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Anti-government strikes in Macedonia
By Paul Stuart
19 December 2002
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The Social Democratic Alliance (SDSM)-led government Together
for Macedonia, formed in October, has been shaken by a series
of strikes. An anticipated period of grace for the newly elected
coalition evaporated as workers at 17 enterprises went on strike
to demand the payment of back wages and the return of legislation
protecting labour rights. Workers in private industry joined the
strike wave, accusing managers of spending back pay to lead luxurious
lifestyles.
Strikes began on November 26 and lasted until December 2, involving
textile, tobacco, printing, mining and railroad workers. All rail
networks in and out of Macedonia were blocked. Lead and zinc miners
in Makedonoka-Kamenica began a hunger strike on November 26 to
protest four months unpaid wages. As miners fell ill, popular
discontent rapidly escalated into strike action. On December 2,
the SDSM coalition government ceded to demands that it sell some
of the mines produce to pay a portion of the back wages.
The Trade Union Federation of Macedonia (SSM) has said that
a general strike will be called on December 20 if the SDSM refuses
to sign a social contract proposed by the federation,
which includes the reintroduction of severance pay abolished by
the former Christian Democrat-type government of President Ljubco
Georgijevski, ousted in a general election last September. The
trade union federation is demanding that a list of 30 companies
slated for closure be covered by a severance agreement.
Both the SDSM and its predecessors have vigorously pursued
privatisation strategies. These policies have led to an economic
catastrophe in Macedonia. In 2001, industrial production fell
by 11 percent as a yearly average. According to economic advisor
to the former government, Sam Vaknin, in August 2002 alone industrial
production fell by 20 percent. Over 340,000 former state employees,
out of a working population about 800,000, have been sacked and
are living off what Vaknin admits is barely subsistence-level
welfare.
The scale of redundancies is so great that the SSM union federation
is working closely with a newly created body called the Autonomous
Trade Union of Bankrupt Firms and Redundant Workers. In October,
under European and US pressure, Macedonia joined the World Trade
Organisation and opened up what remains of its outmoded infrastructure
to even more ferocious global competition.
In February tens of thousands of workers went on strike and
1,000 marched on the parliament building for the repeal of pro-IMF
(International Monetary Fund) legislation. Marchers were attacked
by police who made sure strikers got nowhere near deputies. Temporary
barriers placed around the parliament are now a permanent feature.
The SSM federation cancelled the strikes and encouraged illusions
in impending talks in New York and Washington between the IMF-World
Bank and President Georgiveski and his economics minister.
World Bank officials declared they had no objections to the
SSM federations demands, but said that any back pay had
to be self-financed by cuts in the welfare budget. World Bank
support would be withdrawn if repayment of wages were made an
issue in the September 2002 general election campaign.
In April and May workers launched another strike wave, this
time aimed against the Giorgievski regime. He responded by insisting
that IMF-World Bank targets had to be met, severely undermining
the governments credibility with the Macedonian people.
The SSM federation worked diligently to bring the SDSM into
office, insisting only that it have a say in appointment of the
labour minister. However, once in power the new government pushed
the SSM federations demands to one side. This left the trade
union leaders confronting workers demanding an end to the economic
catastrophe while unable to influence the government it helped
bring to power.
The SDSM government made repeated pledges to pursue World Bank-IMF
structural reforms more vigorously, but on December 12, during
a conference in the capital Skopje on poverty reduction, World
Bank officials insisted that the social crisis has worsened because
its policies have not been applied to the letter. The governments
finance minister admitted that according to measures of world
development, the whole of Macedonia was now in the poverty
zone. Two years ago, after a previous World Bank reform
package, one in five lived below the poverty line. That figure
has now increased to one in four.
The SSM federation is in effect warning the ruling elite and
the World Bank that without some minimal social protection the
whole economic restructuring project is threatened by social upheaval.
The head of the federation, Vanco Muratovski, insisted, Every
government has to have good relations with the trade unions if
it wants to have social peace. This desire to secure its
own power base within the government in return for policing social
discontent is what lies behind its demands on the SDSM to sign
its social contract. It is reported that the government
has contacted the union federation to enter talks prior to the
deadline for the general strike to begin, in an attempt to head
off a political confrontation with the working class.
See Also:
Incoming Macedonian government
pledges subservience to Western powers
[19 October 2002]
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