129 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
129 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
from Libertarian Labor Review #13
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Winter 1994, pages 16-17
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European Alternative Unions Meet
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by Mike Hargis
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The following report is based on Jacques Toubles' article,
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"Recontre europeene des syndicats alternatifs," published in
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January in Le Monde Libertaire.
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A "Meeting of European Alternative Trade Unions" was held in
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Barcelona, Spain, Nov. 29 through Dec. 1, 1991, sponsored by the
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Spanish General Confederation of Workers (CGT). Attending the
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three day conference were delegations from union confederations
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such as the Swedish Workers Central (SAC) and the Romande
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Confederation of Labor; autonomous workers' groups such as the
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Italian base committees (Cobas) and an Irish anarcho-syndicalist
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group; local trade unions or federations affiliated with
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"official" union centers, for example a delegation of railway
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workers from the French Confederation of Democratic Unions (CFDT)
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and the Proof Readers Union of the French General Confederation
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of Workers (CGT); some organizations formed by fellow workers
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excluded from the main confederations such as the SUD Postal
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Federation; and, finally, a delegation from the Moscow section of
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the Russian Confederation of Anarcho-syndicalists (KAS) and some
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militants from the Russian Solidarity trade union.
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The New European Order
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In discussing the developing political/economic landscape in
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Europe, the Spanish CGT delegates noted that the new order being
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constructed in the various Ministerial cabinets, in Brussels, and
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in the board rooms of the multi-national corporations will
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undoubtedly mean an increase in inequality and poverty within
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nations and in different regions of the continent, as well as
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reduction of trade union rights and restrictions on the right to
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strike. It was estimated that two million people would be added
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to the fifteen million already unemployed. In addition, there are
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at least six million workers toiling under temporary or part-time
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work contracts, and fifty million people living in poverty. The
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drive towards the privatization of public services is going
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ahead, and will most likely result in a further increase in part-
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time and temporary contract labor. Underneath all of this is
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developing a parallel society made up of 20 million immigrants.
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The Swedish delegation made special note of the changing
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division of labor being constructed and the greater
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stratification of the labor force that this will engender. They
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see the working class being sub-divided into three groupings: 1)
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a highly skilled stratum of technical workers with secure
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employment organized within corporatist trade unions whose only
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function will be to protect their status; 2) a less skilled and
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more precariously employed group; and 3) a totally marginalized
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group without skills and without employment. Such a development
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would make achieving political and economic unity among the three
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groups very difficult, which would be to the advantage of the
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capitalists an the State.
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Rank and File Action
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The fellow workers from the Italian Cobas discussed the
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growing importance of the base committees, which are primarily
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found in the public services but are also present in the metal
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industry. In the past few years the committees have proven their
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ability to successfully mobilize workers within local branches of
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industry and even within entire industries both on a regional and
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on a national level, thus making them a force to be reckoned
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with. Thanks to this type of organization (the base committee) a
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number of trades--teachers, rail workers--have been able to
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successfully resist employers' plans to reduce their standard of
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living and working. On the railroads, for example, Italy is the
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only nation in Western Europe where the practice of operating
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locomotives with two crew members is still in force, thanks
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largely to the efforts of the base committees in mobilizing
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resistance to the attempts to introduce one-person operation.
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This hard struggle has twice resulted in the conscription of the
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entire rail workforce by the government, something that hadn't
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been seen since the fascist era.
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From the Ex-USSR
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Of particular interest at the conference was the report of
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the Russian delegates of the KAS. The KAS comrade acknowledged
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that the organization was going through a difficult period with a
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number of fellow workers leaving the organization. These
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defections can be explained by the fact that when the KAS was
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formed there were no other libertarian groupings in the USSR and
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some joined the group without really understanding what the KAS
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was all about. When the organization defined itself, in its
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congress, as an organization made up of anarcho-syndicalists and
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anarchists engaged within the workers movement, those who
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disagreed drew the proper conclusion and withdrew from the
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organization, not without first accusing the KAS of being
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bureaucrats, etc.
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Still, in spite of the reduced numbers, KAS' activity has
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increased. KAS members are active in several independent unions,
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such as the Workers' Union of Baikalsk, the unions of Zaporojie,
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the Workers' Union of Lithuania, the strike committee of Samara,
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the Solidarity Unions of the Ukraine and the strike committee of
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Minsk. KAS groups publish some 20 periodicals and, in cooperation
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with the left social-democrats in Moscow, operate an information
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agency called KAS-KOR.
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The KAS has adopted a policy of maintaining contact with
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diverse groups who accept the idea of unionism and collective
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property. Many of these groups are in the official Confederation
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of Labor, although little by little these groups are leaving the
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officials as many strike committees are transforming themselves
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into unions.
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KAS has also set for itself the objective of promoting
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throughout the country the tradition and symbols of anarchism,
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like turning the birthplace of Bakunin into a museum or re-
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editing the works of Kropotkin. Moscow KAS is also working to
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unite the seven anarchist organizations in Moscow into a local
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federation and KAS groups in the Ukraine are part of that
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region's anarchist federation.
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Asked to paint a broad picture of the "left" in the ex-USSR,
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the KAS delegate noted that there are a number of socialist
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parties ranging from left social-democrats to trotskyites to die-
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hard stalinists and the remnants of the CPSU. Also active are a
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number of committees for a labor party, supported by some
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independent unions, some trot groups, and some old
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nomenklaturists. A few anarcho-syndicalists are also supporting
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these committees.
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The Moscow KAS, however, when approached for support by the
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local Committee, refuted their arguments and refused to
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participate in the initiative. The KAS comrade felt that it was
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necessary to state this position for the record, to counter the
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false impression being promoted by the trot press that KAS
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supports the formation of such a labor party.
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International Solidarity
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All in all, the militants who took part in the gathering
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felt that the conference was a positive thing and hope to make it
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an annual event. The changes being brought about in a "unified"
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Europe will be challenging to the autonomous labor movements.
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International Solidarity is the only possible, effective
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response.
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