info@uuiraq.org

"There is a labor movement in Iraq"

International Campaign against the Occupation, For the Defense of Labor Rights in Iraq

www.owcinfo.org/ILC/NEWS/ILC_81.html

ILC INTERNATIONAL NEWSLETTER NO. 81

By Gene Bruskin, coordinator of USLAW, spoke at an antiwar meeting on May 8, 2004 in Chicago. Following are excerpts from his presentation:

In September 2003 a general strike in Basra, led by transportation workers, demanded gas, water and electricity, and the removal of corrupt Baathist managers.

In October 2003, oil workers at the Bergeseeya Oil Refinery in southern
Iraq, struck for two days against a KBR (Halliburton subsidiary) subcontractor, which was hiring 60-70% foreign workers to do the refinery reconstruction. During the strike tribal leaders met with the management and threatened serious repercussions if the foreign workers were not replaced-the change happened immediately.

In December, Coalition backed forces raided the offices of both the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions and the Union of the Unemployed and leaders were arrested and released without charges.

On December 8 the Federation of Workers Councils and Unions in
Iraq held their founding conference in Baghdad with worker delegates representing workplaces from across Iraq. The Workers Councils were initiated by the Workers Communist Party of Iraq, a split off from the Iraq Communist Party founded in the early 1990s.

In January, Dock workers in the
port of Um Qasr staged a picket and blocked the main gate, even without a union, to protest low and arbitrary wage scales at the port overseen by SSA, the notorious anti-union US west coast port operator. The management promised to correct the problems in order to end the picket line.

Also in January 2004 Oil workers at the Southern Oil Co threatened to organize a national strike if the CPA's poverty level wage scale was not improved. An Iraqi government official was dispatched to negotiate with them and agreed to revise the wage scale upward for all oil workers.

On January 31 employees at the Nth Gas Company in
Kirkuk in Northern Iraq went on strike demanding higher wages and the replacement of the company's corrupt Baathist management. Four company managers were removed and the wage scale was changed.

On March 1, 2004 150 bank employees, mostly women, held an unprecedented conference led by the Federation of Workers Councils and the Organization of Women's Freedom in
Iraq. They threatened a general strike at banks and other workplaces if the 17 female bank cashiers arrested by Iraqi authorities were not released. The cashiers were being blamed for the disappearance of millions of dollars during the change in currency that took place in the Fall of 2003. Authorities relented, released the bank cashiers and dropped all charges

Also in March, teachers in Mosul, in the North of Iraq, protested because they hadn't been paid for six months and they threatened a strike. Authorities provided emergency pay to every teacher to avoid a strike.

On March 24 coalition forces and local police fired warning shots at a demonstration of unemployed workers in the holy city of
Najaf, the city that is now surrounded by Occupation Forces seeking to arrest religious leader Muqtada Al Sadr. Unemployed workers had rallied weekly throughout the summer and Fall of 2003 in front of government offices in Baghdad and other Iraqi cities with the Union of Unemployed in Iraqi (UUI), linked to the Federation of Workers Councils, to demand jobs or unemployment. On several occasions UUI leaders and activists were arrested. One UUI demonstrator was killed.

On April 8 workers in Nasiriyah city in southern
Iraq refused to evacuate their Aluminum and Sanitary supply factories despite threats on their lives from Muqtada Sadr's militia who wanted to turn their factories into staging areas to fight the Coalition forces. The workers rejected Sadr as their leader in shaping a new Iraq and chose to protect their jobs and workplaces.

The good news, which you won't read it in the Chicago Tribune, is that there is an Iraqi labor movement. These examples represent only a small part of the organizing activity among workers in
Iraq in the year following the occupation. And these workers didn't have to learn how to organize from the Bremer Provisional Authority or the Governing Council or the US Labor Movement. They didn't file for elections with the NLRB--unions have a tradition in Iraq going back to the 1920s.

There are many lessons to be learned from Iraqi history. Under the British occupation in the 20s the oil and railroad workers formed the first Iraqi unions. The British came into
Iraq after World War I after defeating the Turks, when the spoils of the Ottoman Empire were divided up. Major General Stanley Maude declared victory saying: "Our armies do not come into your cities and lands as conquerors or enemies, but as liberators." For decades under British control, until 1958, unions rose and fell, flourished and were repressed, as Britain tried out various forms of colonial control, echoed in the strategies and debates now taking place in the Bush administration and Congress about how to keep control while preaching democracy and sovereignty.

Britain's initial attempt to take direct control of Iraq led to what is known and still widely celebrated by Iraqis as the Revolution of 1920, a widespread uprising against British control. The British put down the uprising by using bombs and poison gas, introducing WMD into Iraq for the first time. The British found themselves facing increasing domestic criticism in Britain for their heavy handed and expensive colonial policies. This included a campaign to "Quit Mesopotamia," as Iraq was referred to at that point, Britain sought cheaper and more acceptable means of administering their newly acquired Middle Eastern territories. They smelled oil and weren't about to leave. Churchill was put in charge of laying down new guidelines for indirect rule. This rule took various forms until the British were driven out for good in the Revolution of 1958. Workers and unions played an important role in this revolution through the leadership of the Iraqi Communist Party, the strongest popular force in Iraq from the 1930s to the 1970s until they were finally crushed by Saddam.

One of the tactics of British control was the distribution of land and power to tribal sheiks and landlords, creating a power base beholden to the British-these tribal relationships would later play an important role in Saddam's power base and today in the resistance to the US Occupation. Prior to this British policy, land was held in a form of tribal communal ownership. So the British led the movement in the 20th century to privatize
Iraq by privatizing the tribal lands and of course their oil. Now the Bush administration, in a modern version of Britain's earlier efforts, has built its occupation and control of Iraq around a strategy to privatize the largely publicly owned Iraqi economic infrastructure, selling it to the highest bidding multinational and allowing designated Iraqis to buy into the program.

The Revolution of
July 14, 1958 ushered in an independent Iraq as Iraqis supported a military coup by junior officers against a British supported monarchy. The Communist Party was the only political force at this point with a base in mass organizations and trade unions and their support was critical for the success of the revolution. For the first time Iraqi trade unions were officially legalized and substantial organizing began in many sectors. This started a period of progressive legislation, a new constitution and the principle of development through industrialization. Oil provided the capital to create a modern Iraqi state. These policies coincided with growing Arab nationalism and were threatening to British and US interests concerned about keeping control of Arab oil. Allowing democracy to flourish in the Middle East was not on the short list or even the long list of US policymakers at that time, anymore than it is now.

After all, it was only a few years before, in 1953, that the CIA overthrew the democratically elected and immensely popular government in neighboring
Iran. This history of Iran is very instructive. President Mossadegh, elected by a huge majority in Iran, had nationalized the British controlled oil refineries. The 1953 coup was engineered by Kermit Roosevelt, Teddy's grandson with military assistance from none other than Norman Swartzkof Sr, father of the Gulf war general. This ushered in the brutal dictatorship of the Shah whose hated pro-Western regime was overthrown in 1979 and replaced by Islamic fundamentalists. Iran then inspired the fundamentalist movements in the Middle East, including the Taliban and the bin Laden's of the world. We now face a war on terror that is in many ways of our own making. This history makes a pretty good argument that the US should keep their hands (and arms) to themselves, or what goes around comes around, or however you want to interpret this. It is indeed a shortsighted view of power politics that western governments have practiced in the Middle East and that we see unfolding before us today in Iraq.

In 1963 competing military officers, with the support of the emerging Baath party, of which Saddam Hussein was a rising star, overthrew the Revolution. This resulted in a brutal massacre of thousands of popular grassroots leaders, including trade unionists and many communists. The
US made no objection to this massacre, however. It is widely believed, both inside and outside of Iraq, that the also CIA had a role in the coup. At the very least the CIA is thought to have supplied lists to the Baathists of communists to murder, which they did in house-to-house hunts. At the time the Communist party in Iraq was the most popular in the Middle East.

Eventually in 1968, Saddam and his Baath Party staged another coup to eliminate all forces that they had shared power with and began on the road to more than thirty years of dictatorship. Again the Communists were among the major victims, but the party and the trade union movement survived and functioned until 1978 when another wave of executions and persecutions drove most activists into exile, prison or death. At this point Saddam and the Baath party had absolute power and no longer allowed any alternative parties or organizations to function.

Many of us are familiar with the fact that Saddam had friendly relations with the
US and the West throughout the 80s when he was supplied with WMDs by Europeans governments and the Reagan administration, including Rumsfelt, and he used them to fight a brutal war against Iran. His massacre of Iranians, and the use of chemical weapons against them and the Kurds, drew few protests from the US--he was a bastard, but he was our bastard.

Looking back at Iraqi history, which Iraqi's themselves know well, it becomes very clear why they totally distrust the
US. They see more than 80 years of occupation, foreign intervention, war, sanctions, coups, massacres and other manipulations led, tolerated or supported by the British and several US governments. If the Iraqis haven't had much experience with democracy its not because they didn't yearn for it and fight for it-It is in fact the western powers that have opposed democracy and supported surrogates, regardless of how brutal and dictatorial they were, since the end of the Ottoman Empire at the close of WW I.

Let's be clear-President Bush doesn't even support democracy in this country, certainly not in
Florida, and certainly not for anyone who doesn't agree with him. To Bush the NEA are terrorists, the FTAA demonstrators in Miami were terrorists and the pro-choice demonstrators are terrorist allies-anyone who is not with him is against him. He will oppose a genuine democracy in Iraq. He is only interested in control. He will oppose democracy at home-he is the enemy of working people and so is this war

The fundamental principle is this: It is not our country and we have to leave. Recent events have made it clearer not than ever that the occupation is the problem, not the solution. Until we leave there will be no peace and there will certainly be no democracy. Which part of "get the hell out of our country" is it that you don't understand, president bush? And while you are at it, get the hell out of the white house-pay your own rent somewhere else.

In the wake of the Gulf war, in 1990 and 1991 for a brief month or two, many organizers emerged from underground. The Union of the Unemployed and the Federation of Workers Councils were conceived by a newly emerged Workers Communist party, a split off from the traditional CP, which it criticized for collaborating with colonial and Baathist governments for decades in an unsuccessful effort to seek legitimacy. The movement quickly was forced underground but continued to function. At the same time trade unionists that later formed the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions began to coalesce underground.

There were occasional strikes, although very limited, some underground papers. Falah Alwan, the President of the Workers Councils whom I met in
Geneva this year in March, said he organized funds for unemployed and injured workers, but even that resulted in threats on his life.

Nonetheless, when the dust cleared after the
US invasion, Falah and other veteran Iraqi organizers reemerged.

The situation remains difficult for organizing-we shouldn't idealize the workers' movement in
Iraq, despite the courage of so many workers who have begun to organize. Iraqi trade unionists have made some things very clear to USLAW representatives:
 Its hard to organize in the middle of a war-much of the union work has slowed down dramatically in the past month or two.
 Saddam's laws forbidding unions in the public sector, most of the country's economy, are still on the books.
 There is a tremendous amount of confusion and uncertainty among Iraqi working people-violence, religious pressures, massive unemployment, the former Baathist regime's leaders in the shadows, sometimes still running their worker places, and armed religious groups in the community, and a history in which democratic rights have been very fragile and ephemeral
 Women have suffered terribly, losing rights as fundamentalism gains ground.
 The threat of privatization looms over many workplaces

Although there is an interim governing law, passed by the Governing Council that provides for the right to organize and strike Iraqi's have seen the difference between laws on the books and the realities on the ground.

There is considerable maneuvering going on about what the shape of the new labor law will look like in the future and what role the international labor movement will play in the process. In the winter, the
US hired a MN union busting firm to write the labor law for Iraq, although they have been allegedly replaced. The US continues to have a role in the process, however.

USLAW began our relationship with the Iraqi workers and unions in Oct 2003 when we sent what may have been the first international labor delegation to
Iraq. We issued a report after that trip, called Labor Rights and Working Conditions Under the Occupation, which has since been updated. Since then we have stayed in contact with both federations through email and phone.

In March I traveled to
Geneva to meet with the ILO, the UN tripartite body that deals with labor issues. Our delegation included representatives of the International Liaison Committee from Paris and the Arab Confederation of Trade Unions. Both Iraqi Federations were invited although only the Federation of Workers Councils was able to make it. I was able to spend a couple days with Falah Alwan, the President of the Workers Councils. It was a humbling experience.

We were there to follow up our visit to the ILO in June of 2003 Amy Newell delivered a copy of our report: The Corporate Invasion of Iraq on behalf of UsLAW. The report details the sordid record of the
US multinationals that Bush contracted with to rebuild and run Iraq. The report was also translated into Arabic and has been circulated in Iraq and the Arab world. At that meeting we urged the ILO to carefully monitor the situation of labor rights in Iraq. In March of this year our delegation asked the ILO for an update and presented documents detailing violations of labor rights. We also expressed concern that the Iraqi Governing Council had publicly recognized one of the union federations, the IFTU, as the official representative of Iraqi workers-we made it clear that we don't think that any government should have the right to pick and choose which union should represent workers. We issued a declaration to that effect and it is circulating internationally and will be presented to the ILO Workers Committee in June of this year by an international delegation including USLAW.

The AFL-CIO and the ICFTU have made strong statements in support of labor rights and the rights of workers in
Iraq to choose their own unions, and we are encouraging them to make their practice reflect these statements. Many in the USLAW network are concerned that the AFL-CIO has agreed to take money from the Federal government supported National Endowment for Democracy to do labor work in Iraq. The feeling is that any government that attempts to destroy labor rights at home, such as this administration, surely will not support labor rights in Iraq.

A critical issue is privatization. The Bush administration made it clear from the outset that he wanted
Iraq to be a model unregulated free trade zone in the Middle East. In September 2003 the Provisional Authority issued an order making all Iraqi industries subject to sale to foreign owners and allowing international investors tax free and virtually unregulated freedom to buy Iraqi industries and take the profits out of Iraq without restriction; the oil industry was not included on the list because of the sensitivity of the issue. Most Iraqi industries are in bad shape due to more than a decade of wars and sanctions, along with the corruption of Saddam's regime. Workers and managers alike and representatives of both federations told our delegation in October that privatization would be a disaster, resulting in massive job loss and dislocation.

Nonetheless the initiative is still in play, slowed primarily by the fact that few companies wish to invest in
Iraq while the situation is so unstable, unless they have the type of guarantees that US contractors like Halliburton have gotten, virtually ensuring big profits. In April, US appointed Iraqi ministers have discussed ways to encourage foreign banks to locate in Iraq and, significantly, promoted the privatization of Iraqi water. Imagine selling the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers to Bechtel, one of the biggest for-profit water operators in the third world, and giving them permission to sell the water back to unemployed Iraqis. If the Unions lead the fight against this, will the International labor movement support them against the wishes of the Bush administration? We in USLAW hope so and are organizing with that in mind.

We can't underestimate the importance of the responsibility that we in the labor movement have in supporting the emergence of an independent and strong Iraqi labor movement. Falah was very clear. The unions have a window right now. They know that it can close at any moment, as it has in the past. They are determined to build as strong a presence among workers in
Iraq as possible.

For those of us in the peace movement that have opposed the war and the occupation, we must also be in solidarity with the most progressive, secular and humanist forces on the ground-the unions. And this is a feminist force. Both unions have strong pro-women platforms. Both federations have emphasized to us the historical fact that
Iraq has been very much a secular country, in which the Sunni and Shiite religious leaders were just that, religious leaders and not political leaders. They accuse the US of fanning the flames of religious and ethnic sectarianism by making all appointments based on religious and ethnic identities and turning religious leaders like Ayatollah Sistani into powerful national political spokespeople. The recent example of a joint Sunni-Shiite resistance to the occupation shows that there is genuine potential for religious unity.

We in the labor movement can make a difference here-we can play an important role in assuring that whatever Iraqi political formation results from this process includes a labor movement with full rights, operating under internationally recognized ILO conventions, fighting to help Iraqi workers fend off multinational companies seeking low wage havens in the middle east--helping them make sure that Iraqi's get to determine the shape of their national economy, not these multinationals.

What do I mean specifically?

 First, we must recognize that we have a tremendous stake in ending this war and occupation. It is draining our Federal treasury of $5 billion dollars a month at a time when Medicaid cuts are rampant, and US social programs are being savaged, while state and local governments are being driven into fiscal crisis. It is creating hatred of the
US on a massive scale, feeding those terrorist groups that wish to attack innocent US and western civilians. It is killing and severely injuring thousands of our young men and women, creating financial disaster for the families of many guard and reservists and laying the groundwork for another generation of vets suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. Recent events have revealed the utter bankruptcy of Bush's policies in Iraq--they are built on lies and his strategy is totally unraveling. But he still intends to stay the course, so we need to continue to organize. We need to talk to our members and our leaders-we need to lead on this issue-we cannot wait for John Kerry or for Congress-we need to speak out against these war policies

Thank you
Gene Bruskin,
May 8, 2004