02) EUROPEAN WORKERS
STRIKE TO DEFEND JOBS AND PENSIONS
(The following
article is from the May 1-15, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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Special to PV
Using tactics from general strikes to
road blockades, millions of workers across Europe have mounted strong
resistance against the drive to make working people shoulder the burden
of restoring corporate profits.
This epic
struggle has been
particularly sharp in Greece, where the recently-elected social
democratic PASOK party quickly caved in to big business demands to
slash spending. The people of Greece are being ordered by the European
Union and transnational capital to accept wage freezes, tax hikes, mass
layoffs, social spending cuts, and a higher pension age.
But the
militant sections of the
Greek labour movement have fought back, inspiring their sisters and
brothers facing similar right-wing policies in Canada and many other
countries. Starting last year, the communist-led PAME labour
organization, which brings together trade unionists, unemployed workers
and others, took the initiative to launch several powerful general
strikes. Even trade unions led by PASOK itself have been forced by
their own members to join these strikes, shutting down schools,
government offices, docks, transportation, and other sectors.
In yet
another action, public
sector workers walked off the job on April 22 to press the Greek
government to reject further cuts as part of a so-called "aid package"
with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. Doctors,
nurses, teachers, tax officials and dockers stopped work, paralyzing
public services. Tens of thousands marched to the parliament buildings
in Athens, where politicians were meeting to discuss the terms of a
financial bailout.
"These
bloodthirsty measures won't help Greece exit the crisis," said one
union leader.
"We won't
tolerate any more
measures because we cannot make ends meet. I have a mortgage, two
children, I have cut down on every luxury," said 38-year old civil
servant Pavlina Parteniou. "Why don't they catch those who stole the
money? Is my salary or my mother's pension of 300 euros going to save
the country?"
Earlier in
April, thousands of
PAME supporters were joined by students, pensioners and women for
demonstrations in over 60 cities and towns, condemning measures which
will give new tax cuts to big capital.
Anger
against the corporate
agenda has erupted in other European countries. In France, train
drivers recently launched their third strike this year to demand better
pay and working conditions. The railway workers are fighting attempts
to impose layoffs and new schedules which would undermine safety.
British
Airways cabin crew
walked off their jobs for seven days during March, causing hundreds of
flight cancellations in another battle over pay and staffing issues.
Similarly, employees at German-based Lufthansa airlines struck in April
to demand that the company stop violating their collective agreement by
replacing crews with lower-paid workers.
Strikes at
oil giant Total have
disrupted refineries across France. The union at Total is campaigning
to protect job security after the company suddenly closed a major
plant, throwing nearly 400 workers out of their jobs.
French
unions are heading for a
showdown with the Sarkozy government over plans to raise the retirement
age by two or three years. The government also wants to increase the
number of years that workers must contribute to qualify for a full
pension.
Italy's
largest trade union held
a one-day strike against the government's economic and immigration
policies on March 12, disrupting schools, hospitals, transport and
other public services.
The left-wing CGIL union federation,
which has some six million members, called a nationwide stoppage across
all sectors, saying the Berlusconi administration was failing to
respond to the economic crisis. Hundreds of thousands of protesters
gathered in central Rome to march through the capital, carrying
anti-government banners and letting off balloons.