Thursday, May 29, 2008

UN hails dawn of republic in Nepal

original post
Indo-Asian News Service
Kathmandu, May 29, 2008
First Published: 12:02 IST(29/5/2008)
Last Updated: 12:17 IST(29/5/2008)

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's office in New York issued a statement early Thursday congratulating the people of the new republic of Nepal for successfully holding the first meeting of its constituent assembly Wednesday and voting overwhelmingly to turn King Gyanendra into a commoner and ask him to vacate the royal palace in 15 days.

"The people of Nepal have clearly spoken for peace and change through the April 10 assembly election," the statement said. "The secretary-general encourages all parties to continue working in a cooperative manner and to form a new government as soon as possible."

Ban's special representative for Nepal Ian Martin, who attended the near-midnight proclamation of republic Wednesday, called the meet an achievement and said the UN was proud to have assisted in the election of the "most inclusive body Nepal has yet known".

Martin said the assembly, with its democratically-elected representatives, now has the "solemn responsibility to prepare a new constitution as well as to act as an interim legislature during this next important phase of Nepal's peace process, and to fulfil the people's aspirations for sustained peace, economic and social progress, democracy and human rights".

Celebrations had started in Nepal from Tuesday. The government announced a three-day state holiday from Wednesday and pledged to celebrate May 28 each year as Republic Day.

As the monarchy becomes a thing of the past, the assembly has been given the task of electing a new president to take the king's place as head of state.

The president will also head the Nepal Army, which in the past had been virtually the private army of the palace and assisted in royal coups, and have the power to declare and revoke a state of emergency on the recommendation of the council of ministers.

Gyanendra, now stripped of his title as well as crown and sceptre, has 14 days left to vacate the Narayanhity Palace or face constitutional and legal action.

He has also lost his legal and tax immunity and will have no extra privilege that an ordinary citizen does not enjoy.

The king's fall will have a grave impact on the other members of the royal family who in the past used the palace's clout to flout the law of the land and gain undue advantages.

All members of the royalty have lost their titles and other privileges with the proclamation of republic.

The assembly has also ordered the government to disband the palace secretariat, which served as a parallel mini government, and take measures to preserve the property inside the palace that has now become a national heritage.

The pink palace, where royalists used to flock during Hindu festivals to receive the blessings of the king who was once regarded as the incarnation of Hindu god Vishnu, will now become a national museum, opening its tightly guarded portals to the masses.

Nepal's media Thursday acknowledged the contribution of the once dreaded Maoist guerrillas towards the establishment of the republic.

"The first and foremost credit for the republic goes to none other than the Maoists," the Kathmandu Post daily said in a front-page editorial. "Though (we) never agreed with the violent methods the Maoists adopted, it would be unjust not to recognise their role in bringing this day about."

After a 10-year savage war to end the royal dynasty, the Maoists, who emerged as the biggest party in last month's election, are now expected to form the new government with their chief Prachanda as the new prime minister.

With monarchy extinct, Nepal now faces the new challenge of drafting a new constitution within two years that will restore peace and stability and promote equal rights.

"The political forces owe it to the nation to guarantee that the Nepali people will not have to fight for the same things again," the Himalayan Times daily said.

"A republican order should mean better things to come."

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

American Axle workers face big pay cuts with new contract

Labor UpFront newsletter:

Vol. 1, Issue 9
The goal of Labor Upfront is to provide members and friends with news, information, and general ways to stay connected with the on-going struggles of workers. You can also visit our blog, http://laborupfront.blogspot.com/, for further information on the stories in this newsletter and much more! Please feel free to forward this to anyone you feel may benefit, and if you received this from a friend, e-mail cp-labor-join@cpusa.org to join the list.

Scott Marshall, Labor Commission Chair
Melissa O’Rourke, Labor Commission Coordinator, Labor Upfront editor


In This Newsletter:
American Axle workers face big pay cuts
Action Alerts: Chinese workers; Working Woman Survey
Zimbabwe Labor Leaders Arrested
Indian Workers hunger strike enters second week
Clean Car Wash Campaign
Jobs with Justice Conference
Crandall Canyon Cover-up
Election 2008: McCain Revealed kicks into high gear, new endorsements
Union Jobs (still more needed!)


American Axle workers face big pay cuts with new contract
After three months out on the picket line, the workers at American Axle finally have a contract to vote on. CEO Dick Dauch made known from the start that he wanted severe pay and benefit cuts in order to “remain competitive,” and that the workers would suffer for it. Even though he got a 9% raise this year and over the past decade has received over $257 million in compensation, and the company made a profit of $37 million last year, the workers are expected to ratify a contract that cuts their wages by over 33% and increases their health care costs. The deal also will shut down both the Detroit and Tonawanda Forges and offer buyouts and buydowns. Below is the average pay breakdown for production workers for both their current and new contracts:

Currently New Contract
$28/hr $18.50/hr
$1120/wk $740/wk
$58,240/yr $38,480/yr

This means a pay cut of $380 a week, $1647 a month and $19,760 a year. The saddest part is that the UAW had to fight to keep the cuts at this level, rather than the over 50% cuts American Axle demanded. New production hires will be paid $11.50 per hour, twice a year they’ll get an extra $.50 an hour raise, until after 10 years they might make what their co-workers make. For some people $18.50 may seem like great money, but when that pay rate is $1650 a month less than what you’ve been living on, based your mortgage, car payments, kids college tuition, and all your other living expenses on, it’s devastating. At a time when foreclosure rates, personal debt, and the cost of living are skyrocketing, the last thing workers need is a drastic cut in pay. Does anyone really wonder why Michigan has the highest foreclosure and crime rates, along with the fastest growing population of residents receiving food stamps?

According to Wall Street, the labor costs are still too high. Financial firm Lehman Brothers projects that 1,200 of the 3,650 striking employees will opt for buyouts or early retirements. Those employees will "not be replaced in the U.S. but in Mexico," wrote analyst Brian Johnson in a note to investors. Earlier this week Dauch announced plans to expand in India and Thailand; perhaps they should change their name to “Asian Axle” as they abandon their workers in the U.S.

"It's not a good agreement, but at this juncture it's the best we could do," said UAW President Ron Gettelfinger. After weeks at the negotiating table, he said he didn't think that more negotiations would net a better contract, so the contract goes to membership and will now be up to the workers to decide their fates. After 11 weeks on the strike line, during which American Axle shifted work to Mexico, many seem glad to still have a job.


Action Alerts
Chinese workers assistance and show of solidarity
We received this note from a friend of ours in Florida and thought the idea was so great we needed to share it.

Hi Labor UpFront,
It seems now would be a good time to push for more of a bridge between US labor and Chinese labor. We could ask them if there is a way we can help. The city of Dujiangyan was under a different name when I was 6 years old, and I did not realize for a couple of days in this crisis, that in the news I was seeing the town we lived in for 2 1/2 years, mid-'48 to beginning of '51. (I was gone much of that time to a boarding school for missionary kids, but still have some memories of what used to be called Guan Xian.)
We do not have any more meetings of our local this school year, but I am going to take it up with officers and our delegation to the NEA, which meets in DC July 1-6. I am not a delegate to the AFT which meets a couple of weeks later in Chicago, but I will try to see if someone in the AFT will raise it. I am interested in hearing other labor folks thoughts on this. Not only is this important worker to worker help but it can help us build workers of the world unite – badly needed in this time of corporate globalization.
In solidarity,
John Streater
Florida


Working Woman Survey
Working America and the AFL-CIO are conducting a nationwide survey on what it's like to be a working woman. If you’re a working woman, your opinion matters greatly. Please take a moment to complete the Ask a Working Woman survey and share your thoughts and experiences.

The results of this survey have never been more important. Women’s rights and labor organizations will use the results to advocate for women across the country over the next two years. Your voice matters. We want to hear from you (or the women in your life).

And if you’re not a working woman, forward this link to your sister, your mother, your co-workers and your friends to make sure their voices are heard.

International Labor News
Zimbabwe Labor Leaders Arrested
From the IUF: In the ongoing post-election repression of the democracy movement and workers and trade unionists in particular, Lovemore Motombo and Wellington Chibebe, respectively President and General Secretary of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), were arrested on May 8 and charged with "inciting people to rise against the government and reporting falsehoods about people being killed" for speaking out on May Day about the country's political crisis and the growing repression of the opposition to Mugabe.

The IUF and unions internationally are calling for messages to the government of Zimbabwe demanding their immediate and unconditional release. In view of the extreme violence which has been frequently inflicted on union leaders and activists, the IUF considers the government responsible for the physical safety and well being of the arrested ZCTU leaders.

You can take action by following suggestions from the IUF here, or through Amnesty International’s campaign here.


Indian Workers enter their second week of hunger strike
From DC Metro Council's Union City: More Indian workers joined a hunger strike - now in its seventh day - at a noontime rally held earlier today near the Capitol Reflecting Pool to demand that Congress hold hearings on abuses of workers under the guest worker program. The rally also marked the launch of solidarity fasts in DC and India by supporters of the workers' struggle. Following the rally, a delegation of workers and supporters delivered letters asking House and Senate representatives to pressure the Department of Justice to protect the workers during an ongoing criminal anti-trafficking investigation against their former employer Signal International, a marine construction company
.

The workers walked off the job in March and began a truth-action tour to protest and expose Signal’s human trafficking violations and worker abuse through President Bush's H2B visa guest worker program. In late 2006, the workers mortgaged their futures – and $20,000 – on false promises of fortune and green cards by recruiters from Signal. But when the workers arrived in the US to work on post-Katrina reconstruction, they only received guestworker visas and were forced to pay Signal $1,050 a month to live in a trailer with 23 other workers. “At a time when 30 percent of New Orleans workers were looking for work, the government suspended a law that made it illegal to hire undocumented workers,” says NOWCRJ Organizer Saket Soni. “The guestworker program is designed to control labor. It sanctions forced labor by migrants and further disenfranchises the most vulnerable American workers.” The hunger strike will specifically call on the Department of Justice to prosecute Signal International and for Congress to hold hearings on the guest worker program in the post-Katrina Gulf Coast.

Click here to urge your Representatives in Congress to sign onto a letter calling for them to remain in the U.S. and to hold hearings on Signal International.
Click here for other ways to support the workers' struggle.


U.S. Labor News
Clean Car Wash Campaign
With some 18,000 “carwasheros” in Southern California making $50 a day or less, the United Steelworkers (USW), the AFL-CIO and a coalition of community organizations have teamed up to launch a campaign to “clean up” Los Angeles’ multimillion dollar carwash industry. The Community-Labor-Environmental Action Network (CLEAN) is supporting the union organizing efforts of the Carwash Workers Organizing Committee of the United Steelworkers (CWOC).

María Elena Durazo, Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, said, “For too long, carwash owners have operated in the shadows, violating labor and health and safety laws with impunity. This coalition is going to do some spring cleaning of a dirty industry, and bring these injustices out into the open.”

The CWOC released a report entitled “Cleaning Up the Car Wash Industry: Empowering Workers and Protecting Communities,” which confirms that Los Angeles carwash owners are often operating below the radar of labor, health and safety, and environmental laws.

For more information, check out the USW campaign site here.


Jobs with Justice Conference
From May 2-4, nearly 1,000 Jobs with Justice activists came together in Providence, RI, including rank-and-file union members, students, international delegates, and members of community and faith-based organizations, as well as workers’ centers. In total, the Conference hosted representatives from 32 local JwJ coalitions and organizing committees, 34 states and the District of Columbia, 44 organizations, and several countries: Brazil, Colombia, France, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia and South Korea.

It was refreshing to hear the optimism in the voices of all the participants, and the level of the use of the term “working class,” and not in the twisted and divisive way the media’s using it right now. This conference was not about debating or simply talking about issues, it was about mobilizing to fight. It was about building a movement to take us in the direction of real change, to strengthen support for real legislation for working people in this country and around the world.

The plenaries focused on celebrating victories and exploring new trends; building power for social and economic justice; and an international dialogue on the labor movement as a political force and social movement. Some of the focal points of workshops and half-day issue forums were organizing for support for the Employee Free Choice Act and increased labor organizing; immigration and trade; health care; and community and coalition building.

The conference was also host to a strategy session addressing the needs and issues of young workers, and how to fill the national void that exists in young worker organizing. Young workers, organized and unorganized, discussed the relationship between the younger generations and the labor movement, how to bridge the gap, and the need to build and strengthen youth leadership within labor. Read more about it here.

Reps cite criminal cover-up in deadly Utah mine blasts
By John Wojcik
WASHINGTON--Top company officials at the Crandall Canyon Mine in Huntington, Utah, where nine miners perished in August 2007, concealed facts that would have prevented the deaths and should be criminally charged, according to a Congressional report released May 8. The report also charged that the company should never have asked the government for permission to remove coal from the area of the mine collapse and federal officials should never have approved the request.

House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller (D-Calif.) formally asked the Justice Department, in an April 29 letter attached to the report, to investigate the two blasts at the mine. The first trapped and killed six miners and the second killed three rescuers, including a Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) inspector.

The letter from Miller urges the Justice Department to determine whether the mine manager, Laine W. Adair, on his own or in collusion with the owner, Murray Energy Corp., made intentionally false statements to government officials about the condition of the mine before the August disaster. The report issued by Miller’s committee says the false statements were indeed made by company reps. Article continues here.

Election '08
McCain Revealed kicks into high gear, door-to-door mobilization
McCain Chicago ProtestFrom the AFL-CIO weblog:
Hundreds of union members launched the biggest union mobilization yet in the 2008 political season with the first round of door-to-door walks, part of the AFL-CIO Labor 2008 political mobilization program.

Union volunteers in more than 20 states shared information on key working family issues, like health care and the economy, reaching thousands of union members in states such as Indiana, New Hampshire, Colorado, Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Ohio. The walks will continue in coming months as millions of union members mobilize to elect a working family-friendly president and Congress.

Above Photo: As John McCain comes to town to speak at the convention center, union members in Chicago greet him to give a reminder that working Americans demand real health care solutions and job creation. Photo credit: Scott Marshall


Endorsements Update:
Over the past few weeks the Obama campaign received even more boosts with the endorsement announcements of former Presidential candidate and Senator John Edwards, and labor unions American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), the United Steelworkers (USW), and today’s endorsement of the United Mineworkers of America (UMWA).

Union Jobs (We need more listings!)
We've gotten an increasing number of responses in the call for union job listings, more than we can list anymore. For the sake of space and ease, we'll list cities and industries, and for further information please contact me, morourke@cpusa.org.
Chicago: IBEW: further info is available at www.ejatt.com
Chicago Education-to-Careers: http://www.cisco.org/etc/apprec.htm
Dallas: Jobs at IBT and UAW represented facilities

There is also a website, http://www.unionjobs.com/ that lists union jobs, including staff, trades and apprenticeships, by state.

Keep them coming!!!!
In an effort to assist young workers in finding decent-paying union jobs, I’m requesting that anyone who knows of job openings or apprenticeships, in all fields and across the country, please forward that information to laborupfront@cpusa.org.

We welcome questions, comments and stories for our next newsletter. Send them to us at laborupfront@cpusa.org or call (773) 446-9920, ext. 212.

Cuba supports press freedom

From: PWW

Author: Peter Phillips
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 05/27/08 10:09

“You cannot kill truth by murdering journalists,” said Tubal Páez, president of the Journalists Union of Cuba. One hundred and fifty Cuban and South American journalists, ambassadors, politicians and foreign guests gathered at the Jose Marti International Journalist Institute to honor the 50th anniversary of the death of Carlos Bastidas Arguello — the last journalist killed in Cuba. Carlos Bastidas was only 23 years of age when he was assassinated by Fulgencia Batista’s secret police after having visited Fidel Castro’s forces in the Sierra Maestra Mountains. Edmundo Bastidas, Carlos’ brother, told about how a river of change flowed from the Maestra (Teacher) mountains, symbolized by his brother’s efforts to help secure a new future for Cuba.

The celebration in Havana was held in honor of World Press Freedom Day, which is observed every year in May. World Press Freedom day was proclaimed by the UN in 1993 to honor journalists who have lost their lives reporting the news, and to defend media freedom worldwide.

During my five days in Havana, I met with dozens of journalists, communication studies faculty and students, union representatives and politicians. The underlying theme of my visit was to determine the state of media freedom in Cuba and to build a better understanding between media democracy activists in the U.S. and those in Cuba.

I toured the two main radio stations in Havana, Radio Rebelde and Radio Havana. Both have Internet access to multiple global news sources including CNN, Reuters, Associated Press and BBC with several newscasters pulling stories for public broadcast. Over 90 municipalities in Cuba have their own locally-run radio stations, and journalists report local news from every province.

During the course of several hours in each station I was interviewed on the air about media consolidation and censorship in the US and was able to ask journalists about censorship in Cuba as well. Of the dozens I interviewed all said that they have complete freedom to write or broadcast any stories they choose. This was a far cry from the Stalinist media system so often depicted by U.S. interests.

Nonetheless it did become clear that Cuban journalists share a common sense of a continuing counter-revolutionary threat by U.S.-financed Cuban-Americans living in Miami. This is not an entirely unwarranted feeling in that many hundreds of terrorist actions against Cuba have occurred with U.S. backing over the past 50 years. In addition to the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, these attacks include the blowing up of a Cuban Airlines plane in 1976 resulting in the deaths of 73 people, the starting in 1981 of an epidemic of dengue fever that killed 158 people, and several hotel bombings in the 1990s, one of which resulted in the death of an Italian tourist.

In the context of this external threat, Cuban journalists quietly acknowledge that some self-censorship will undoubtedly occur regarding news stories that could be used by the “enemy” against the Cuban people. Nonetheless, Cuban journalists strongly value freedom of the press and there was no evidence of overt restriction or government control.

Cuban journalists complain that the U.S. corporate media is biased and refuses to cover the positive aspects of socialism in Cuba. Unknown to most Americans are the facts that Cuba is the number one organic country in the world, has an impressive health care system with a lower infant mortality rate than the U.S., trains doctors from all over the world, and has enjoyed a 43 percent increase in GDP over the past three years.

Ricardo Alarcon, president of the National Assembly, discussed bias in the U.S. media. “How often do you see Gore Vidal interviewed on the U.S. media?” he asked. Vidal has recently said that the U.S. is in its "worst phase in history." “Perhaps Cuba uses corporate news to excess,” Alarcon said, “Cuban journalists need to link more to independent news sources in the U.S.” Alarcon went on to say that Cuba allows CNN, AP and the Chicago Tribune to maintain offices in Cuba, but that the U.S. refuses to allow Cuban journalists to work in the United States.

As the Cuban socialist system improves, the U.S. does everything it can to artificially force Cold War conditions by funding terrorist attacks, maintaining an economic boycott, launching a new anti-terrorism Caribbean naval fleet, and increasingly limiting U.S. citizen travel to Cuba. It is time to reverse this Cold War isolationist position, honor the Cuban people's choice of a socialist system and build a positive working relationship between journalists in support of media democracy in both our countries.

Peter Phillips is a professor of sociology at Sonoma State University and director of Project Censored, a media research organization. He traveled to Cuba as an invited guest of the Journalists Union of Cuba, May 10-15, 2008.

South America nations found union

original article here

Unasur summit in Brasilia on 23 May 2008
Some members hope Unasur could become a regional version of the EU

The leaders of 12 South American nations have formed a regional body aimed at boosting economic and political integration in the region.

At a summit in Brazil, they signed a treaty which created the Union of South American Nations (Unasur).

Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the move showed that South America was becoming a "global player".

But tensions between several members will make it difficult for the group to achieve its goals, observers say.

Mr Lula said at the summit in Brasilia that the differences between some Unasur governments were a sign of vitality in the region.

"The instability some want to see in our continent is a sign of life, especially political life," Mr Lula said.

"There's no democracy without people [protesting] in the streets," he added.

The treaty envisages that Unasur will have a revolving presidency and bi-annual meetings of foreign ministers.

Prior to the Brasilia summit, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez described the "empire" of the United States as Unasur's "number one enemy".

Mr Chavez is embroiled in a bitter diplomatic row with his Colombian counterpart Alvaro Uribe - a staunch US ally - over Colombian claims that Venezuela has been helping to finance the activities of the Colombian Farc rebels.

The Unasur members are Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay and Venezuela.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Putin named PM of Belarus-Russia alliance

Move coordinated between presidents of Russia, Belarus


updated 10:01 a.m. ET, Tues., May. 27, 2008

MINSK, Belarus - The Belarusian president said Tuesday he had named Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin the prime minister of the Russia-Belarus alliance.

Russia and Belarus signed an agreement in 1996 that envisaged close political, economic and military ties, but efforts to achieve a full merger have foundered. Structures of the alliance have limited powers.

The meaning of the move Tuesday by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko was not immediately clear.

Some observers expected Vladimir Putin to become president of a unified state of Russia and Belarus after he stepped down earlier this month as Russian president.

The Belarusian news agency BelTA quoted the executive secretary of the alliance as saying Lukashenko had coordinated the move with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

_________________________________________________________

from Alexander Lukashenko's (the President of Belarus) website:
http://president.gov.by/en/press58633.html#doc

Vladimir Putin appointed Chairman of the Supreme State Council
of the Belarus-Russia Union State


27.05.2008

On 27 May, the Chairman of the Supreme State Council of the Belarus-Russia Union State, President of the Republic of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, signed the Executive Order of the Supreme State Council on appointing Vladimir Putin the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Belarus-Russia Union State. The Executive Order was also signed by the President of the Russian Federation, Dmitry Medvedev.

_______________________________________________________________

Interesting development to say the least. I wonder what the future holds for the Union of Russia and Belarus, and the possibility of a Eurasian Union. I know that Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, and Serbia have all shown interest in becoming closer with the United State of Russia and Belarus, and possibly joining it in the future. A majority of Russian and Belarusians (especially Russian speaking Belorussians who have nostalgia for the former Soviet Union) support a full Union between the two countries.

For more information on the Union of Russia and Belarus: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_of_Russia_and_Belarus

For more information on the Commonwealth of Independent States (a confederation of 11 former Soviet Republics): http://www.cis.minsk.by/main.aspx?uid=74 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth_of_Independent_States

Russian Communists challenge parliamentary election

original post here

REUTERS
6:31 a.m. May 27, 2008
MOSCOW – Russia's Communist party filed a law suit on Tuesday to challenge the legality of December's parliamentary election, which was won by former President Vladimir Putin's ruling party.

The Communists, who won 57 of the 450 seats in parliament in the Dec. 2 election, filed the suit in the Supreme Court seeking to annul the vote.

'We have just filed the suit,' Vadim Solovyov, Secretary of the Communist Party's Central Committee, told Reuters. 'We consider the elections were falsified.'

The Communist party says the vote was rigged by the authorities to hand victory to the United Russia party, which won 315 seats.

The suit says the Russian media gave skewed coverage of the election and says there were serious breaches of election law during the campaign and voting.

The Kremlin and Russian election officials denied there were significant violations.

Election observers from European democracy watchdogs the Council of Europe and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe said the vote was not fair.

The Communists challenged the legality of previous elections held more than four years ago but their cases are still working their way through the court system.

(Reporting by Aydar Buribaev; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Alison Williams)

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Non-union home builder feels the heat

From: PWW

Author: John Rummel
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 05/23/08 17:55

BIRMINGHAM, Mich. — To wear a lemon costume in public you have to be pretty serious about your cause. So upset was Terry Templeton with the inferior construction of her Pulte-built home that the Arizona resident traveled all the way to Michigan to air her complaints at a shareholders meeting of Pulte Homes Inc.

Jim Gallo/PWW. Click for larger image.
At a demonstration outside the meeting, Templeton said, “I’m here because I don’t want another family to go through the suffering we’ve gone through. I thought they were a quality reputable company. They lied to me, they lied to my family and they are doing it to other folks. I cannot let that happen to one more person.”

After being told so many times by the company that it was only her house that had the problems (minimum of eight to 10 plumbing leaks, entire ceiling fell downstairs, electrical arcs, mold, stucco problems and more), Templeton began talking to her neighbors and discovered the problems are “pretty much throughout the entire subdivision.”

It’s easy to see where those problems come from after talking to the workers who actually build the homes. Speed-up and denial of rights on the job are a big problem. “They ask us to finish homes in less time than is possible” and deny workers basic necessities like drinking water, all of which makes conditions unsafe, said Gilberto Lopez, who worked for a Nevada Pulte subcontractor doing painting and drywall work.

Building trades workers from Michigan who participated in the rally said they see the growth of non-union builders like Pulte (who have a big presence in the state) as a threat to their jobs.

With non-union builders, worker safety and home quality suffer, said Martin Brna and Tony Morgan, members of Painters District Council 22 in Michigan. They told this reporter, “You have to know the material you’re dealing with, the hazards you’re dealing with — there are lots and lots of different factors.”

“We have strict safety standards on union jobs,” they said, but, in contrast, “you won’t see OSHA on a lot of these non-union jobs. Pulte has a terrible reputation in how they treat their workers.”

Detroit Metro AFL-CIO President Saundra Williams said Pulte must stop building “lemons.” She said, “They must provide better pay, the proper equipment, and make worksite safety a higher priority. Is that too much to ask?”

In spite of the economic downturn, Williams said, Pulte Homes has been an extremely profitable company. “This company rode the wave of the building boom and its top officers and shareholders were rewarded very, very handsomely. I wish I could say the same for the workers who build these homes,” she said.

Before a delegation representing workers and homeowners went into the stockholders meeting, Father Norman Thomas, from the Interfaith Committee on Worker Issues, said that like others in Catholic circles around Detroit, he thought the Pulte name was a good name — “until I went to Las Vegas.” He said, “I want to tell them [the stockholders] what I experienced there because we met with the workers and we saw the homes. I want to let them know a lot of people know the other side.”

jrummel @ pww.org

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Thousands killed in 1950 by US's Korean ally

Original article

By CHARLES J. HANLEY and JAE-SOON CHANG, Associated Press Writers Mon May 19, 4:38 AM ET

DAEJEON, South Korea - Grave by mass grave, South Korea is unearthing the skeletons and buried truths of a cold-blooded slaughter from early in the Korean War, when this nation's U.S.-backed regime killed untold thousands of leftists and hapless peasants in a summer of terror in 1950.

With U.S. military officers sometimes present, and as North Korean invaders pushed down the peninsula, the southern army and police emptied South Korean prisons, lined up detainees and shot them in the head, dumping the bodies into hastily dug trenches. Others were thrown into abandoned mines or into the sea. Women and children were among those killed. Many victims never faced charges or trial.

The mass executions — intended to keep possible southern leftists from reinforcing the northerners — were carried out over mere weeks and were largely hidden from history for a half-century. They were "the most tragic and brutal chapter of the Korean War," said historian Kim Dong-choon, a member of a 2-year-old government commission investigating the killings.

Hundreds of sets of remains have been uncovered so far, but researchers say they are only a tiny fraction of the deaths. The commission estimates at least 100,000 people were executed, in a South Korean population of 20 million.

That estimate is based on projections from local surveys and is "very conservative," said Kim. The true toll may be twice that or more, he told The Associated Press.

In addition, thousands of South Koreans who allegedly collaborated with the communist occupation were slain by southern forces later in 1950, and the invaders staged their own executions of rightists.

Through the postwar decades of South Korean right-wing dictatorships, victims' fearful families kept silent about that blood-soaked summer. American military reports of the South Korean slaughter were stamped "secret" and filed away in Washington. Communist accounts were dismissed as lies.

Only since the 1990s, and South Korea's democratization, has the truth begun to seep out.

In 2002, a typhoon's fury uncovered one mass grave. Another was found by a television news team that broke into a sealed mine. Further corroboration comes from a trickle of declassified U.S. military documents, including U.S. Army photographs of a mass killing outside this central South Korean city.

Now Kim's Truth and Reconciliation Commission has added government authority to the work of scattered researchers, family members and journalists trying to peel away the long-running cover-up. The commissioners have the help of a handful of remorseful old men.

"Even now, I feel guilty that I pulled the trigger," said Lee Joon-young, 83, one of the executioners in a secluded valley near Daejeon in early July 1950.

The retired prison guard told the AP he knew that many of those shot and buried en masse were ordinary convicts or illiterate peasants wrongly ensnared in roundups of supposed communist sympathizers. They didn't deserve to die, he said. They "knew nothing about communism."

The 17 investigators of the commission's subcommittee on "mass civilian sacrifice," led by Kim, have been dealing with petitions from more than 7,000 South Koreans, involving some 1,200 alleged incidents — not just mass planned executions, but also 215 cases in which the U.S. military is accused of the indiscriminate killing of South Korean civilians in 1950-51, usually in air attacks.

The commission last year excavated sites at four of an estimated 150 mass graves around the country, recovering remains of more than 400 people. Working deliberately, matching documents to eyewitness and survivor testimony, it has officially confirmed two large-scale executions — at a warehouse in the central South Korean county of Cheongwon, and at Ulsan on the southeast coast.

In January, then-President Roh Moo-hyun, under whose liberal leadership the commission was established, formally apologized for the more than 870 deaths confirmed at Ulsan, calling them "illegal acts the then-state authority committed."

The commission, with no power to compel testimony or prosecute, faces daunting tasks both in verifying events and identifying victims, and in tracing a chain of responsibility. Under Roh's conservative successor, Lee Myung-bak, whose party is seen as democratic heir to the old autocratic right wing, the commission may find less budgetary and political support.

The roots of the summer 1950 bloodbath lie in the U.S.-Soviet division of Japan's former Korea colony in 1945, which precipitated north-south turmoil and eventual war.

In the late 1940s, President Syngman Rhee's U.S.-installed rightist regime crushed leftist political activity in South Korea, including a guerrilla uprising inspired by the communists ruling the north. By 1950, southern jails were packed with up to 30,000 political prisoners.

The southern government, meanwhile, also created the National Guidance League, a "re-education" organization for recanting leftists and others suspected of communist leanings. Historians say officials met membership quotas by pressuring peasants into signing up with promises of rice rations or other benefits. By 1950, more than 300,000 people were on the league's rolls, organizers said.

North Korean invaders seized Seoul, the southern capital, in late June 1950 and freed thousands of prisoners, who rallied to the northern cause. Southern authorities, in full retreat with their U.S. military advisers, ordered National Guidance League members in areas they controlled to report to the police, who detained them. Soon after, commission researchers say, the organized mass executions of people regarded as potential collaborators began — "bad security risks," as a police official described the detainees at the time.

The declassified record of U.S. documents shows an ambivalent American attitude toward the killings. American diplomats that summer urged restraint on southern officials — to no obvious effect — but a State Department cable that fall said overall commander Gen. Douglas MacArthur viewed the executions as a Korean "internal matter," even though he controlled South Korea's military.

Ninety miles south of Seoul, here in the narrow, peaceful valley of Sannae, truckloads of prisoners were brought in from Daejeon Prison and elsewhere day after day in July 1950, as the North Koreans bore down on the city.

The American photos, taken by an Army major and kept classified for a half-century, show the macabre sequence of events.

White-clad detainees — bent, submissive, with hands bound — were thrown down prone, jammed side by side, on the edge of a long trench. South Korean military and national policemen then stepped up behind, pointed their rifles at the backs of their heads and fired. The bodies were tipped into the trench.

Trembling policemen — "they hadn't shot anyone before" — were sometimes off-target, leaving men wounded but alive, Lee said. He and others were ordered to check for wounded and finish them off.

Evidence indicates South Korean executioners killed between 3,000 and 7,000 here, said commissioner Kim. A half-dozen trenches, each up to 150 yards long and full of bodies, extended over an area almost a mile long, said Kim Chong-hyun, 70, chairman of a group of bereaved families campaigning for disclosure and compensation for the Daejeon killings. His father, accused but never convicted of militant leftist activity, was one victim.

Another was Yeo Tae-ku's father, whose wife and mother searched for him afterward.

"Bodies were just piled upon each other," said Yeo, 59, remembering his mother's description. "Arms would come off when they turned them over." The desperate women never found him, and the mass graves were quickly covered over, as were others in isolated spots up and down this mountainous peninsula, to be officially "forgotten."

When British communist journalist Alan Winnington entered Daejeon that summer with North Korean troops and visited the site, writing of "waxy dead hands and feet (that) stick through the soil," his reports in the Daily Worker were denounced as "fabrication" by the U.S. Embassy in London. American military accounts focused instead on North Korean reprisal killings that followed in Daejeon.

But CIA and U.S. military intelligence documents circulating even before the Winnington report, classified "secret" and since declassified, told of the executions by the South Koreans. Lt. Col. Bob Edwards, U.S. Embassy military attache in South Korea, wrote in conveying the Daejeon photos to Army intelligence in Washington that he believed nationwide "thousands of political prisoners were executed within (a) few weeks" by the South Koreans.

Another glimpse of the carnage appeared in an unofficial U.S. source, an obscure memoir self-published in 1981 by the late Donald Nichols, a U.S. Air Force intelligence officer, who told of witnessing "the unforgettable massacre of approximately 1,800 at Suwon," 20 miles south of Seoul.

Such reports lend credibility to a captured North Korean document from Aug. 2, 1950, eventually declassified by Washington, which spoke of mass executions in 12 South Korean cities, including 1,000 killed in Suwon and 4,000 in Daejeon.

That early, incomplete North Korean report couldn't include those executed in territory still held by the southerners. Up to 10,000 were killed in the city of Busan alone, a South Korean lawmaker, Park Chan-hyun, estimated in 1960.

His investigation came during a 12-month democratic interlude between the overthrow of Rhee and a government takeover by Maj. Gen. Park Chung-hee's authoritarian military, which quickly arrested many then probing for the hidden story of 1950.

Kim said his projection of at least 100,000 dead is based in part on extrapolating from a survey by non-governmental organizations in one province, Busan's South Gyeongsang, which estimated 25,000 killed there. And initial evidence suggests most of the National Guidance League's 300,000 members were killed, he said.

Commission investigators agree with the late Lt. Col. Edwards' note to Washington in 1950, that "orders for execution undoubtedly came from the top," that is, President Rhee, who died in 1965.

But any documentary proof of that may have been destroyed, just as the facts of the mass killings themselves were buried. In 1953, after the war ended in stalemate, after the deaths of at least 2 million people, half or more of them civilians, a U.S. Army war crimes report attributed all summary executions here in Daejeon to the "murderous barbarism" of North Koreans.

Such myths survived a half-century, in part because those who knew the truth were cowed into silence.

"My mother destroyed all pictures of my father, for fear the family would get an image as leftists," said Koh Chung-ryol, 57, who is convinced her 29-year-old father was innocent of wrongdoing when picked up in a broad police sweep here, to die in Sannae valley.

"My mother tried hard to get rid of anything about her husband," she said. "She suffered unspeakable pain."

Even educated South Koreans remained ignorant of their country's past. As a young researcher in the late 1980s, Yonsei University's Park Myung-lim, today a leading Korean War historian, was deeply shaken as he sought out confidential accounts of those days from ordinary Koreans.

"I cried," he said. "I felt, 'Oh, my goodness. Oh, Jesus. This was my country? It was true?'"

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission can recommend but not award compensation for lost and ruined lives, nor can it bring surviving perpetrators to justice. "Our investigative power is so meager," commission President Ahn Byung-ook told the AP.

His immediate concern is resources. "The current government isn't friendly toward us, and so we're concerned that the budget may be cut next year," he said.

South Korean conservatives complain the "truth" campaign will only reopen old wounds from a time when, even at the village level, leftists and rightists carried out bloody reprisals against each other.

The life of the commission — with a staff of 240 and annual budget of $19 million — is guaranteed by law until at least 2010, when it will issue a final, comprehensive report.

Later this spring and summer its teams will resume digging at mass grave sites. Thus far, it has verified 16 incidents of 1950-51 — not just large-scale detainee killings, but also such events as a South Korean battalion's cold-blooded killing of 187 men, women and children at Kochang village, supposed sympathizers with leftist guerrillas.

By exposing the truth of such episodes, "we hope to heal the trauma and pain of the bereaved families," the commission says. It also wants to educate people, "not just in Korea, but throughout the international community," to the reality of that long-ago conflict, to "prevent such a tragic war from reoccurring in the future."

___

Associated Press investigative researcher Randy Herschaft in New York contributed to this report.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Communist party membership no longer a fireable offence in California

From: the Guardian

McClatchy newspapers , guardian.co.uk, Friday May 16 2008

The California Senate yesterday passed legislation that would delete membership in the Communist party as a reason for firing a public employee, a Cold War-era prohibition intended to root out communists.

Democratic Senator Alan Lowenthal called communism a "failed system," and said his bill - Senate Bill 1322 - was intended to protect "the constitutional freedoms that we have fought so valiantly for," including freedom of political affiliation.

California is the only state that allows public employees to be dismissed for membership in a political party.

In addition, current law requires that any organisation that applies to use a public school facility can be asked to sign a statement that "the applicant is not a communist action organisation or a communist front".

"SB 1322 seeks to protect the rights of free speech and political affiliation by repealing the no-longer necessary statute from the books," Lowenthal said.

The bill, he said, would "still allow employees to be fired for any activity to overthrow the state or federal government".

The legislation, which will now be considered by the assembly, was approved on a 24-15 vote, with Democrats in support and Republicans opposed.

Republican senator Jeff Denham warned: "the Communist party is not a dead organisation ... and [is] actively repressing human beings in Cuba and China in brutal ways.

"The state has every right to hold school employees accountable for their political standing, especially if that employee belongs to an organisation that favours the violent overthrow of the government," Denham said during the debate on the bill.

Denham said that it's also "reasonable that use of public school property should be limited to groups who support our democracy and do not advocate the overthrow of government by force, violence or other possible means."

But Lowenthal argued, "the communist party does not advocate the overthrow of the U.S. government.

"This is a very conservative bill," he said. "[It] says we must uphold the constitution."

The legislature cannot repeal California's loyalty oath, which was added to the state constitution by voters in 1952, but its current use was debated yesterday.

The oath requires public employees in California to swear to "defend" the US and California constitutions "against all enemies, foreign and domestic".

The law is sporadically enforced, but since the end of the Cold War some potential employees - including Quakers and Jehovah's Witnesses - have declined to sign the pledge over religious or political issues.

In a recent high-profile case, California State University, Fullerton, cancelled the appointment of an American Studies lecturer after she declined to sign the oath.

UAW Local 602 Ratifies Agreement

from: WILX, Lansing

Reporter: John Tramontana
Email Address: john.tramontana@wilx.com

"It took a number of days to go back and forth to get where we are today," said UAW Local 602 President Doug Rademacher.

Twenty-eight days to be exact. Four long weeks of small paychecks and strike duty. But now the picket signs have been retired. The strike chants? Silent.

UAW local 602 employees are officially off the picket lines after ratifying a new agreement with GM management at the Lansing Delta Township Plant.

"It was as though the burden of the world was lifted off my shoulders," said UAW lead negotiator Stephen Bramos.

He says, at the end of the day, it was a deal all could be happy with.

"It's a foundation that we can build upon for years to come."

The groundbreaking deal is the first of its kind at the Lansing Delta Plant, and Friday morning more than 2,000 Local 602 employees got their first look at it.

"I voted yes. It was worth being out," said relieved worker Manuel Rosales.

"I think basically, they did a good job with the negotiating," said employee Reggie Hattaway.

Workers say there's more job security with the deal.

"As management decided to do a lot of things that we weren't familiar with, there was no language. Now, we have language," Rosales added.

And they expect to work more closely with management.

"Instead of it being us against them, for the first time since we've been at delta, it will be everyone working together," Hattaway said.

Working together for the first time with a local contract.

Comrade: Commies coming?

from: The Orlando Sentinel

You bet your babushka, baby. But now, the red menace is kind of green.


NEW YORK - The d�cor inside the national headquarters of the Communist Party USA, or CPUSA, is more Macy's than Marx. Glass walls rise from the floor to form state-of-the-art work spaces, nontoxic linseed oil burnishes the work surfaces, and biodegradable blue carpet is underfoot. Colorful paintings by the renowned artists Boris Taslitzky and Alejandro Romero, depicting the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps and working-class struggle, dot the walls of the expansive open-plan office. Inside their transparent cubicles, the 21-strong staff tap away on Apple Macs and sip Starbucks coffee.

This is what class warfare looks like in the 21st century.

In February, the CPUSA officially unveiled its newly refurbished office space in the trendy Chelsea district of Manhattan. The Reds went "green" for their $1 million overhaul, including various environmentally conscious features in the design. Huge windows and transparent walls were installed to take advantage of the sunlight and create greater energy efficiency. They also installed occupancy sensors so artificial lighting would not be wasted, and nontoxic building materials were used to reduce health risks to staff.

The new office is the symbol of a new era in the Communist movement and what its members hope will be the first step in a return from the political fringes.

"It's a very exciting time for the organization," says Sam Delgado, a 24-year-old Web content developer and spokesperson for CPUSA. "When I first joined the movement in 1999, there were no young people. That's not true anymore."

As the new frontman of the Communist Party, Delgado, a New Jersey native and video-production expert, bears a greater resemblance to the Rock than to Che Guevara. Like the other 20 staff members -- whose roles in the office range from the finance department to national leadership -- he earns a paltry but equal $26,000 per year. The party's income comes from donations and bequests, with enough left over for the million-dollar renovation.

"We're part of a new generation," Delgado says. "The younger people are re-evaluating our presence and how we put ourselves forward. We renovated the national office, and now we want to create a new digital space."

With two other young converts to the revolutionary struggle, Delgado has formed a new technology buzz-team, which aims to announce a new Web site at the end of the year. The Youth Communist League already has a fully operational MySpace page, with 250 buddies with names such as "Maoism" and "Socialism." The Texas branch of CPUSA proudly displays a cartoon of Karl Marx in a cowboy hat on its Web site, and the party has even jumped on the YouTube bandwagon, with a video presentation of the new office set to tongue-in-cheek '70s music fit for an episode of Shaft.

Delgado claims results.

"We have turned a corner recently," he says. "We get two or three new members every week."

And though not a recruitment rate that keeps George W. Bush up at night, it is an improvement for the party, whose current membership nationwide is roughly 3,000.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the '90s were a troubled time for the party. But Delgado doesn't look back and exudes optimism. "I believe now we can achieve communism in America within my lifetime, within the next 50 years."

But away from the rah-rah spirit at headquarters and a few chatty leftist corners of the Internet, a CPUSA revival is viewed as, well, unlikely.

"As a historian, I don't usually feel comfortable about predicting the future," says John Earl Haynes, an author on domestic communism. "However, in this case, I'm confident in saying that the CPUSA has absolutely no future in the country."

American Axle workers keep up the fight

From: PWW

DETROIT -- No one at American Axle expected to be out for three months, but workers continue to keep the dozen or so gates of the sprawling American Axle complex in Detroit fully staffed. While there have been different proposals to end the strike it seems like every time a possible solution is at hand, American Axle steps back to ask for more concessions. While American Axle has previously demanded the closing of forge plants in Detroit and New York, its latest demand was to add yet another third plant (in New York ) to the hit list.

Forge workers are members of UAW local 262 and almost 300 of them are on the chopping block. Picketers talked about the tough times facing all working people. “It’s Bushonomics,” said Mark a picketer outside the forge, “they’re trying to get rid of the middle class. You got the rich and the poor with not much in between.”

He pointed to the foreclosure crisis as an example of the crisis hitting working people and asked, “How are you going to refinance your house when it’s worth 150,000 but you owe 165,000?” Jokingly he added, “It’s getting so we’re going to have to move in the woods and live off the deer and fish.”

The word from picketers is that some work is being done for $10.50 an hour at a non-union American Axle plant in Oxford, some 40 miles away. If so, one doesn’t have to travel outside the country to find cheap labor.

That must be exactly what another striker from local 235 Tim Langan meant when he said if things keep going like they are “we’ll be the cheapest workers in the world.” Half jokingly he added, “The only thing we export is jobs.” Earlier in the strike, CEO Dick Dauch had warned that he had the flexibility to export jobs all over the world and the right to do so.

Picketers said they’re still getting good help from UAW locals, different unions and others from the community. A long strike needs a well-organized Community Services Committee and the UAW has one of the best. Eric Webb, Community Services member of Local 235 at American Axle showed off the well-stocked food pantry committee members work to keep full. A couple of times every week members go out and bring in contributions from area grocery stores, churches, unions and other organizations. Insuring the strikers have enough to eat isn’t the only problem the committee works on. After three months, financial problems grow. The committee is also there to give help and advice on mortgage payments and other pressing bills. In addition there are the labor liaisons from the United Way (all labor appointed) who also organize assistance to help the strikers survive all the problems associated with the lack of a weekly paycheck.

Most people, including the union, thought the strike would be over long before this. After GM’s offer of $200 million to help with buyouts and buy-downs (money up front to compensate for the lower-wage American Axle was offering) didn’t produce movement by American Axle toward a settlement, you see why as one worker put it “corporate greed is killing us.”

Checks, messages and resolutions of support can be sent to:

UAW Local 235
Attn: Adrian King, President
2140 Holbrook Ave.
Hamtramck, MI 48212
phone: 313-871-1190



jrummel@pww.org

After elections, Nepal searches for a unified path forward

From: PWW

Author: R.K. Sharma
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 05/09/08 15:17

The surprise results of Nepal’s elections are now giving way to the next, perhaps more challenging, step of piecing together a coalition to write a new constitution and move toward abolishing the monarchy. In the recent election, the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) won the most seats — 220 out of 601 — in the Constituent Assembly that is tasked with writing the constitution and deciding on the political framework for the Himalayan nation. Nepal has been ruled by a Hindu king for more than 200 years.

The Nepali Congress Party came in second with 110 seats and the Communist Party of Nepal – UML was a close third with 103 seats. The current prime minister is Girija Prasad Koirala of the Congress Party.

In the round of voting, which used proportional representation, the Communist UML received 20.5 percent, while the Nepali Congress got 21 percent and the Maoists topped with 29 percent.

Thanks to patient persuasion by left and democratic forces of Nepal, as well as of neighboring India, the Maoist CPN-M entered the electoral arena last year and ended its 12-year long “People’s War.” An end to the stalemate between the Maoists and the monarchy, with its brutal suppression of the people and all political activists, was necessary in order for Nepal to move forward.

The U.S. government provided millions of dollars in military aid to fight the Maoists, which it considers a terrorist group. The “terrorist” designation is now under review by Washington. Former President Jimmy Carter, whose team was part of the international election observers, suggested that the U.S. should welcome the Nepal developments.

Parchanda, the chairman of the CPN-Maoists, issued a statement renouncing “all forms of violence,” saying “we want to show a new model of peace process.”

Both of Nepal’s giant neighbors, China and India, congratulated Parchanda (whose name means “one who is fired up for victory”) for his party’s success. China recently offered to build a rail link from Lhasa, Tibet, to Khasa, Nepal, within the next five years. Such a railway would bring more trade and tourism, and also promote more people-to-people contact in the Himalayan heights.

The king of Nepal, whose powers were drastically curtailed in a pre-election agreement and interim constitution, said he is satisfied with the people’s participation in the election process.

But the situation is full of thorny issues. The Nepali Congress Party said it will not “give up government leadership” unless the Maoists surrender their weapons to the army. But the agreement, said the Maoists, was not to surrender arms, but to merge their army with Nepal’s army.

The Maoists have approached national and regional parties, including the UML, to form a coalition that would give them a two-thirds majority necessary for anything to pass in the Constituent Assembly.

One of the regional parties they have approached — the Madhesi People’s Rights Forum of the southern Himalayan slopes bordering India, which has 30 seats in Nepal’s Constituent Assembly — demands a separate state.

In addition, Congress leader Sher Bahadur Deuba urged his party to continue the present government of seven parties, under Prime Minister Koirala, and not hand over power to the Maoists. The rationale, he argues, is that the interim constitution says a two-thirds majority vote is required, but the Maoists may not be able to cobble together the necessary votes.

The UML is discussing whether it should join with the Maoists. But one of its demands is that the Maoists disband their youth wing because of their coercive tactics, including using arms, throughout the elections.

Separatist vote threatens Bolivia’s progress

From: PWW

Author: W. T. Whitney Jr.
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 05/09/08 15:14



In a blow to the revolutionary Bolivian government of President Evo Morales, overwhelmingly elected in 2005 as the nation’s first indigenous president, a much anticipated autonomy referendum in Bolivia’s Santa Cruz department gained approval by an estimated 80 percent of voters on May 4.

Earlier, the government had cited rulings and statements from Bolivia’s Congress, Constituent Assembly and National Electoral Court as well as the Organization of American States to declare the referendum illegal. Spokespersons called for a boycott, and some 40 percent of the voters complied, with another 15 percent destroying their ballots. Racist Santa Cruz youth groups intimidated indigenous voters, while referendum opponents blocked highways and burned ballots found marked “yes’ prior to the voting. Arrests totaled 100; another 40 were wounded. One elderly man was killed.

Economic, class and racial divisions underlie confrontation in Santa Cruz, long controlled by European-descended commercial and landowning classes. Indigenous Bolivians and Bolivians living in poverty each comprise two-thirds of the country’s population. By contrast, Santa Cruz, in Bolivia’s east, accounts for 30 percent of the country’s GDP; 15 families there own 1.2 million acres. Neighboring Tarija department, expected soon to mount its own autonomy referendum together with two other eastern departments, produces 80 percent of Bolivia’s natural gas.

Having nationalized 44 oil and gas companies, the government enjoys $2 billion in annual revenues from hydrocarbon production, up from $180 million in 2005. This is used to fund social programs and expanded pension coverage. Stepped-up land re-distribution is directed at preventing inequalities exemplified by 100 Bolivian families owning 62.5 million acres, five times the holdings of two million other families. Last December, the Constituent Assembly approved a document ensuring indigenous rights and state control over natural resources. At that point, Santa Cruz announced its autonomy referendum.

Many government supporters viewed the statute as portending separation. It calls for control by Santa Cruz over natural resources, fiscal management, land distribution, transportation networks, agricultural sales, telecommunications, the police and military forces.

Bolivian armed forces remain supportive of the government. On May 3, General Luis Trigo cited constitutional authority for the military’s role to defend the whole state. A week earlier Vice Admiral Jose Luis Cavos noted that “We are a people in arms ...We will defend unity all our lives.”

As head of the Santa Cruz Civic Committee, Branko Marinkovic personifies the autonomist movement. His riches serve to illustrate economic realities propelling the struggle. The immigrant from Croatia owns 100,000 acres, has interests in a transnational gas pipeline company and holds “complete control of the soybean and sunflower industry.” Accused of illegally owning 50,000 acres, he faces the loss of 35,000 acres to agrarian reform.

The Morales government has blamed the campaign to divide Bolivia on U.S. manipulation, a claim consistent with author Eva Golinger’s charge that Washington has dispensed $129 million to Morales’ opponents over three years. U.S. ambassador Philip Goldberg has been characterized as the “ambassador of ethnic cleansing” from his State Department experience in helping to destroy Yugoslavia. Observers have noted increased U.S. military activity in Paraguay, adjacent to Santa Cruz.

Speaking to the nation late on May 4, President Morales praised the abstention and defacing of ballots by a possible majority of Cruzanos as a “great rebellion.” They were acting in “defense of the interests of the majority.” For him, the vote was a “simple poll without any legal value.”

“We want autonomy for the people,” he asserted, “not only for the rich.” Bolivia’s proposed new constitution provides for autonomy of indigenous groups, departments and municipalities. Morales suggested that if his Santa Cruz opponents had waited to work toward autonomy through a fully approved constitution, their efforts would have been legal.

Morales assured listeners that his government sought equality for all and an end to “internal colonialism.” Analyst Nelson Valdes, over the Internet, predicts that “We might see, shortly, a ‘dual power’ scenario — usually the beginnings of a revolutionary, counterrevolutionary or civil war situation.”

atwhit@ roadrunner.com

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Capitalism Kills

Global workplace deaths vastly under-reported, says ILO

ORLANDO, Florida (ILO News) - Some 2.2 million people die of work-related accidents and diseases each year, the International Labour Office (ILO) said in a new report to be issued Monday at the 17th World Congress on Safety and Health at Work, adding this number may be vastly under estimated due to poor reporting and coverage systems in many countries.

While the number of work-related illnesses and deaths has lessened somewhat in the industrialized countries, the ILO report said the number of accidents - in particular fatal accidents - appear to be increasing, particularly in some Asian countries due to poor reporting, rapid development and strong competitive pressures of globalization.

"Occupational safety and health is vital to the dignity of work", said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia. "Still, every day, on average, some 5,000 or more women and men around the world lose their lives because of work-related accidents and illness. Decent Work must be safe work, and we are a long way from achieving that goal."

What's more, the ILO report, entitled Decent Work - Safe Work, ILO Introductory Report to the XVIIth World Congress on Safety and Health at Work, Orlando, USA, also warns that work-related malaria and other communicable diseases as well as cancers caused by hazardous substances are taking a huge toll, mostly in the developing world. The majority of the global workforce lacks legal or preventive safety or health measures, accident or illness compensation and has no access to occupational health services.

"The sad truth is that in some parts of the world, many workers will probably die for lack of an adequate safety culture", said Jukka Takala, Director of the ILO SafeWork Programme. "This is a heavy price to pay for uncontrolled development. We must act swiftly to reverse these trends."

The report noted that men, in particular, are at risk of dying at working age (below 65) while women suffer more from work-related communicable diseases, psycho-social factors and long-term musculo-skeletal disorders. In several industrial countries, more than half of the retirements are based on early retirements and disability pensions rather than workers reaching the normal retirement age. While not all factors behind these trends are directly caused by work, the workplace is in a key position for prevention and maintaining work ability through its management system.

The ILO report said reporting systems and coverage of occupational safety and health in many developing countries are poor and in some cases deteriorating. For example, India reports 222 fatal accidents while the Czech Republic, which has a working population of about 1 per cent of India, reports 231, the ILO said, adding that it has estimated the true number of fatal accidents in India at 40,000. The report said such statistics suggested that only a fraction of the real toll of work-related death and disease is covered in a number of developing countries.

The ILO report also noted that hazardous substances cause the deaths of an estimated 440,000 workers each year. Of these, asbestos alone kills some 100,000 workers worldwide each year. The number of people killed by asbestos in the United Kingdom, according to that country's own estimates, is some 3,500 every year - more than ten times the number of workers killed in accidents there.

The European Union, meanwhile, recently in its own Statistical Portrait Report estimated a total of 120,000 fatalities (EU 15) attributed to work while the ILO's estimate is now at 122,000 work-related deaths annually. The United States number is estimated to be 103,000.

While work-related diseases are the main problem in industrialized countries, accident hazards are more prevalent in the developing economies where workers are frequently dying in mishaps that occur in such sectors as mining, construction and agriculture. In the industrialized countries, the share of the workforce in such hazardous sectors has declined while that of safer service industries (office work, banking, commerce) has grown.

Furthermore, the findings show younger workers (age 15-24) are more likely to suffer non-fatal occupational accidents than their older colleagues, while workers over the age of 55 appear to be more likely to suffer fatal accidents and ill-health than others, the ILO report said.

New data in the report also shows that women suffer much more than men when it comes to work-related communicable diseases, such as agriculture-related malaria and bacterial and viral infections as well as musculo-skeletal disorders. Men tend to die as a result of accidents, lung diseases and work-related cancers, such as those caused by asbestos. The end result is aggravated in certain parts of the world by HIV/AIDS. Life-expectancy rates in many developing countries and economies of transition have plummeted far below the official retirement age of around 65 and even below the average actual retirement age of 59 to 61 years in the industrialized world.

Mr. Takala added that most workers in the world are not covered by legal preventive measures and will never receive compensation in case of accidents and diseases. He also said most have never seen an occupational doctor or a labour inspector.

The report also says that newly emerging problems such as psychosocial factors, violence, the effects of alcohol and drugs, stress, smoking and HIV/AIDS are rapidly leading to increased morbidity and mortality worldwide. Smoking, which affects mostly workers in the restaurant, entertainment and service sectors, is estimated to cause 14 per cent of all work-related deaths caused by disease, or close to 200,000 fatalities. The ILO also estimated that the cumulative loss of labour force participants due to HIV/AIDS since the start of the epidemic had reached 28 million worldwide by 2005. The ILO's educational programme, Addressing Psychosocial Problems at Work (SOLVE) is working in many countries to address these problems at both a policy and a shop-floor level.

The ILO said action at international, regional, national and enterprise levels is a prerequisite to preventing or reducing work-related accidents and ill-health. It has developed a new five-point "Global Strategy" to encourage the use of existing tools such as the Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 1981 (No. 155) and other ILO labour standards on safety and health at work. The strengthening of national occupational safety systems through tripartite collaboration is fundamental and this includes legal provisions, enforcement, compliance and labour inspection capacity and capability, knowledge management, information exchange, research and support services. Management systems, such as the ILO-OSH2001, are vital but they are best motivated by laws, regulations and efficient enforcement. Inspectors should not be considered as nuisance or threats to business, in fact countries with the best inspection systems are also the most competitive ones worldwide.

"The ILO has been actively supporting initiatives in countries developing national policies", Mr. Takala said. "For example, tripartite national construction safety committees have been set up both in Argentina and Colombia, with the purpose of discussing and formulating the respective national policies and programmes for that sector". Ireland, Israel and Argentina have recently formally signed agreements with ILO to adopt the ILO Management Systems Guidelines.

There are other signs of progress as well. Some highlights include Japan, which recently became the 28th member to ratify the ILO Convention on Asbestos and plans a total ban on the substance. Luxembourg has pledged to ratify all 21 ILO Conventions on occupational safety and health. China has established a comprehensive national profile on occupational safety and health with a view to ratifying Convention No. 155. At last count, 134 countries have ratified the Labour Inspection Convention, with Estonia being the latest.

The ILO new Global Strategy considers that development of international collaboration is a key factor in intensifying preventive efforts and mobilizing resources to promote occupational safety and health at work. This year, some 115 countries organized numerous national activities on 28 April to mark World Day for Safety and Health at Work which was launched by the ILO to build on the original trade union observance of this day as the International Day for the Commemoration of Dead and Injured Workers.

Strong partnerships are being built by ILO with World Health Organisation (WHO), International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), International Maritime Organization (IMO), International Commission of Occupational Health (ICOH), International Occupational Hygiene Association (IOHA), International Association for Labour Inspection (IALI), International Ergonomics Association (IEA) and others. Examples include such important initiatives as the Global Programme for the Elimination of Silicosis and Joint African Effort with WHO, chemical safety with nine international organisations, radiation protection with IAEA, safety and health in ship breaking with IMO and Basel Convention on Transboundary Waste, development of basic occupational health services with ICOH and many others.

The ILO considers the World Congress on Safety and Health at Work, of which it is a co-organizer, a key event in terms of the exchange of technical and practical experience, but also a valuable promotional opportunity to increase awareness of the human and economic costs of accidents and diseases at work.

For more information, please contact The ILO Department of Communication at +4122/799-7912 or email: communication@ilo.org.

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I love it when people have no good argument against socialism and try to point to mad men like Stalin or Mao and cry "but Communism killed (insert random number here) millions of people!" (with no data or facts, mind you), when in reality it is capitalism that kills at least 15.2 million people a year (2.2 million plus the conservative number of 13 million who die each year from starvation). Let’s also not forget deaths caused by war and easily curable diseases that occur each year.