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En Oaxaca sentimos luto por el Cairo, Egipto Nov 25 11 In Oaxaca we’re mourning for Cairo, Egypt Nov 24 11 Second Open Letter from TPTG Oct 14 11 Trade Unionists Under Attack: Urgent Appeals for Help from Mexico and Zimbabwe international |
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Wednesday March 03, 2010 14:44 by Eric Lee - LabourStart.org
![]() Urgent Appeals for Help from Mexico and Zimbabwe Some 1,200 members of Mexico's National Miners' and Metalworkers' Union, or Los Mineros, have been on strike since July 2007 at the Cananea mine over health and safety and other contract violations. Grupo Mexico, the mining giant which operates Cananea, and the Mexican government have continuously tried to end the strike and crush the union. They have threatened and jailed union leaders, illegally frozen union bank accounts and failed to investigate or prosecute assassinations of union members. On February 11, a federal court gave Grupo Mexico permission to fire the striking workers and terminate the labor agreement. The government has threatened to use armed force to gain control of Cananea. The Los Mineros members at Cananea are resolved to continue occupying the mine until a fair labour agreement is reached. Los Mineros is one of the strongest and most democratic trade unions in Mexico. Please take a moment to send off your letter of protest today. In Zimbabwe, on 3 November 2009, three armed men forced their way into the home of Gertrude Hambira, the Secretary General of the General Agriculture and Plantation Workers Union (GAPWUZ). Gertrude was away at the time of the attack but her husband, her elderly mother and the couple's children were at home. Her husband was awoken by the men, who demanded to know the whereabouts of his wife. He was pinned down by the intruders, and they threatened to shoot him if he called for help. One of the men fired a single shot into the roof of the house, and they only left when a security alarm was activated. Her husband immediately alerted a neighbour before calling the police. Gertrude Hambira is now in hiding and fears for her safety. She fled after individuals identifying themselves as officers from the CID (Criminal Investigation Department) raided the union's head office on 24 February, in a search for her. Five days earlier she had been called to a meeting at Police Headquarters in Harare, where she was interrogated by a panel of seventeen high ranking security officials. During the interrogation the panel stated that Ms Hambira should be behind bars. Amnesty International is campaigning to pressure the Zimbabwean government to protect her and to stop intimidating her and other human rights defenders. Please visit their page and support the campaign. Please forward this message on to your fellow trade union members. Thanks very much. Eric Lee |
Front pageExigimos la presentación con vida de David Venegas Reyes Irã: prenúncio de mais uma invasão imperialista. Perú: Ollanta Humala y el gobierno nacionalista الأناركيون و الإشتراكيون الثوريون في مصر Which way forward for the 99%? A 10 años del levantamiento de diciembre de 2001 Los libertarios vuelven a la Federación de Estudiantes de la Universidad de Chile (FECH) Un paso adelante, ¿dos atrás? Balance político del 2011 en Colombia بيان تضامن التحرريين الأممين مع نضال شعب م Iran-Israel: non aux menaces de guerre de l’Etat israélien Να προχωρήσουμε ένα βήμα πιο πέρα Semana de Lucha (14-18 Nov) contra el Pacto Social y por la Huelga General A un año de la muerte de Georges Fontenis The Egyptian military council promotes sectarian strife and massacres protestors Build on the Anarchist and Revolutionary Potentialities of the Occupy Wall Street Movement. Intimidación Policial y Detención de 24 Compañeros en Oaxaca de Magón, México نداء من اجل ملتقى أممي في تونس 6 settembre, sciopero generale di lotta e indignazione Sobre el encuentro de Barrancabermeja: un paso adelante para el movimiento popular colombiano London burns - causes & consequences of the riots - an anarchist perspective Los libertarios y las Bases para un Acuerdo Social por la Educación Chilena Latest NewsInternational | Repression / prisoners | en Tue 14 Feb, 13:25
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Jump To Comment: 1Just fyi -- wanted to share with you my post from today after meeting with the head of the Zimbabwe labor movement Wellington Chibebe called, "We Remain United: In Zimbabwe's Labor Movement, a Voice for Human Rights and Democracy". Here is the link: http://borderjumpers1.blogspot.com/2010/03/we-remain-un....html. I am blogging everyday with my partner Danielle Nierenberg across Africa from our website called BorderJumpers [www.borderjumpers.org]. Bernard Pollack
Here is the text:
In Harare, on the way to our meeting with Wellington Chibebe, the secretary general of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), even our driver was excited for us.
"He is a good, good man. I've only seen him on TV, but he's fights very hard for the people and to promote democracy!"
Since the early 1990s, ZCTU grew increasingly opposed to the government of Robert Mugabe and was the main force behind the formation of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). In fact, MDC's leader and the current Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, Morgan Richard Tsvangirai held the same position with the ZCTU before Chibebe.
Chibebe is one of the most vocal—and effective—voices in civil society promoting respect for human rights and democracy. Despite being brutally beaten, tortured, and having his life threatened over the last two decades, Chibebe remains more positive than ever about the direction of his country. It was largely due to Zimbabwe's labor movement that in the 2008 presidential election Tsvangirai defeated Mugagbe. Yet despite MDC's victory, Mugabe, refuses to step down and the nation has a "power sharing" agreement..
When we met with Chibebe, he was cautiously optimistic about the power-sharing agreement and the future of democracy in Zimbabwe. "Our role as the labor movement is to fight for democracy and good governance, respect for people's basic rights, and also social and economic rights." He says that while the MDC plays a critical role in promoting democracy, the mission of the union movement will be to hold all political parties accountable to these principles. "We just can't afford to repeat the same mistake by treating any government or political party as angels from heaven," he says. While he described the beginning of the power-sharing agreement as "terrible," Chibebe felt strongly that "things are now getting better, we are able to make some positive changes happen."
Chibebe was born 300 miles south of Harare. His upbringing herding goats and farming built both a sense of responsibility and social consciousness, he says. "Rural kids grow up different from urban ones, you start fighting for your rights at a very early age. If you aren't aggressive, you'll get abused." He also described how in rural life he had no access to books or libraries, so everyone listened to their elders, learning about the importance of struggle and hearing passionate tales of resistance against the ruling government. Not even a teen when his mother passed away, Chibebe became passionately involved in political struggle for social and economic justice that has lasted his whole life.
Being at the helm of the Zimbabwe labor movement at this moment is no easy task. The country faces unemployment rates of more than 90 percent. The media is controlled by the government. Union leaders are routinely harassed and imprisoned. And the Mugabe government instituted draconian laws to thwart unions, such as arresting any meeting of more than four people. Yet the affiliates of the ZCTU, representing more than 30 unions and every sector of the economy, have remained united. "While it is very difficult at times with unemployment so high to convince people to be in unions, we are still able to recruit and grow."
Chibebe works tirelessly to bring attention to Zimbabwe’s economic and human rights realities and to pressure the government to reform its ways. As workers struggle to survive inflation and low paying informal employment, Chibebe has expanded the work of the ZCTU to represent all workers in both formal and informal employment. ZCTU fights for economic and social justice not just for his members, but for the fundamental rights of all of Zimbabwe’s workers.
In 2002, Chibebe and the ZCTU had the vision of helping informal sector workers—everyone from street vendors to musicians and artisans—form unions. The desire for social and economic change spread like wild fire when the Zimbabwe Chamber of Informal Associations (ZCIEA) started in 2002. Presently with more than 1.5 million paying members (out of 3.5 million members), the informal workers now have access to all the resources of the ZCTU such as their lobbyists, their research arm, and the strength and power of their affiliate unions.
Chibebe, and everyone we met with at ZCTU, speaks with great pride about the support they've been given by the American labor movement through the Solidarity Center, which maintains an office in the country. "Because of the Solidarity Center and the American worker, we've had incredible moral and material support," Chibebe said. Some of the examples he cites are the role the Solidarity Center plays in supporting their research institute, expanding distribution of their newspaper "the Worker," their ability to fund a lobbyist, create a paralegal program, training activists and leaders, and getting support from international governments and politicians through organizational delegations such as the visit from the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU).