Turkish workers protest closedown decision
INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNION CONFEDERATION
ITUC
OnLine
015/290110
Turkey: Workers Protest
Against Government‘s Decision to Close Down Their
Workplace
Brussels, 29 January 2010 (ITUC OnLine):
Tobacco workers from all around Turkey have been
protesting in Ankara against their government for 47
consecutive days. The government decided to close down all
the warehouses owned by Tekel, the former state tobacco and
alcohol monopoly, which was recently privatised. This would
mean the loss of 12.000 jobs by the end of
January.
The union which represents the workers,
Tekgida-Is, a Türk-Is and IUF affiliate, started protesting
in front of the AKP (Turkey's governing party) headquarters
in December last year. On 16 December, they were brutally
chased away by the police to a nearby park. The following
day, the police put up barricades around the park and then
used water hoses and tear gas against the demonstrators.
Mustafa Türkel, president of Tekgida-Is and Türk-Is
general secretary, was arrested, to be released again later
on.
Police violence escalated and excessive force
was repeatedly used against the demonstrators, many of whom
had to be hospitalised. About 8000 workers are currently
staging a sit-in strike in front of the Türk-Is national
headquarters, while about a dozen of them remain in the park
on hunger strike.
On 28 January, a united unions'
front, consisting of six national union confederations
(including the four Turkish ITUC affiliates), met with Prime
Minister Erdogan in Ankara. The Prime Minister ordered his
Minister of Finance and his Vice Prime Minister to work out
a solution by the beginning of next week. A new meeting
between the Prime Minister and union representatives will be
scheduled at that point. “The ITUC will closely monitor
those meetings” said Guy Ryder, ITUC general secretary.
“The international trade union movement supports the
Turkish Workers in their legitimate fight for their jobs and
will not tolerate the use of brutal force against them”,
he added.
The united unions' front announced
further strike action in early February if no acceptable
solution is
found.
ends