a three-year term for exercising her right to freedom of assembly and for demanding reforms in Bahrain’s educational system. Education International and LabourStart spearheaded a global petition campaign urging Bahrain’s government to release both teachers, sparking international outrage that aided in Al-Salman’s release.

Her colleague, Mahdi Abu Dheeb, president of the Bahraini Teachers’ Association, is still incarcerated.  A military court sentenced Al-Salman and Dheeb in September 2011 and the verdict was upheld by the Manama Court in October.

The global union and human rights movement has repeatedly called on the government of Bahrain to halt its attacks on workers. The International Labor Organization (ILO) has voiced grave concern over the Bahraini government’s failure to honor its commitments to the ILO.

Read the full story from the Education International.

Interview: Labor, Business Must Partner for Ethical Investment in Burma

Political transformation is happening fast in Burma, but social and cultural change are just beginning—putting the country at a key tipping point for how it ultimately will be structured, says Pyi Thit Nyunt Wai, general secretary of the Federation of Trade Unions-Burma (FTUB).

“We’re starting at ground zero. The country is like dough that’s being kneaded. We must decide what shape it has to be,” he says.

Known familiarly as U Maung Maung during his 24 years in exile, the Burmese trade union leader joined Burmese employer groups, investors and representatives of U.S.-based multinationals in Washington, D.C., November 27 in a first-of-its-kind meeting sponsored by the AFL-CIO and Solidarity Center. The group discussed how to shape corporate responsibility and implement best practices as global multinationals consider investing in Burma. Now is the time to ensure their involvement is done right, says Maung Maung.

“Labor needs to be involved from the start. I would rather have workers’ rights built in from the beginning rather than added on later.” The most recent deadly garment factory fires in Bangladesh served as the meeting’s somber backdrop, a harsh example of a failed model of global corporate practice in which hundreds of garment workers have been killed in factory fires over the past few years.

Burma’s new labor laws, passed late last year, allow the creation of unions, with a minimum of 30 members. Within weeks of the laws’ passage, groups of woodworkers, garment workers, hatters, shoemakers, seafarers and other trades, including agricultural workers, registered openly as trade unions. There currently are 380 local unions registered with the government, and 500 more in line waiting for approval, Maung Maung says.

Trade union leaders are now organizing workers throughout Burma. At the same time, they are educating workers and employers about the need for workplace safety and health measures and other practices fundamental to ethically operated work environments.  “I do believe there is political space so that trade unions and investors should work together” to ensure corporate social responsibility, says Maung Maung.

Maung Maung returned to Burma in September after nurturing the Burmese labor movement from Thailand during his long exile. He left Burma following a violent military crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators that forced thousands of Burmese activists into prison or exile. Following the March 2011 formation of a more civilian government, Burma in April held free elections and Burmese democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi was elected to Parliament, following 24 years of house arrest.

Maung Maung, who encourages multinational corporations to locate factories and operations in Burma and help create badly needed jobs, also has a message for those seeking to invest in the nation: “Let’s try to work together to form sustainable investment so we create an ethical economy.”

Maung Maung interviewed by Solidarity Center staff.

South Africa Domestic Workers Strategize with U.S. Counterparts

Clapping and singing “women must be praised,” a traditional South African protest song from the years of apartheid oppression, eight domestic workers from South Africa gathered with their American sisters and brothers from the United Domestic Workers of America (UDW)/AFSCME in San Diego on one of their first full days in the United States.

Implicit in the song, which pays tribute to women for their effort in the struggle for democracy and justice, is the sense they did not sacrifice to end apartheid only to be treated without dignity in peoples’ homes.

“We are workers like any other workers, and without legal guidelines and industry standards, domestic workers are vulnerable to exploitation and abuse,” said Eunice Dhladhla, who has labored as a domestic worker from a young age. Like many of South Africa’s primarily female domestic workers who started their work lives in apartheid South Africa, Dhladhla took the job because black workers were prevented from attaining better-paying jobs.

Dhladhla and seven other members of the South African Domestic Service and Allied Workers Union (SADSAWU) were in San Diego as part of a recent Solidarity Center exchange program sponsored through a U.S State Department grant. The exchange, one of several organized each year by the Solidarity Center, also will bring U.S. domestic workers to South Africa, creating opportunities for workers to share best practices, experiences and ideas to better empower domestic workers. The 25,000-member SADSAWU is part of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), the country’s largest labor federation.

While in San Diego—the group also traveled to Atlanta, Boston and Vermont on their 10-day trip—the San Diego County Board of Supervisors presented the UDW with a proclamation declaring November “Homecare Provider Month.” They also visited lawmakers’ offices—a first for the women, who do not have such opportunities in South Africa.

“Workers get a chance to speak for themselves (in the United States). This never happen to us,” said Pinky Mashiane, a SADSAWU organizer. “The South Africa legislators lay down their laws and legislation. … They never come to us and say, ‘As workers, as trade unionists, what do you want to see?’”

The domestic workers were less pleasantly surprised by the lack of maternity leave options and unemployment protections in the United States.

“We have more laws in South Africa that protect domestic workers,” Mashiane said. “We have maternity benefits. When you are pregnant you have four months leave. It starts at your last month of pregnancy. After your child is born, you stay on leave for three months and you are paid by the unemployment insurance fund. (We) have stronger laws against unfair dismissals.”

Also while in California, the women met with immigrant domestic workers at the Filipino Advocates for Justice and shared organizing strategies with the National Domestic Workers Alliance (NDWA), which represents 45 affiliate organizations in 18 states. In Boston, they took part in the AFSCME Council 93 convention, where they heard AFSCME President Lee Saunders.

The exchange was especially timely, with domestic workers organizing into unions and associations across the world, united by the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF), which was recently founded to ensure dignity and respect for all domestic workers. SADSAWU General Secretary Myrtle Witbooi is IDWF president. In September, IDWF won the AFL-CIO George Meany-Lane Kirkland Human Rights Award for supporting domestic worker movements and building bridges between unions and domestic workers internationally.

Building on what they learned during the exchange, members of the group said they plan to conduct more member education around organizing new members, will enlist community members in union building and include workers in leadership training. In short, said Mashiane:

“We need to grow our union using every tool that we have and everything that we’ve learned here. We also need to approach the government and demand that they listen to us. We want to talk to them. If they don’t listen then …. we’ll take what we wanted to tell them into the press so they can hear what we want.”

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