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Dear Friend, Please treat this as an open letter and feel free to circulate. The head of the TUC European Union and International Department, Owen Tudor, has written a letter criticising Iraqs oil workers union, for not building links with certain international union federations, and lambasting solidarity organisations for issuing statements alerting the trade unions and general public to the escalating anti-trade union measures and oil privatisation plans in Iraq. [Copies of Owen Tudors statement, and the Naftana (Arabic for our oil) and US Labour Against the War (USLWA) statements are reproduced below this email. ] Instead of directing his fire at the anti-trade union measures in occupied Iraq, Owen Tudor prefers to level a false accusation against a besieged trade union representing impoverished workers, languishing under a ruthless occupation. He also takes a swipe at small solidarity organisations in Britain and USA, and engages in diversionary nitpicking and making light of the grave problems facing the Iraqi people and trade unions. But despite Owen Tudors attempt to cloud the issues and downplay the seriousness of the problems facing Iraqs genuinely independent trade unionists, the facts are plain and simple to understand. The Iraqi government has, in the past few months, accelerated the implementation of decree 8750. The Iraqi Ministerial Council approved decree 8750 in August 2005 (probably not published in the official gazette till September) promising a new paper on how trade unions should function, operate and organise, dissolving one government committee and replacing it with a new ministerial committee that includes the *minister for National Security, * to be in charge of Labour and Social Rights, and stating that the new committee would control all trade union funds. *Using wording rivalling the deviousness of the Saddam regimes 1987 anti-trade union law, decree 8750 does not ban trade unions. In 2004 US administrator Paul Bremer issued a notorious directive, still in effect, reviving Saddams 1987 anti-union decree*, *which also did not ban trade unions as such*, *but merely deemed all workers in the state sector to be civil servants. Civil servants were **of course **banned from joining trade unions. Similarly, *decree 8750 is worded such that it effectively makes all union activity illegal*. The decree states that *the** new ministerial committee /must take/ /control of all monies belonging to the trade unions and prevent them from dispensing any such monies. /* How trade unions can function /*legally*/ when it is illegal to dispense a penny on their activities, only Owen Tudor knows. He also knows how to stay calm and not resort to hyperbole when *Unions in Iraq are clearly still functioning, and have been since the Decree was announced. * *In English, this means that his TUC department will not launch a serious campaign to defend Iraqs independent trade unionists until they all stop functioning. While the country burned and cities were at the receiving end of trigger-happy US Marines, US air and land bombardment, and occupation-induced terrorist attacks, *the government proceeded **this year **with the implementation of the anti-union policies and decrees. * As if it was not bad enough that his TUC department did not campaign to defend the Iraqi lawyers and writers unions, Owen Tudor tries to downplay nakedly anti-union measures by describing properly constituted unions, with elected officers, as more professional associations than trade unions. In April the government accelerated the implementation of its 8750 anti-union decree. *Contrary to Tudor Owens accusations of hyperbole, the Naftana statement below understates the scale of the problem facing Iraqi trade unions by highlighting the actual freezing of the accounts of only the oil workers union. * The government decree in fact ordered control over the accounts of all trade unions (*including those close to the government*). I find it astonishing that he chooses to accuse the oil workers union, *whom the TUC officially invited to Britain last year*, of not communicating with international union federations. He knows very well that the oil workers union has been trying very hard to establish such contacts in the face of insidious, but polite and patronising disregard. He also knows that this union is financially strapped - (the price of true independence under occupation) - and relies heavily on its supporters in Britain to communicate its news in English to the British and world trade union movement. *Instead of publicly criticising the union, he should be writing to them expressing concern at the news of freezing their account, ascertaining the full facts and offering financial and other help. He should also be asking them how the TUC could help the unions planned second anti-privatisation conference in Basra. *It is deeply regrettable that some in the TUC international department prefer to turn a blind eye to *certain* international events, which are seriously threatening trade unionists abroad, if such events are *deemed to be politically embarrassing to Blairs government*. For them Iraq is building a democracy, and strangling independent trade union activity does not fit in with that *fictitious Blairite image of Iraq*, an image designed to lull trade unionists into silence about the gravity of the situation in Iraq, and thwart calls for the swift withdrawal of the US and British occupation forces. In the name of supporting a fictitious democratic process, they are in effect helping to crush democratic activity. And by not exposing the consequences of the Blairite (Thatcherite) alliance with the Bush administration, some in the TUC international department are, probably with good intentions, helping prolong the occupation of Iraq and privatisation and theft of Iraqi oil and other wealth by the transnationals. *In doing this, they are also damaging the reputation and proud record of most of Britains unions, strongly opposed to the war and continuing occupation of Iraq. * Instead, *Tudor Owen should also be alerting Britains unions to the fact that the Iraqs oil minister is preparing the ground for signing privatisation agreements, deceptively called Production Sharing Agreements, with the transnational oil barons. * The TUC is perhaps not aware that the occupation authorities have spent millions of dollars on so called civil society and other *sweetheart* organisations to prop up activities designed to draw attention away from the war crimes of the occupation forces and plans to privatise Iraqs oil and main industries. The implementation, *probably selectively*, of decree 8750 will hit the genuinely independent organisations hardest, because they rely heavily on the pennies they collect from impoverished workers and donations collected by solidarity organisations. Decree 8750 is aimed at strangling the truly independent trade unions and other mass organisations. International solidarity helps them stay independent and to resist pressures to turn them into sweetheart unions, docile apologists of the occupation and the transnationals. Best wishes, Sami Ramadani Sami Ramadani, 1. Statement by the TUCs Owen Tudor The TUC is unaware of what has happened to the Oil Workers Union (it doesnt help that they seem only to communicate with small campaigning organisations rather than the global oil workers federation (ICEM) or the global trade union movement (ICFTU), but it is certainly true that Decree 8750 has been used to intervene in the lawyers union and others (note that this organisation and others affected are more professional associations than trade unions, not that that makes the governments actions any better). However, it is a massive exaggeration to describe Decree 8750 as the September 2005 decree making all trade union activity illegal, and things are bad enough without exaggerating and giving completely the wrong impression. Unions in Iraq are clearly still functioning, and have been since the Decree was announced (in August by the way). This is not intended to stop people protesting about Decree 8750, as the TUC, ICFTU and Iraqi unions have been for nearly a year. But hyperbole doesnt help, it sends people off in the wrong direction. Owen Tudor, Head of TUC European Union and International Relations Department 2. Naftana Statement (a very similar statement was also issued by US Labor Against the War (USLWA)) * OIL UNION BANK ACCOUNT FROZEN IRAQI GOVERNMENT ATTACKS OPPONENTS OF OIL PRIVATISATION* We have just confirmed reports that the Iraqi regime has frozen all the bank accounts of the Iraqi oil workers union, both abroad and within Iraq. Wave of anti-union activity by government* The Iraqi regimes decision comes in the wake of a series of anti-union measures, including the disbanding of the council of the lawyers union, freezing the writers union accounts and the September 2005 decree making all trade union activity illegal. For that anti-union act the regime used the pretext of promising the promulgation of a future law to regulate trade union organisations and their activities. This action follows in the footsteps of US administrator Paul Bremer In 2004 Paul Bremer, the occupations then pro-consul in Iraq, declared trade union activity in the state sector illegal. That decision re-enacted Saddam Hussains 1987 decree banning workers unions in the state sector by declaring them to be civil servants rather than workers. Hamstringing opponents of oil rip-off* Iraqs enormous oil wealth is being groomed for Production Sharing Agreements, which would transfer effective control over all aspects of oil policy, production and marketing to multination oil companies. The oil workers union is one of the most effective opponents of this policy, organising an anti-privatisation conference last year and another one to come this year. Notes for journalists The GUOE organises over 23, 000 oil and gas industry workers Naftana (Arabic: our oil) was set up by UK activists after contact with the GUOE. We are in regular contact with the leadership of the union. In August 2003 the union halted oil exports for two days as a protest over low wages. The GUOE is independent of any political party or union federation. GUOE executive committee members, including its President, were part of the opposition against Saddam Husseins dictatorship, and many were imprisoned by the regime. The GUOE is opposed to the military occupation of Iraq and to the privatisation of the oil and industrial sectors of Iraq. The GUOE is a successor to the Southern Oil Company Union (SOCU), set up immediately after the fall of the Saddam regime. In October 2003 union activists kicked US company KBR out of oil industry workplaces. Sign up to the Naftana email alerts system at
naftana-subscribe@lists.riseup.net For news of the oil workers union, visit the unions website: http://www.basraoilunion.org/ |