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Turkey: union bureaucracy works to sabotage paper workers
occupation
By our correspondent
10 March 2005
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On March 4, in cities across Turkey, tens of thousands workers
from several industries remained at their workplaces to demonstrate
their solidarity and support for the SEKA paper workers, who have
been occupying their factory in Izmit, northwest Turkey, since
January 20. The SEKA workers took action to oppose the AKP (Justice
and Development Party) governments plan to shut down the
plant and turn it over to the local council.
The action was called by the Confederation of Labour Unions
of Turkeys (Turk-Is) Presidential Board, which consists
of the presidents of the Turk-Is-affiliated trade unions. The
board issued a statement after a March 1 meeting, which said:
Turk-Is will organise sit-ins on Friday, March 4, in solidarity
with the SEKA workers. The Presidential Board calls on the government
to change its decision to close SEKA Enterprises in Izmit and
to allow production to go on at this workplace.
The Turk-Is bureaucracy was forced to take this step in the
face of the resistance of SEKA workers and mounting pressure from
other workers, particularly those employed by state companies,
which are slated to be privatised in a short period of time.
Under these circumstances, the Turk-Is bureaucracy did its
best to avoid a serious challenge to the government and its neo-liberal,
free-market programme, backed by the International
Monetary Fund (IMF). It limited its proposal for action by calling
on workers of its affiliated unions to remain in their workplaces
for one night.
The Turk-Is bureaucracy was also silent about any serious plans
for future actions to defend the SEKA workers, planning only a
March 13 or 14 rally in Izmit and limiting their criticism of
the government to hollow rhetoric. Turk-Is President Salih Kilic,
who has close links with the far-right circles known as the deep
state in Turkey, called on the government to reconsider
its decision, noting that the March 4 action was a warning. As
usual, Kilic utilised chauvinistic language, commenting: Turkey
is being transformed, under the policy to privatise, into a weak
country that cant produce anything. We are being forced
to become a country dependent on foreign products.
Although deprived of a revolutionary perspective by their union
leadership, SEKA workers are instinctively critical and suspicious
of the bureaucracys manoeuvres. In an interview conducted
by the web site sendika.org, one SEKA worker said, They
tell us we are great, but on the other hand, there is this: it
needs a method. What method? You go for action, raise solidarity,
if it means general strike, so be it, if it means closure, so
be it, things move on based on a schedule. You dont do that,
and then tell us you are the watchdog of this country.
That is silly.
It is the 42nd day today. That is, I havent gone
home for 42 days. This is not a joke. Therefore, say it but also
take responsibility. Follow it up with action. If not, do not
say it.
Izmit, an industrial province neighbouring the countrys
biggest city and industrial center of Istanbul, suffered widespread
damage from the earthquake of 1999 and is still trying to recover
from the employment consequences of this disaster, in addition
to the impact of the severe economic crisis of 2001.
The IMF-backed economic recovery plan in place
is based on austerity in the public sector. According to this
programme, strongly supported by the AKP government, a major revenue
source for the treasury is a massive privatisation operation,
including the shutdown of state corporations such as SEKA. In
addition to SEKA, two large state-owned enterprises employing
tens of thousands of people are scheduled to be privatised in
the course of 2005PETKIM in the petrochemical industry and
TUPRAS in petroleum refining.
On February 18, hundreds of security forces accompanied by
armed vehicles besieged the factory, attempting to force an end
to the occupation. Realising the determination of the workers,
and that the brutality that would be required to break their occupation
would make for bad publicity, the AKP government ordered the police
not to intervene for the time being. But there are serious signs
that this can change. A news report appearing in the Cumhuriyet
newspaper on March 4 indicates that the government is making preparations
to launch another police crackdown against the SEKA workers. According
to this report, AKP leader and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
complained to his associates about the SEKA action: We can
no longer tolerate this. The judiciary has made up its mind about
the matter and the relevant sides will execute the closure decision.
See Also:
Turkey: paper workers occupy
factory
[25 February 2005]
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