IRAQI UNION CALLS FOR A "FREEDOM
CONGRESS" AND UN INTERVENTION
Interview with Felah Alwan,
by David Bacon
t r u t h o u t |
Interview
http://www.truthout.org/issues_05/041905LA.shtml
On March
18, the Federation of Workers Councils and Unions of Iraq, one of
In the following interview, the president of the Federation of Workers'
Councils, Felah Alwan,
explains the way the union proposes to end
Q: What political process can end the occupation?
F:
Our society may be headed for civil war between religious groups. We call
for the organization of a Congress of Liberation, including all the political
powers in
Q: So you think UN troops should replace the
F: If the current troops withdraw, there may be a need for another military
force, especially from countries that haven't participated in the
occupation. They would supervise new elections, to help the Iraqi people
elect their government, instead of the election that just happened. The
main thing is to end the occupation, and all this would take place
afterwards. But the occupation will never end until we can hold a
congress of all the powers in
Q: What was the attitude of the members of the Federation of Workers
Councils and Unions of
F: Our federation issued a statement criticizing the way the elections
were conducted. We said that for people to choose between more than one
alternative, they would have to know the programs of the different political
parties and groups. This hasn't happened in
As an example, one important Shiite cleric told people to participate, and said
that those who boycotted the voting would go to hell. This was an
intervention by religious orders, threatening people if they refused to
participate. Sistani also threatened people
with hell if they refused to vote for the electoral list of the group of Shiite
parties. On the other hand, the party of the Prime Minister [Issad Allawi] waged a propaganda
campaign telling people that if the election failed, everyone who boycotted or
refused to participate would be punished. In the cities, in areas under
the hegemony of the Islamist militia, people were threatened if they refused to
participate or if they didn't vote for the list of the Shiite candidates of Sistani's party.
So the election took place without a real desire on the part of the
voters. People were also afraid that the election centers
would be attacked, and even that people would be beheaded. In this case,
it is unfair to call this an election. It was a ridiculous thing.
We tried to enter one of the centers to take
pictures, and the armed men there prevented us from doing that. They
stopped people from going in to see what was happening. The supervisors
and the supporters of the armed militia called on people to support their
alternative, and no other, especially the list of Sistani.
In
So we called on workers to boycott these elections, because people were divided
according to their ethnicity, language and religion. Its purpose was to
impose the American project on
We do know that many workers in the State Leather Industry Factory, and in others,
boycotted the election. But we don't know the exact number, because in
D: What is the economic situation of workers in
F: The large number unemployed forces people to work under very bad
conditions, and for very low wages. For example, agricultural workers are
paid less than 100,000 Iraqi dinars a month.
That's about $70. The cost of fuel has increased very rapidly, and makes
transportation very difficult. The conditions are very dangerous.
Outside of
The large number of unemployed makes workers afraid to lose their jobs.
Our workers struck a chemical plant in
In the villages, people work for $1 a day. On construction sites in Nasariya, 100 miles south of
D: Has the economic situation gotten better over the past year?
F: The prices have gone up very rapidly. Kerosene rose so much that
a worker can't buy it. Transport also increased a lot, because the price
of fuel went up. Vegetables and food went up because transport went up,
and because it's dangerous and expensive to transport it goods. All of
this puts a lot of pressure on the wages of the workers.
Q: How was your union formed?
F: Our union came out of the Union of Unemployed of Iraq. We had an
18-day demonstration at the start of the occupation, for unemployment insurance
or jobs. Workers started to organize themselves on their own. They
were very courageous.
Our organization was founded in the electricity, textile railway, and services
industries. The main problem has been how to struggle against the old
administration in the factories, and to raise the wages. Our focus from
the beginning has been on the daily life issues. We've held a lot of
seminars, and prepared our own proposal for the labor
coude. The tried to get the Minister of Labor to accept it, but the government already had its own
agenda.
People are beginning to see the trade union movement as one made up of workers
themselves, not related to the authorities. We have a weak trade union tradition among workers now, because workers see
unions as part of the government. The authorities compound
this problem by intervening in the trade union movement, with legislation that
gives support to one organization and not others. Trade unions are being
used by political parties to play a role in