August 2004
by David Bacon
Once the US
occupation of Iraq began over a year ago, Iraqi workers lost
no time in reorganizing their country's labour movement.
Labour activity spread from Baghdad to the Kurdish north,
with the centre of the storm in the south, in the oil and electrical
installations around Basra, and the port of Um Qasr.
Workers quickly
discovered that the occupation authorities had little respect
for labour rights, however.
Once the Coalition Provisional Authority took power in
Baghdad in March of 20003, it began enforcing a 1987 law banning
unions in public enterprises, where most Iraqis are employed. To this CPA head Paul Bremer added Public Order
#1, banning pronouncements that "incite civil disorder,
rioting or damage to property."
The phrase civil disorder can easily apply to organizing
strikes, and leaders of both the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions
and Iraq's Union of the Unemployed have been detained a number
of times.
Labour repression
in Iraq, however, has provoked US unions into speaking out against
the war and occupation in a way unseen since Ronald Reagan's
wars in Central America. Bremer's hostility towards labour made it onto
the radar screen of US unions last fall, when a delegation sent
by US labour Against the War to make contact with the country's
reborn workers' movement brought back accounts of the suppression
of labour rights. This spring USLAW, encompassing U.S. unions
and labour councils representing hundreds of thousands of members,
organized a fund-raising campaign for Iraq's new unions.
This June in Geneva, Neil Bisno, secretary-treasurer
of SEIU Local 1199P, delivered $5,000 checks to the IFTU and
the Workers Councils and Unions of Iraq.
Last
January AFL-CIO president John Sweeney condemned enforcement
of the 1987 law and called on the CPA
"to allow Iraqi workers to associate together and
participate collectively in rebuilding the economy."
The AFL-CIO and other international labour federations
began working with the International Labour Organization to
redraft Iraq's labour code, which could lead to dropping the
1987 prohibition.
In the meantime,
however, the National Endowment for Democracy, with a history
of cold war intelligence activity, began offering funds for
US government labour programmes in Iraq. Some USLAW activists
fear that NED involvement will endanger more progressive parts
of the country's labour law, like guarantees of healthcare,
housing and education, as well as involve unions in administering
the occupation.
This June,
US labour opposition to the occupation had grown so strong that
two of the AFL-CIO's largest unions, the Service Employees (SEIU)
and the State County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) passed
resolutions calling for withdrawal of US troops and respect
for the rights of Iraqi workers.
The California Labor Federation, with one-sixth of all
US union members, followed suit.
As labour's
campaign to unseat Bush grows stronger, opposition to the Iraq
war and support for that country's new labour movement have
become election issues for thousands of US workers.
Low wages have
driven the upsurge in Iraqi labour activity, including three
general strikes in Basra alone. Following the arrival of US
troops, Iraqi public sector workers began receiving emergency
salaries dictated by the Coalition Provisional Authority - roughly
from $60 to $120 monthly. Then the CPA's Order 30 on Reform
of Salaries and Employment Conditions of State Employees last
September lowered the base to $40, and eliminated housing and
food subsidies.
Iraqi longshoremen,
working for the port authority in Um Qasr, were given a further
cut when the occupation started, because their profit sharing
arrangement, in which they'd received 2% of unloading fees,
was terminated. When authorities decided in October to pay them
in Iraqi dinars instead of dollars -- another sizeable loss
-- workers began organizing a union.
On the day
they were set to vote on the officers for their new union, Port
Director Abdel Razzaq told them the election was cancelled because
of the 1987 prohibition. In November, he fired three port workers for
trying to organize.
In January
dockers struck briefly over the low wage scale, blocking anyone
from entering the main gate.
They grew more angry when managers decided to pay them
in old banknotes, worth only 75% of new ones. In the melee that ensued, Razzaq's office was
occupied, and the demonstration only ended when he was rescued
by occupation troops. Since
then, workers charge that a private militia protects him.
On hearing
about the firing of the Um Qasr longshoremen, San Francisco's
International Longshore and Warehouse Local 10 condemned the
action. "You are not alone," President Henry Graham
told them. "If
dockworkers in the rest of the world hear about your situation,
you can count on their support."
West coast dock unions stopped work on March 20, to coincide
with worldwide demonstrations on the anniversary of the Iraq
invasion.
Iraqi workers
and unions charge that the US is keeping wages low to attract
foreign investors, as Washington plans the privatization of
Iraq's economy. The Bush administration sees the Iraq as a free-market beachhead
into the Middle East and south Asia.
A year ago it put Tom Foley, a Bush fundraiser, in charge
of private sector development for the CPA.
On September 19 the CPA published Order 39, permitting
100% foreign ownership of businesses, except for the oil industry,
and allowing repatriation of profits. Foley then listed state
enterprises to be sold off, including cement and fertilizer
plants, phosphate and sulphur mines, pharmaceutical factories
and the country's airline.
While sales were delayed until after the June handover,
the goal remains unchanged, and Iraq's new constitution forbids
changing these measures.
The threat
of privatization, and the influx of US contractors, has caused
more labour unrest. Workers fear that new corporate owners will
cut costs by laying off workers.
Companies with fat reconstruction contracts are already
trying to perform work previously done by Iraqis.
A
recent study by the economics faculty of Baghdad University
says that unemployment has hovered at 70% since the occupation
began. Few Iraqis have
been hired by companies doing reconstruction, which have brought
in thousands of foreign workers, and for those jobs where they
do get hired, they have to pay a fee which is often the equivalent
of a month's wages.
Iraq has no
unemployment benefits or any welfare system, so the loss of
a stable job in a state enterprise condemns a family to hunger
and misery. One obvious
advantage, therefore, of having a union is gaining a voice in
decisions about privatization and contracting.
Conflict over
reconstruction work boiled over last October in a two-day wildcat
strike at the Bergeseeya Oil Refinery near Basra.
Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR), a division of Halliburton
Corp., was given a no-bid reconstruction contract to repair
oil facilities. KBR brought in a Kuwaiti construction company,
Al Khoorafi, using Indian and Pakistani workers. To protect their jobs, Iraqi workers threw
them out and protested outside the company's offices.
At the Southern
Oil Company, workers then organized a union.
Headed by Hassan Ju'ma, they banned foreign workers following
the Bergeseeya action. KBR tried to get them to accept its foreign
staff but local workers refused to budge. "Iraq will be
reconstructed by Iraqis, we don't need any foreign interference,"
Jum'a said.
Then, in December,
Southern Oil Company workers began challenging the wage schedules.
They surveyed prices, and proposed a monthly minimum of $85.
Workers threatened to strike and shut off oil production,
and said they'd join the armed resistance if occupation troops
were called in. The Oil Minister immediately flew to Basra,
where he agreed to return to the pre-September scale.
In January,
unrest spread to the Najibeeya, Haartha and Az Zubeir electrical
generating stations, where workers mounted a wildcat strike,
stormed the administration buildings, declared the September
wage schedule void, and vowed to shut off power if salaries
were not raised. Again
the ministry agreed to return to the old scale.
Southern Oil
Company unionists finally forced the CPA to raise wages, with
extra pay for working in risky or isolated locations, often
attacked by the armed opposition. Following another walkout in February at the
Basra Oil Pipeline Company, the SOC wage schedule eventually
spread to most worksites in the oil sector.
Workers then took the fight to power stations, where
they threatened to stop electrical generation, potentially halting
all other industries.
Samir Hanoon,
vice president of the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions in Basra,
warned that if the ban on unions wasn't lifted, "we will
take other actions -- protests, demonstrations and total shut-downs.
We realize that there may be some sacrifices but we are ready
to accept them. Our real problem is with the CPA."
The installation
of the interim administration of Issad Allawi at the end of
June did not improve either salaries or respect for labour rights.
Hanoon's warning seems as unheeded by Baghdad's new authorities
as it was by the CPA.
David Bacon is a freelance journalist
and photographer. Ewa Jasciewicz, in Basra for Occupation Watch
earlier this year, contributed to this report.