Some 670,000 workers in Tunisia waged a nationwide one-day strike today to protest the government’s refusal to increase wages for civil servant workers. The strike follows months of intense negotiations between the Tunisian General Labor Union (UGTT) and the government, which refused to increase wages in 2019 because of its commitment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to freeze public-sector wages and spending and balance the budget.
Hundreds of thousands of Tunisian workers pack the streets of Tunis for a one-day strike. Credit: UGTT
Workers began the strike at midnight. By morning, hundreds of thousands gathered at the UGTT headquarters in the capital, Tunis, and at regional offices across the country, rallying to cries of “We want employment, freedom, national dignity.” The UGTT says all public service workers took part in the strike, including workers from state-owned enterprises.
Public-sector wages have failed to keep up with rising prices, leading to a decline in purchasing power. The UGTT says the monthly minimum wage of about $128 is one of the lowest in the world, while Tunisia’s Institute of Strategic Studies says real purchasing power has fallen by 40 percent since 2014. The UGTT points out that private-sector workers have seen a 6 percent pay increase for 2019.
In addition, the government’s proposed $60 tax increase would severely impact workers’ wages, social security and the prices of consumer goods, UGTT Deputy General Sami Tahri said at a press conference yesterday.
Only one flight left the airport, and the strike affected ports, public transportation and central, regional and local administrations. Vital care at hospitals continued.
Reach for a can of tuna in your cupboard and there is a good chance it was packed by a migrant worker in Thailand. In southern Samut Sakhon Province, near the Gulf of Thailand, 6,000 factories employ some of the estimated 2 million to 4 million migrant workers, and similar numbers of factories crowd other provinces across Thailand. Fueling the country’s $236 billion export industry and helping make Thailand Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, Burmese, Cambodian and Laotian workers often toil in canning and processing factories for low pay in sometimes dangerous conditions with few rights on the job. “Hands and legs are cut off by machines and [government occupational safety] officials are not doing good job of monitoring machines for safety,” says Aung Kyaw, speaking through a translator. Aung heads up the Migrant Workers Rights Network (MWRN), a nonprofit migrant worker rights organization based in Thailand, which since 2009, has provided a crucial bridge between workers and access to legal redress for unpaid wages, occupational injuries and other forms of workplace abuse.
Migrant Workers Need to ‘Band Together’
The first step in migrant worker outreach is to ensure workers are aware they have rights on the job–MWRN leader Aung Kwaw. Credit: Solidarity Center/Tula Connell
Aung, who migrated to Thailand from Kachin state in Myanmar, worked in a shrimp peeling factory where he experienced firsthand the brutal conditions many migrant workers endure to support themselves and their families “The factory didn’t pay the minimum wage, it set the target by how many you peeled,” he says. “If workers were sick, managers forced the worker to work. We worked up to 12 hours a day with no overtime.” Recognizing the need for migrant workers “to band together,” he and eight other co-workers in 2009 formed MWRN, a Solidarity Center partner. In 2013, MWRN expanded to Yangon, Myanmar. There, staff trains potential migrant workers about their rights and the labor laws to which they are entitled in Thailand, and provides them with contact information for Myanmar’s embassy in Thailand and other key resources. In 2014, the organization opened an office in Myawaddy, Myanmar, on the Burmese-Thai border.
First Step: Workers Must Know Their Rights
The first step in migrant worker outreach is to ensure workers are aware they have rights on the job. Workers don’t know what the law is or how they can fight violations, says Aung. As part of MWRN’s education and outreach, its 21 committee members, who live in different regions and provinces around Thailand, visit migrant worker communities and talk with workers to explain the laws and their rights. Understanding their rights must begin before they start the journey to Thailand. Unscrupulous labor brokers scour rural villages for workers, falsely promise them high wages and charge them exorbitant fees, which they often struggle to repay on their low wages. Even if employers pay workers the legally required $10 a day minimum wage, it does not come near meeting the cost of living—for example, five pounds of rice, a basic food staple, costs nearly $2. Now aware of MWRN’s work, many often come to the office when employers violate their rights—an opportunity Aung takes to explain that because they are not alone in experiencing workplace abuse, they need to collectively join together to fight exploitation.
Migrant Workers Owed Millions in Unpaid Wages
Burmese migrant workers head into a fish processing factory in Thailand. Credit: Solidarity Center/Jeanne Hallacy
The most frequent workplace issue involves unpaid wages. In one case, MWRN gathered evidence of systemic underpayment at a processing factory and shared its findings with the employer association, which found the company violated wage laws. (Aung says at least one employer group, the Thai Tuna Industry Association, works well with MWRN and cooperates on addressing workplace issues at its member employers). But even after the government labor office ordered the factory to pay the 1,850 workers $6.25 million in unpaid wages, the company refused. MWRN and workers waged protests at the plant, and the company ultimately negotiated with workers for $2.6 million. With its new offices in Myanmar, MWRN is investigating recruitment agencies and reporting those that violate laws to the Burmese government. The group also has begun reaching out to workers on Thai fishing boats. Aung estimates laborers on fishing boats receive two-thirds of the legal minimum wage, with no benefits. Investigative reports have shown fishing boat workers often are targets of human traffickers, and then held for years on boats in slave-like conditions. An estimated 15,000 people from Myanmar alone crossing into Thailand to take up jobs each month, making Thailand home to more than 55 percent of the region’s migrant workers who are helping drive the country’s economic expansion. Thailand is funding a $55 billion project, the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) Act, an infrastructure and utilities development program to connect land, sea, and air through high-speed rail links, ports, and airports. As Thailand assumes the chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) this year, migrant worker rights advocates say prioritizing migrant worker protection is also essential to ensuring the country meets its ambitious economic goals.
Benefiting hundreds of miners, forklift drivers and other workers, the United Workers Union of Liberia (UWUL) and ArcelorMittal Liberia (AML)—part of global steel giant ArcelorMittal group—signed their fourth labor contract in Monrovia December 14. The three-year contract includes a 14.5 percent wage increase over the duration of the contract as well as a sexual harassment clause to protect workers, especially women. The contract continues workers’ effort to close the wage gap between resident and expatriate workers, who can receive up to 10 times the salary for the same work.
“While these unions have very little in the way of material resources, they have shown themselves to be unstoppable when it comes to building union power and mobilizing their members,” says Fred Redmond, president of the United Steelworkers (USW), which supports organizing efforts with UWUL, a Solidarity Center ally.
According to Redmond, UWUL is having significant impact on workers in Liberia beyond its footprint through a “surge of organizing” at several new mining operations and—through a new contract—providing momentum for workers currently negotiating with Firestone Liberia and Golden Veroleum’s palm oil farms.
Two wildcat strikes broke out at an AML mine in Yekepa, Nimba County, earlier this year when workers protested low wages, wage theft, job insecurity, lack of healthcare, poor housing and lack of schooling for workers’ children. Members of the Liberia House of Representatives last month voted to audit AML to investigate its compliance with its Mineral Development Agreement (MDA) with the government of Liberia, which requires the company to establish and maintain medical and education facilities for employees, their families and the broader community, and to prioritize the employment and development of local Liberians.
AML ranks fifth in size of 25 ArcelorMittal mining companies worldwide. The company has about 300,000 employees in 60 countries around the world, including Brazil, Bosnia, Canada, France, Mexico, Ukraine and the United States.
In Liberia, the Solidarity Center and the USW partner with workers in key extractive industries such as mining, timber and rubber, as well as with domestic workers, to enable unions to better serve their members and organize additional workers. UWUL began organizing AML in 2008 with training and support from the Solidarity Center and USW, winning the right to represent workers in 2009. The workers’ first agreement with AML was negotiated in 2012.
Недавно опубликованное Центром Солидарности видео о гендерном насилии на рабочем месте теперь доступно на русском языке.
Двухминутное видео объясняет формы гендерного насилия на рабочем месте, в том числе издевательства, словесные оскорбления и преследования, системный гендерный дисбаланс между работодателями и работниками, который позволяет работодателям использовать небезопасные условия труда и другие нарушения в отношении работников.
Работники, работодатели и представители государств в настоящее время обсуждают предлагаемую конвенцию (положение) Международной организации труда (МОТ), которая будет касаться насилия и домогательств на рабочем месте и данное видео заканчивается призывом к действию, присоединиться к кампании.
Узнайте больше о кампании «Остановить гендерное насилие на рабочем месте»!
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