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Labor News
International Unions Escalate Mexico Solidarity Frntera
NorteSur July 11, 2009
International labor activists and their
supporters are ramping up pressure on the Mexican government to resolve
several outstanding disputes. On a five-day visit to Mexico this week, a
delegation of several dozen labor leaders representing millions of workers
from the US, Canada, Europe, South Africa, Australia, and South America
renewed their backing of Mexican colleagues locked in conflicts with the
federal government and the big transnational corporation Grupo Mexico.
The immediate issues at stake include settling a two-year old strike at
Grupo Mexico’s Cananea copper mine near the Sonora-Arizona border,
guaranteeing the recovery of the remains of miners killed in the February
2006 Pasta de Conchas coal mine disaster in Coahuila state, freeing
imprisoned labor leaders, and allowing Mexican mine workers’ union leader
Napoleon Gomez Urrutia to return unmolested from Canadian exile. Among other
demands, the international movement is seeking a meeting with Mexican
President Felipe Calderon to discuss its issues of concern.
Labor
attorney Marco Antonio del Toro said the visit showed the vibrancy of
international support for Mexican labor causes, adding that Mexico could not continue billing
itself as a democratic nation as long as “unjust jailings and alliances
between businessmen and government” continued.
Representatives of the
United Steelworkers, International Metal Workers Federation and the
International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers
Unions helped form the group that traveled to Mexico. The labor delegation arrived
to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the founding of Mexico’s mine
and metallurgical workers’ union, which falls on July 11. This year’s
celebratory event was scheduled for the port town of Lazaro Cardenas, Michoacan.
Also a
member of the delegation, Canadian parliamentarian and New Democratic Party
leader Jack Layton met with Mexican Labor Secretary Javier Lozano.
“We made it clear that the government’s interference in union governance,
its jailing of union leaders and freezing of union bank accounts, declaring
strikes illegal and failing to prosecute the killers of union leaders are
serious and unacceptable violations of basic human rights,” Layton said in a
statement after the meeting.
According to one Mexican press account,
Lozano assured Layton
that Mexico’s
federal government, which ordered Napoleon Gomez removed from the union
leadership and pursued legal actions against the veteran labor leader for
alleged embezzlement of union funds, based its actions in strict accordance
with Mexican law.
While in Mexico City, Layton and Australian Labor Party
parliamentarian Graham Perret also met with Mayor Marcelo Ebrard, who is
increasingly mentioned as a possible 2012 presidential candidate.
Anti-Gomez union members used the occasion of the 75th union anniversary and
international visit to stage a demonstration outside a press conference and
run a large media ad .
In the ad, a group of 13 union leaders from
Chihuahua,
Sonora, Zacatecas, Coahuila, and Durango slammed Gomez for
using the union to his own benefit. Calling for the renovation of the
organization, the statement accused Gomez’s leadership of bringing workers
to the point of internal “confrontation.” Pro-Gomez union forces have
charged that dissidents are manipulated by Grupo Mexico and anti-labor elements of
the federal government.
Accompanying the foreign visitors, Mexican
senator and longtime human rights activist Rosario Ibarra charged that
almost 100 oil industry workers have “disappeared” since the advent of the
Calderon presidency in 2006, because of labor disputes.
Although the
high-level international labor leaders’ tour marked a significant escalation
of foreign support for burning labor issues in Mexico, the
visit generally received scant attention in the country’s press, especially
in the electronic broadcast media.
___________________________________________________ Sources: La Jornada,
July 9, 10, 11, 2009. Articles by Patricia Munoz Rios and Carolina Gomez Mena.
International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers
Unions, July 8 and 10, 2009. Press releases. Frontera NorteSur (FNS):
on-line, U.S.-Mexico border
news
Center for Latin American
and Border Studies New Mexico State University Las Cruces, New Mexico For a
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