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South Korean government cracks down on public sector strike
By Carol Divjak
24 November 2004
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The South Korean government of President Roh Moo-hyun last
week meted out savage repression against striking workers opposed
to planned changes to the countrys labour laws in line with
the demands of big business and foreign investors.
President Roh, a former human rights and labour lawyer, won
the presidency in 2002 but initially faced a hostile majority
in the countrys national assembly. In April, however, the
Uri party, which is closely aligned to Roh, won a narrow parliamentary
majority by exploiting widespread outrage over attempts by the
assembly to formally impeach the president.
Far from defending the rights of workers, the government has
bowed to demands for greater workforce flexibility.
The legislation will restrict union activities and allow companies
to hire more temporary workers in the private sector, a key demand
of investors.
The proposed legislation has provoked sharp opposition, especially
from government workers who are currently barred from forming
a union or taking industrial action. The new laws would legalise
public sector unions and allow them to bargain collectively on
behalf of their members but would maintain the ban on strikes.
A strike last week by the Korean Government Employees Union
(KGEU)the first ever by government workerswas met
with an extensive police crackdown. Even before the strike began,
the government dispatched thousands of police in a bid to prevent
union members from voting over the proposed action at 200 polling
booths set up in government offices. Police arrested 186 people
and seized documents in raids on 47 offices.
After the strike began on November 15, Rohs administration
declared that all those involved in the walkout would be dismissed
or otherwise punished. By the second day, only 300 workers remained
on strike, and union leaders called it off on November 17.
Heo Seong-gwan, minister for government affairs and home administration,
indicated that he intended to press ahead with disciplinary proceedings
against any civil servants who actively backed the strike. Initially
he indicated that as many as 3,200 central and local government
employees could face dismissala figure that was later dropped
to 2,488.
While declaring that it was a personally painful experience,
Heo declared that the government would do whatever was required
to establish law-and-order. To date, authorities have been asked
to instigate disciplinary action against more than a thousand
strikers.
In addition, police have laid charges against 457 union members,
including 17 strike leaders. At least five union leaders, including
the KGEUs policy planning director, have been arrested.
The government has also threatened to press charges against the
heads of two regional governments for aiding and abetting the
strikers.
The repressive measures against public sector employees have
fueled anger among workers against the government and its planned
labour legislation. The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU),
one of the countrys two main umbrella unions, held a rally
of more than 20,000 in Seoul on November 14 to oppose the new
laws. The government reacted by deploying 9,000 riot police who
used hundreds of buses to set up barricades around the rally.
As well as calling for the rights of government employees to
be recognised, the KCTU is opposed to legislative changes that
will allow private companies to employ even greater numbers of
non-regular workers. Currently comprising about 60
percent of the countrys workforce, casual workers receive
on average about half the pay of permanent employees and frequently
suffer ill treatment and poor conditions.
The KCTU has called an indefinite general strike on November
26 to oppose the new labour laws. But there are already signs
that the union leadership is preparing to do a deal with the government.
At a press conference on Monday, KCTU head Lee Su-ho declared
that the KCTU was prepared to form a bargaining party to negotiate
with the government. According to how the dialogue goes,
the level of strike may be reconsidered, he said.
Over the past seven years, the KCTU leadership has repeatedly
called for general strikes, both under Roh and the previous administration
of Kim Dae-jung, only to accommodate to the government and its
policies. KCTU leaders promoted first Kim then Roh as democrats
who would protect the interests of working people. In fact, both
administrations pressed ahead with restructuring measures that
have severely undermined the jobs and living standards of workers.
During its summer offensive this year for wages
and conditions, the KCTU ran a fragmented campaign, encouraging
its affiliates to strike separate agreements that most times fell
far short of original claims. The demand for improved conditions
for irregular workerssupposedly a key component of the campaignwas
largely unrealised.
In the current standoff over the labour legislation, the union
leaders will once again adapt themselves to the government and
the demands of big business.
See Also:
South Korean government uses
police measures against striking workers
[3 August 2004]
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