
For those who have an illusion about the Iraqi Federation of Trade
Unions (IFTU)
In a letter published in the
Guardian (18 August 2004) written by Abdullah Muhsen,
the “representative” of IFTU in London, he described the invitation of the
un-elected interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi by Tony Blair to address the Labour Party Conference
as “an opportunity for those who honourably opposed the war to extend support
to Iraqi democrats who are trying, in the most difficult circumstances, to
construct a vibrant civil society”.
Whoever has demonstrated one day
against the war on
Ayad Allawi is
a Ba’athist thug; he is another dictator like Saddam.
He wants to implement a law to allow a state of emergency against any
gatherings. He wants to bring back the death penalty in order to bring
“stability to
Mr Mohsen
says this is the person who can construct a “vibrant civil society”, but I am
very sure that it is not Allawi and his fellow
gangsters who have been brought to power and imposed against the will of secular
and progressive people in
It is the workers who are organising
and mobilising themselves in the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions and Workers
Councils (IFTUWC) and the Union of Unemployed of Iraq (UUI) and women’s rights
activists of the Organisation of Women’s Freedom in Iraq (OWFI) who have been
fighting against occupation and political Islam, who have put the real
foundation of a civil, modern and secular society, and not you or your union,
nor your “democratic” Allawi, who are part of the US
government’s dark agenda and serving its interests in Iraq.
In his letter, Mr Mohsen goes on to defend Allawi’s
history of Ba’athism. He says: “Allawi
is criticised for having been a Ba'athist, but many
decent people joined the Ba'ath party”. Those decent
Iraqis that Mr Mohsen is talking about are workers
and women in Iraqi society who were forced or often sentenced to long prison
terms, or even execution, if they did not join the Ba’ath
party. So in order to protect their own lives and the lives of their families,
they had to join. But a top official like Ayad Allawi, who has been involved in killings and crimes
against the people of
Some people, including unfortunately
some among the left groups, who had been supporting Mr Mohsen’s
union, IFTU, have been disappointed and outraged by what Mr Mohsen
had written in the Guardian. But for me this came as no surprise at all. This
is the true nature of IFTU, which we have been warning about since the
beginning of the occupation. We told you which camp they represent and what
their aims and agenda are.
Today
For those who have opposed the war
and are opposed to the occupation of
IFTU has been acting against the
interest of the working class and is a tool in the hands of the imposed interim
government to violate the rights of workers in
IFTU is this era’s version of
state-made, anti-labour Ba’athist unions. They should
be denied any kind of support. Workers in
IFTU enjoys the backing of the US/UK
governments, as well the recognition and support of Allawi’s
interim government. Any support or recognition offered to them will be a direct
support for the government of Allawi and against the
interests of the workers and people of
Houzan Mahmoud
An
activist of Union of Unemployed of Iraq (UUI) and Iraqi Federation of Trade
Unions and Workers Councils (IFTUWC)
Representative
in the
houzan73@yahoo.co.uk
20/08/2004