FWCUI Bulletin
5 11-9-2006
1.
On Sunday 3-9-2006, hundreds
of health sector workers held a strike in Nasiriyah city, 370 Km south of Baghdad and in Umara city 370 Km South-east of Baghdad. They raised
demands of higher average salaries and repayment of contagious disease
compensation (similar to dangers of work benefit). This sector was frozen for
periods after the occupation. The strike continued for 3 days during which the
workers received nothing but promises. None of the demands were met afterwards.
One of the strike organizers, Jassim Muhammed, stressed the willingness of the
workers to hold a sit-in for the coming days in front of the officials’
buildings in order to express their dismay of the authorities’ neglect for
their demands.
2.
Al Aadhamiya (part of Baghdad) Municipality
workers have started a strike since August 30th in protest of US
troops raid over their building. The US soldiers broke doors and windows
and smashed the employees’ desks, under the pretext of searching for guns
inside the municipality. The report of the employees’ union, affiliated to the
Federation of Services’ Workers, determined the amount of losses resulting in
the work place and also announced a protesting open strike, since August 30th
and continuing currently.
3.
Workers’ strike
in Hilla textile company demanding better
salaries, in the time that many industrial and services sectors undergo a wave
of workers’ protest aiming at salaries’ increase. These protests are related to
the sudden rise in the prices of all goods and services available.
4.
For the
second time, the workers of Processing Gas in the South Oil Sector put a halt
to the production because the authorities did
not meet their demands in full, due to a missing part of the deal about
benefits. The workers decided that the agreement resolved early in the month
was breached and therefore the strike will resume. The workers of Gas
production joined the previous workers of Gas Processing. They all stopped work
at eight a.m. on Monday
morning.
Workers’ Media
Center
11-Sep-06