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International TU News

Nationwide Strike in UK against Pension Reforms by Public Sector Workers

12 Saturday May 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International

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Hundreds of thousands of British public sector workers, including police officers, prison service staff, paramedics and border control agents, staged a 24-hour nationwide strike on Thursday, 10th May, to protest the government’s plans to reform their pension plans. The Metropolitan Police estimated that more than 30,000 policemen (one-fifth of the entire force in England and Wales) joined the work stoppage to protest budget cuts that will slash the number of constables in the country by at least 16,000 over the next four years. Unions representing the workers complain that the government is forcing them to work longer for less pay, while the Government warns that the current pension system is unsustainable and unaffordable since peoples’ life expectancy has been rising. The government proposes to hike the retirement age for public sector employees to 68 and also seeks substantially higher contributions from employees. Both sides are settling in for a long battle. “We’re going to be paying more money when the cost of pensions are falling and our members have had a pay freeze for two years. So it’s unfair, and ministers cannot justify the changes,” said Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the Public & Commercial Services (PCS) trade union. But Francis Maude, a Cabinet Office minister said it is dead issue and that pension negotiations will not re-start and that “nothing further will be achieved through strike action”. With respect to the police officers, they are prohibited by British law to go on strike – hence, the constables who demonstrated on Thursday took the day off from work and were not in uniform. Donning black baseball caps with the slogan “cuts are criminal” emblazoned upon them, police marched through Central London demanding an end to the budget cuts that they fear to lead to more crime on the streets. ”We care very deeply about the communities that we serve. We have seen what happens when we have a Government that has given policing a very low priority,” said Police Federation chairman Paul McKeever at the march. ”If you are cutting our jobs, then you are cutting the service we can deliver and the public’s safety is at risk.” A police officer named Scott Jeffreys from Derbyshire told the Daily Telegraph: “We’ve come down today to increase public awareness about the cuts and the effects that they’re having on the service we provide. But it’s not just about our pay and pensions. We’re also here because we’re concerned about the stealth privatization of the police service.” Jeffreys added: “Our chief constable takes the view that this is a route that we won’t go down, which I’m glad about, as I think the privatization route is a very dangerous one. If private companies are contracted to do a job for us and then we’re low on money, they will still have to get paid, so the losses will be in frontline services again.” There’s been no public consultation, no parameters seem to have been set and no guidelines seem to have been issued. Why give money to private organizations whose sole reason for existence is to make profit when as a police service, every penny we get goes on policing? That’s important and that’s how it should stay.” In response to the policemen staging the march, a spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron said in a statement: “The Government inherited a very tough fiscal challenge. We are having to make spending cuts across the board. We think the reductions in spending on the police are challenging but manageable and that the police will still have the resources that they need to do the important work that they do.”


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May Day observed world wide – International report.

03 Thursday May 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International

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THOUSANDS of activists across the globe have joined May Day rallies, with Occupy Wall Street members in several US cities leading demonstrations and clashing with police, and Europeans also taking to the streets to protest anti-austerity measures.
In Oakland, California, police fired teargas and “flash-bang” grenades to disperse the crowds, sending protesters fleeing a downtown intersection where they were demonstrating. Officers took four people into custody. Black-clad protesters in Seattle used sticks to smash small downtown windows and ran through the streets disrupting traffic. In New York, police in riot gear lined the front of a Bank of America, facing several dozen Occupy activists marching behind barricades. “Bank of America. Bad for America!” they chanted. About 50 demonstrators in Chicago rallied outside another of the bank’s branches. Across the world, protests drew tens of thousands of demonstrators into the streets from the Philippines to Spain. They demanded everything from wage increases to an end to austerity measures. The US protests were the most visible organising effort by anti-Wall Street groups since Occupy encampments were dismantled. May Day, which has been associated for more than a century with workers’ rights and the labour movement around the world, has been used by American activists in recent years to hold rallies for immigrants’ rights. From New York to San Francisco, organisers of the various demonstrations, strikes and acts of civil disobedience said they were not too concerned about muddling their messages. They noted that the movements have similar goals: jobs, fair wages and equality. Organisers of Chicago’s rally said they welcomed participation from the Occupy groups. “I definitely see it as an enrichment of it,” Orlando Sepulveda said. “It’s great.” In Los Angeles, at least a half a dozen rallies were planned. A rally was also planned in Minneapolis. In Atlanta, about 100 people rallied outside the state Capitol, where a law targeting illegal immigration was passed last year. They called for an end to local-federal partnerships to enforce immigration law.

May Day New York
NEW YORK- MAY 15: Thousands of union members and Occupy Wall Street protestors march together down Broadway towards the financial center on May 1, 2012 in New York. Demonstrators have called for nation-wide May Day strikes to protest economic inequality and political corruption. The May Day protest was significantly smaller than last year’s, which drew about 1000 people. Organisers said turnout last year was greater, in part, because the rally was on a Sunday, rather than during the work week. In the San Francisco Bay area, service on the Golden Gate Ferry was shut down as ferry workers went on strike. They have been in contract negotiations for a year in a dispute over health care coverage. A coalition of bridge and bus workers said they would honour a picket line of at least 50 workers outside the ferry terminal. They were joined by some Occupy protesters. Organisers backed away from earlier calls to block the Golden Gate Bridge, but scores of police – some carrying helmets and batons – lined the span during the morning rush hour. Some protesters with signs stood nearby, but did not disrupt traffic. A group of workers, patrons and property owners clashed with a few dozen protesters who stormed a downtown diner in an attempt to shut it down. The two sides scuffled briefly before police moved in, and the restaurant stayed open. Threatening letters containing a white powder that appeared to be corn starch were sent to some institutions. Three letters were received on Tuesday, two at News Corp headquarters and addressed to the Wall Street Journal and Fox News, and one to Citigroup. The message in the letters said: “Happy May Day.” Seven letters were received on Monday at various banks. One was sent to New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Occupy activists had said they planned to bring business to a standstill, but the crowds protesting in the rain were modest.
MEANWHILE, May Day protesters have poured into streets across Europe, swept up in a wave of anti-austerity anger that threatens to topple leaders in Paris and Athens. From the eye of the eurozone debt storm in Madrid to the streets of Paris and crisis-hit Athens, where tottering governments face elections within days, marchers spoke of job losses, spending cuts and hard times. More than two years after the eurozone sovereign debt crisis erupted, frustration with austerity is boiling over across the continent as voters wait in vain for signs of the economic pay-off.

Spain Financial Crisis
In Spain, suffering the industrialised world’s highest jobless rate of 24.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2012, the major unions called protests in about 80 cities. Tens of thousands massed in central Madrid’s Neptuno square yesterday, decrying the jobless queue, new labour reforms that make it easier and cheaper to fire workers, and a budget squeeze in health care and education. “Total Violence, You Are Robbing Us of Home and Bread!” said a banner brandished by 51-year-old Josefa Martinez Fernandez, adding that her two daughters in their 20s were out of work. “The young who had work have been thrown out,” she said. Thousands rallied in Athens, Thessaloniki and other cities around Greece, five days ahead of cliffhanger general elections with voters fed up with years of austerity. “No One Alone, Together We Will Get There!” read a banner draped on a stage in Athens’ central Kotzia square. Polls indicate that Greeks are fleeing the main parties for smaller groups in revenge over a European Union-IMF economic recovery plan that has brought repeated waves of pay and pension cuts. The two parties that have ruled Greece for the past 37 years, socialist Pasok and conservative New Democracy, are blamed for catastrophic finances after decades of state overspending and nepotism. The new Greek government will face an early test when 436 million euros ($553.07 million) of debt, held by private creditors who turned down a swap, matures on May 15. In Paris, the French presidential election race overcast the day as three powerful political movements battled for attention with competing rallies five days before polling day. Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigrant far-right National Front kicked off the May Day events with several thousand supporters marching through central Paris in memory of Joan of Arc, who has become a far-right icon. Le Pen, who scored a record 18 per cent in the April 22 first round, led the march and urged supporters to abstain rather than back President Nicolas Sarkozy or Socialist Francois Hollande in the run-off. Waving a sea of blue, white and red French flags, Le Pen’s supporters chanted “France for the French!” and “This Is Our Home!” as they marched to the Place de l’Opera. Sarkozy’s right-wing supporters were to gather at the Place du Trocadero in Paris’s posh 16th arrondissement to hear their champion give his last major speech in the capital before the vote. And, on the left, trade unions were to carry out their traditional march to the historic Place de la Around 150,000 people took part in the “Holiday of Labour and Spring” march in Moscow, by coincidence similar to the numbers said by the opposition to have shown up at anti-Putin demonstrations over the last months. The authorities appear keen to revive worker celebrations and make May Day a centrepiece of the year as Putin seeks to hold onto popular support as he heads back to the Kremlin in defiance of the anti-government protests. Marchers unfurled huge banners proclaiming the names of their factories and unions as bands played rousing music that could have been taken from the score of a Soviet film. “The Union of Machine Builders! Hurray!” declaimed the announcer as another workers group filed past the town hall on Moscow’s Tverskaya Avenue. In an event that struck a chord with those nostalgic for the mass parades projecting Russian power in Soviet years, the crowds packed the avenue from the Kremlin to its end as far as the eye could see. Wearing a suit without a tie under the bright spring skies, Putin led the march next to a white overcoat-clad Medvedev and surrounded by supportive banners like “Workers for Medvedev and Putin!”. It was the first time for years that Russia’s rulers had joined the May Day rally, a key day in the calendar in the Communist Soviet Union. The last such appearance is believed to have been by Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s.

Massive Demonstration in Cuba:

In Cuba, every May 1st is an occasion of celebration, confirmation and commitment to the working class, the heroic nation to which we  belong and the Revolution that was always “of the humble and for the humble”.
It is not any other day for the rest of the world. In many nations  the workers carry out massive demonstrations, strikes and demands in  favor of their dreams, hopes and rights.
There are some that do not think that the symbolic date is important.  Even so, they cannot ignore the day, at least for the hours that the  event lasts in each country in salute to International Workers’ Day. > The historic tradition guides the Cuban proletariat whose world debut  took place in 1890, over a century ago, in compliance with the II  International in Paris, France.
Banners, flags, posters and slogans carried by the workers and their  families, students and foreign guests decorated this year’s rally accompanied by denunciations against Washington’s economic blockade  and in defense of the Cuban Five and the concepts of unity,  productivity and efficiency.
For the first time the health sector presided the rally representing  the close to half a million of the sector’s professionals and  technicians.
As an expression of the current economic transformations underway in  the country, a new non state working force was present this May Day: self employed workers.
From east to west and north to south, educators, construction  workers, civil defense, men, women, children and senior citizens were  present. The youth, example of the continuity of the Revolution once again closed the rally. Some 50,000 young people marched to close the historic event, one thousand for every 50 years of the existence of  the Young Communist League. Over one thousand representatives of 162 labor unions and social and  solidarity movements from 62 nations also participated in the  celebrations. Another 102 delegates from 37 nations participated alongside the Cuban people to celebrate International Workers’ Day.
In today’s world with new changes even in the U.S. itself, it will be  impossible to stop the rallies of those that have been forgotten. This will be a different year. Thousands of workers, students, > immigrants and unemployed from over 115 cities in the U.S. will for  the first time participate in protests and general strikes. This will not be a normal day in the U.S. either. Uruguayan writer  Eduardo Galeano wrote: “May 1st is humanity’s only truly universal day , but in the U.S. the people work and no one, or almost nobody,  remembers that the rights of the working class did not sprout from the  ear of a goat, or from the hands of God or master”.
In Greece, Italy, Spain and other European nations, where workers are  brutally exploited and workers rights are sampled on with the pretext  of the crisis, the day will include protests against government policies that put an end to the so called “wellbeing” and launch  millions to the unemployment line. Federico Engels’ phrase in 1890 is valid today: “The workers of  America and Europe are revising their efforts (.) The event that we  are witnessing today will make the capitalists from around the world  take into account that the working class is truly united”.
The bells of International Workers’ Day are once again tolling. The words of August Spies, one of the Martyrs of Chicago, calls on the  workers of the world and warns politicians and bankers: “If you believe that hanging us will smother the labor movement, the  movements in which the millions of oppressed, millions that suffer  scarcity and misery await salvation, if this is your opinion, then  hang us. You will only burn out a spark, but there and yonder, behind  and forward the flames will rise. It is an underground fire and no one  will be able to put it out. (Courtsey: Ganashakti)


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A Third Industrial Revolution?- Defend the interests of the workers.

02 Wednesday May 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International

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The ‘Economist’ in  its latest issue has forecasted the arrival of  a Third Industrial Revolution. This is based in the change of technologies like introducing robots in the manufacturing, change in management systems, new designs and objectives and reduction in prices.

What will be the role of the worker and his issues are also in question. The issue has to be studied well and the new challenge have to be faced by the working class.

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Protest Rallies in Spain

01 Tuesday May 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International

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MADRID(Spain):

Tens of thousands of people across Spain protested Sunday against education and health care spending cuts as the country slid into its second recession in three years. Unemployment is at a eurozone high of 24.4%, more than half of Spaniards under 25 years old are jobless, and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservative government has introduced stinging austerity measures in its first five months in office. Speaking at a party rally, Rajoy, who on Friday announced a new set of tax hikes to come into effect next year, said he had “no alternative.” He added, “Spain needs deep structural change, not makeup.” Protesters in northeastern Barcelona, northern Bilbao, eastern Valencia and many other regional capitals carried banners urging Rajoy to not “mess around with health and education.” Cayo Lara, lawmaker of the United Left party, said at a large gathering in Madrid that many protesters believed the government was intent on using the financial crisis as an excuse to sell off essential public services to the private sector. The protest is rising and the government is not in a position to answer.

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Observe May Day in a befitting manner

29 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International

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1st May is observed as May Day, the International Day of the working class, every year through out the world for more than one century.

Observe May Day with flag hoisting, joint rallies etc. in a befitting manner.

Revolutionary Greetings on May Day!

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Strike in Portugal against austerity measures and change in labour laws

24 Saturday Mar 2012

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Public services across Portugal ground to a halt as unions staged a 24-hour strike on 22rd March 2012 against austerity measures agreed by the government in return for an international bailout. Garbage went uncollected, ports and schools closed, public transport was disrupted by the country’s second general strike in four months. The strike was against the change in the  labour laws that make it easier to fire workers, reduce holidays and cut layoff compensation, moves the government contends will revive the economy. It is also angry at government austerity measures such as the elimination of public employees’ Christmas and vacation bonuses — each roughly equivalent to a month’s pay — that aim to rein in the public deficit. Unlike the two previous general strikes held in November 2011 and November 2010, yesterday’s action did not have the backing of Portugal’s second-biggest union, the historically more moderate General Workers Union (UGT), which reached an agreement with the government over the labour law reforms.  The metros in Lisbon and Oporto, Portugal’s second-largest city, were closed, forcing tens of thousands of commuters to find an alternative way to get to work or school. The majority of ports, including the port of Lisbon and Viana do Castelo in the north, were closed while garbage collection was halted across the country, according to CGTP. Hundreds of schools closed their doors throughout the country, according to the Fenprof teachers’ union. Demonstrations and rallies were held in 38 cities and towns across the country, including Lisbon, Oporto and Coimbra. Much of the strike passed peacefully, but a skirmish broke out between police and young activists who had organised their own march in one place.

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Occupy Wall Street Protestors call for strike on 1st May

20 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International, Uncategorized

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Occupy Wall Street activists on Monday called for supporters to skip work on May 1 to protest against alleged police brutality during 73 arrests in New York during the weekend. Several dozen activists joined members of New York’s City Council for a news conference in Zuccotti Park to complain about police tactics.  May Day is both an ancient rite of spring fertility and, in modern times, a celebration of the international labor movement. It also has been used to protest various issues. It’s impossible to gauge the expected response of the strike.

While the government is trying to suppress the protest, there is a chance that by the end of the winter, there will be once again an increasing of the protests.

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Occupy Wall Street Movement completes six months – a report

18 Sunday Mar 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International, Uncategorized

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Protesters chanted and cheered as they marched down Wall Street on Saturday to mark six months since the birth of the Occupy movement. Some of the protesters applauded the Goldman Sachs employee who days ago gave the firm a public drubbing, echoing the movement’s indictment of a financial system demonstrators say is fuelled by reckless greed. “I kind of like to think that the Occupy movement helped him to say, ‘Yeah, I really can’t do this anymore,’” retired librarian Connie Bartusis said of the op-ed piece by former Goldman Sachs manager Greg Smith, who claimed the company regularly foisted failing products on clients as it sought to make more money. Carrying a sign with the words “Regulate Regulate Regulate,” Bartusis said the loss of governmental checks on the financial system helped create the climate of unfettered self-interest described by Mr. Smith in his piece, although Goldman’s leadership suggested he had not portrayed the bank’s culture accurately. “Greed is a very powerful force,” Bartusis said. “That’s what got us in trouble.” On Saturday, six months after the protesters first took over Zuccotti Park near the city’s financial district, protesters gathered there again, drawing slogans in chalk on the pavement and waving flags as they marched through lower Manhattan. With the city’s attention focused on the huge St. Patrick’s Day parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti drew a couple of hundred people a smaller crowd than the demonstrations seen in the city when the movement was at its peak. Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore made an appearance at the park, milling around with protesters. With the barricades that once blocked them from Wall Street now removed, the protesters streamed down the sidewalk and covered the steps of the Federal Hall National Memorial. There, steps from the New York Stock Exchange and standing at the feet of a statue of George Washington, they danced and chanted, “We are unstoppable.” Police say arrests had been made, but they don’t have a full count yet. As always, the protesters focused on a variety of concerns, but for Tom Hagan, his sights were on the giants of finance. “Wall Street did some terrible things, especially Goldman Sachs, but all of them. Everyone from the banks to the rating agencies, they all knew they were doing wrong. … But they did it anyway. Because the money was too big,” he said. Dressed in an outfit that might have been more appropriate for the St. Patrick’s Day parade, the 61-year-old salesman wore a green shamrock cap and carried a sign asking for saintly intervention- “St. Patrick- Drive the snakes out of Wall Street.” He, too, praised Mr. Smith’s editorial and said it came just as the Occupy movement is again gaining ground. It was a sentiment echoed by others. Stacy Hessler held up a cardboard sign that read, “Spring is coming,” a reference, she said, both to the Arab Spring and to the warm weather that is returning to New York City. She said she believes the nicer weather will bring the crowds back to Occupy protests, where numbers have dwindled in recent months since the group’s encampment was ousted from Zuccotti Park by authorities in November. But now, “more and more people are coming out,” said the 39-year-old, who left her home in Florida in October to join the Manhattan protesters and stayed through much of the winter. “The next couple of months, things are going to start to grow, like the flowers.” Some have questioned whether the group can regain its momentum. This month, the finance accounting group in New York City reported that just about $119,000 remained in Occupy’s bank account the equivalent of about two weeks’ worth of expenses. But Ms. Hessler said the group has remained strong, and she pronounced herself satisfied with what the Occupy protesters have accomplished over the last half year. “It’s changed the language,” she said. “It’s brought out a lot of issues that people are talking about. … And that’s the start of change.”

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WFTU supports 28th February Strike – Writes to Prime Minister

25 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News, TU News - International

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World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU), representing trade unions in more than 120 countries, declared its support and solidarity to the One Day Nationwide Strike called by the Central Trade Unions and All India Federations in India.  WFTU  General Secretary George Mavrikose also addressed a letter to Dr.Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of India, demanding that the government change the anti-worker policy and discontinue the neo-liberal policies adversely affecting the working class.

More and more support from all over India and the world are coming for the success of the 28th February General Strike.

 

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Demonstrations in front of White House by ‘Occupy Wall Street’ Protestors

18 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - International

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Thousands of ‘Occupy Wall Street’ protestors demonstrated in front of White House, the official residence of the President  of the United States  in Washington continuing their protests against inequality, unemployment and other issues on which they had been continuing their agitation. It is also reported that in between, a smoke bomb was hurled at the white house by unknown people.

The US government has so far kept silence on the incidents.

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