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Russia: The political significance of the strike at the auto
plant in Togliatti
By Vladimir Volkov
28 August 2007
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On August 1, workers at AvtoVAZ, the largest Russian producer
of automobiles since Soviet times, carried out a warning strike.
The action pointed to growing social and political ferment among
workers in Russia.
For several hours on the day of the strike, incomplete vehicles
came off the assembly line, and a massive meeting was held by
the main gate of the factory. According to varying accounts, from
400 to 2,000 people took part in the meeting.
As their basic demand, the workers at AvtoVAZ asked that their
monthly wage be raised to 25,000 rubles. The current pay is about
7,000approximately half the average level for the industry
and for manufacturing as a whole in Russia, according to official
statistics.
According to Peter Zolotarev, chairman of the Unity trade union,
who spoke on behalf of the strikers, additional detachments of
police were assigned to the factory that day. Representatives
of the factory administration tried to force the workers to start
work and assured them that there would be no victimization.
On the next day, the administration announced that no strike
had occurred and that 150 men had simply violated labor discipline.
Soon, the leaders of AvtoVAZ officially issued reprimands to 170
workers and accused them of violating labor law and refusing to
work. Two were fired.
Although the strikers had not managed to halt the main assembly
line at the factory or to achieve any improvement in their situation,
their protest has become an important political event and has
attracted the attention of the mass media. Even on the eve of
the strike, the majority of Russian newspapers published material
about the impending action and then continued to follow its consequences.
The names of the main organizers of the strike have become known
nationwide.
AvtoVAZ during the Soviet and post-Soviet periods
AvtoVAZ is one of the symbols of Russian industry, being the
largest automobile manufacturing plant in the country. It was
built at the end of the 1960s in Togliattia city on the
banks of the Volga with a population of more than 700,000, named
after one of the leaders of the Italian Communist Party. It was
designated for the production of the Zhiguli (Lada), based on
the technology of the Italian Fiat. AvtoVAZ was the flagship of
Soviet automobile production. Up to the beginning of the 1990s,
the plant produced 2,000 cars per day.
Even now, despite the decline of former Soviet industry and
growing difficulties faced by the enterprise because of its relatively
outmoded technical base and competition from world producers,
the factory employs around 100,000 people. About 700 automobiles
leave its assembly line every day.
Vladimir Kadannikov, the director of AvtoVAZ for many years
who left his post two years ago, was a typical Soviet economic
boss. Having become assistant head of his department in 1967,
he quickly rose through the factory hierarchy to the top position.
In the years of Gorbachevs perestroika, Kadannikov
was considered one of the most contemporary-minded
directors who supported market reforms; as such, he was appointed
by Boris Yeltsin in 1996 as first vice-premier of the Russian
government, spending a few months at this post.
In the post-Soviet period, AvtoVAZ maintained its status as
a symbol, but in a somewhat different formas an example
of the ruthless plundering of the former state property by a new
layer of greedy businessmen. The factory became a
sinecure for Boris Berezovsky, the disgraced oligarch
now living in London, who laid the foundations for his multibillion-dollar
fortune by appropriating for himself profits derived from the
plants production.
At the start of the 1990s, Berezovsky founded the firm LogoVAZ,
which received exclusive rights to sell the Zhiguli. Among the
main stockholders of LogoVAZ were the upper managers of the factory,
including Kadannikov. By organizing a system of fictitious sales
and tax evasion, enormous sums were drained from the factory at
a time when concern about production was completely cast aside
and the workers went without pay for long periods.
In his book about Berezovsky, the American journalist Pavel
Khlebnikov (murdered in Moscow in the summer of 2004) wrote that
in the mid-1990s, the factory could not meet tax obligations,
could not pay for electricity or cover the workers wages.
The Yeltsin government did not declare the factory bankrupt for
one reason: At that time it would have been necessary to admit
that the largest industrial enterprise in Russia was insolvent
(The Kremlin Godfather, Boris Berezovsky, or the History of
the Plundering of Russia, Moscow, 2001, p. 95 [Russian edition]).
Being the most important element in the empire of one of the
Russian oligarch turned out, however, not to be the last role
for AvtoVAZ. As part of the course begun by President Vladimir
Putin to establish government control over the major natural resources
and industrial companies in Russia, AvtoVAZ ended up in the sights
of the state corporation Rosoboroneksport [RussianDefenseExport],
and at the end of 2005 was absorbed by it.
Rosoboroneksport is a semi-secret structure with many branches,
and is the main exporter of Russian arms on the world market;
it simultaneously strives to expand its role in the Russian economy
as a whole. In 2006, the income of Rosoboroneksport from the sale
of military technology was $5.6 billion, and for the first six
months of this year, $2 billion.
Enterprises making up the corporation, which is headed by Sergei
Chemezov, a personal friend of President Putin, include the Perm
Motovilikhinskie Factories (which manufacture the artillery systems
Smerch and Grad and oil industry equipment), as well as virtually
all the plants that produce Russian helicopters.
When it was bought by Rosoboroneksport, the annual profit of
AvtoVAZ was 4.6 billion rubles. The inclusion of AvtoVAZ into
the state corporation resulted in an increase in the capitalization
of the factory over the last year or so by a factor of four (reaching
almost $3 billion). The new heads of the factory have announced
large-scale projects in collaboration with major world auto producersCanadas
Magna, Frances Renault and Italys Fiat.
It is clear that a strike at such a plant, even apart from
its immediate scale and results, is capable of serving as an example
to be imitated at many other enterprises throughout the land.
Moreover, it affects the most sensitive interests of the new ruling
elite of Russia. In an objective sense, the protest of the AvtoVAZ
workers is a political challenge to the leading bureaucratic-oligarchic
clans of the Kremlin, headed by President Putin.
Vladimir Artyakov, the president of the AvtoVAZ Group, is one
of the regional leaders of the pro-Kremlin party One Russia
and a deputy of the Samara Provincial Duma. He conducted his campaign
under the slogan of raising the pay to 25,000 rubles. Having issued
this slogan as their main demand, the strikers at AvtoVAZ have
exposed the rhetoric of Russias main party of power as sheer
demagogy.
Attacks on the strikers
These circumstances explain the enormous interest in events
at AvtoVAZ and the ruthless efforts of the local authorities and
the administration at the factory to end the strike and punish
the participants.
Even before it was launched, the action was condemned by the
official factory trade union, which belongs to the FNPRThe
Federation of Independent Trade Unions of Russia (a structure
formed on the basis of the former official unions of the Soviet
bureaucracy).
Anton Vechkunin, an activist in the independent union Unity,
was stopped on the street four days before the strike by the police
and held for three days in a temporary detention center in the
city. One other worker at the factory, Aleksandr Dziuban, who
is chairman of the union committee at the machine assembly department,
was detained on the eve of the strike and arrested at the entrance
gate without any explanation. He was carrying some 200 union leaflets
into the factory.
In connection with the strike, Pavel Kaledin, a journalist
with the leading national newspaper Kommersant, was also
punished. Under pressure from the administration of AvtoVAZ, the
regional representatives of the media company to which Kommersant
belongs accused the journalist of biased coverage of the events
at the plant and demanded that he be fired.
In addition, a few days before the start of the strike, 5,000
copies of the newspaper Workers Democracy were confiscated
in Moscow. That issue contained material about the situation at
the factory and the strike that was being prepared; it had been
specially published for shipment to Togliatti. Workers Democracy
is published by the centrist Revolutionary Workers Party (RRP),
which calls itself Trotskyist. The Moscow Ministry of Internal
Affairs for railway transport announced that it seized the paper
under suspicion that its material contained extremist views.
The authorities used the incident to test recent changes in
legislation that allow virtually any expression of dissatisfaction
in printed or oral form to be classified as a public call
to carry out extremist activity.
Coverage of the strike in the mass media bore a dual character.
Part of the liberal media described the events in relatively objective
terms. The pro-Kremlin media aggressively attacked the strikers,
predictably accusing them of being greedy and lazy.
The Izvestia journalist Boris Klin wrote in his commentary
of August 2: Many wish to not do a damned thing, but
to receive a hell of a lot. But such a dream cannot come
true, even if it is achieved by political means. Moreover, such
attempts should rightly result in the opposite of what they intend.
Cynically playing on the fact that the quality of the Zhiguli
lags behind world standards, the author continued: On the
contrary, all that has been gained by the Togliatti activists
should be confiscated and their pay should be reduced to the bare
minimum. They must be made to understand that their pay should
grow not because they feel like spreading black caviar on white
bread, but only under one conditionthat the cars which the
factory produces are genuine cars, and not buckets of bolts.
It is worth noting that Boris Klin writes in Izvestia
as the fervent defender of the Russian Orthodox Church. He fights
for elevating its political authority in society, supports the
idea of introducing lessons on the foundations of Orthodox culture
into the schools, and argues that government laws are nothing
more than the exposition of divine precepts given from above in
the Bible.
His example is one more illustration that apologies for social
oppression inevitably go hand in hand with the most reactionary
theories and religious obscurantism.
Another line of attack on the AvtoVAZ strikers has been the
idea that they acted not independently, but under the control
and financial support of interested political forces.
A representative of the Samara governor, Konstantin Titov,
declared that supporters of the party A Just Russia,
another pro-Putin party, are to blame for the sudden outburst
of social activity among the workers. A Just Russia
is headed by President Putins friend and speaker of the
Federation Council, Sergei Mironov. The spokesman for the Samara
governor suggested that, since practically all the top managers
of AvtoVAZ are in One Russia, the social conflict
at the factory was inspired by their factional opponents from
a competing pro-Kremlin clan, who sought to exploit it during
the pre-election period.
Leaders of the strike have repeatedly denied such suspicions,
insisting that the action was an expression of the spontaneous
protest of workers, which was supported by the Unity trade union.
The reason for such speculation in the mass media is transparent.
Behind it stands the desire to convince public opinion that there
can be no independent expression of the working masses and no
political alternatives to the social crisis outside of those proposed
by the various parties of the ruling establishment.
The strike of the AvtoVAZ workers is not an isolated phenomenon.
It occurred under conditions of a growing wave of strike and protest
activity in Russia that began in the fall of last year and has
embraced ever-newer regions and areas. This includes the protest
action of oil workers in the Khanty-Mansiisk autonomous region
in October of last year, the strike at the Russian Ford factory
in February of this year in Vsevolozhsk, near St. Petersburg,
the protests of Heineken brewery workers in St. Petersburg in
April, and that of the workers at the Mikhailovcement works in
the Riazan area, as well as other actions.
They indicate that the period of apathy and confusion that
lasted for 15 years after the fall of the Soviet Union is coming
to an end. The realities of capitalist Russia have brought social
devastation, poverty, illegality, war and disease. The working
class of Russia is beginning to recognize that within the framework
of the existing situation, it serves as a source of cheap labor
and as a manipulated electorate that must submissively
vote every four years for one or more of the protégés
of the oligarchy and state bureaucracy.
Deepening social inequality and the growth of the authoritarian
chain of command are creating the conditions for new
acts of social protest. The miners strikes of 1989-1990
have not been forgotten; they showed how powerful the working
class can be when it begins to move.
The course of events raises the question of political perspectives
with a new intensity. What was sadly lacking with the miners and
other detachments of the Soviet working class in the years of
perestroika was a clear understanding of the source
of their past social gains, of the foundations of the October
1917 revolution, and, correspondingly, of how the social gains
growing out of this revolution could be defended.
The great experience of the October Revolution of 1917, once
again confirmed in negative form by the bitter experience of the
last 20 years, shows that it is impossible to resolve a single
one of the fundamental social and economic questions in the interests
of the workers (a) without building an independent party of the
proletariat, and (b) without an international revolutionary program.
It is important to understand that the political continuity
that links our time with the epoch of three Russian revolutions
passes though the struggle of Leon Trotsky and the Left Opposition
against the Stalinist degeneration of the Bolshevik Party and
the Soviet state in the 1920s-1930s, and through the creation
in 1938 of the Fourth International.
The fight to introduce this understanding into the consciousness
of the Russian working class, and for the assimilation of the
main lessons of the international struggles of the proletariat
of the twentieth centurythis is the task to which the most
conscious workers, students and representatives of the intelligentsia
in Russia must direct their strength.
See Also:
Russian mine disaster kills
at least 38
[25 May 2007]
The bitter legacy of Boris
Yeltsin (1931-2007)
[26 April 2007]
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