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- <text id=89TT1972>
- <link 90TT1979>
- <link 90TT1912>
- <link 89TT2033>
- <title>
- July 31, 1989: Soviet Union:Revolution Down Below
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- The New USSR And Eastern Europe
- July 31, 1989 Doctors And Patients
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 22
- SOVIET UNION
- Revolution Down Below
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Striking miners take Gorbachev's call to action seriously
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan
- </p>
- <p> Coal miners walking off their jobs from the Ukraine to the
- Arctic Circle. Ethnic gangs battling in Georgia. Thousands of
- other dissatisfied workers threatening strikes. "The situation,"
- said Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev last week as he surveyed
- the turmoil rocking his vast country, "is fraught with
- dangerous political and economic consequences." The question for
- Gorbachev: Will the "revolution from below," which he has been
- urging on his laggard countrymen, help accelerate his ambitious
- plans for reform--or tear the U.S.S.R. apart?
- </p>
- <p> At a meeting of national and regional party leaders last
- week, he proposed his own partial answer. If the party was
- blocking change by clinging to conservative attitudes, he
- lectured, then "a purge should take place, a purge was needed."
- He called for "an influx of fresh forces" affecting every level
- from factory collectives to the Politburo. Vowed Gorbachev:
- "This concerns everyone."
- </p>
- <p> The Kremlin was plainly alarmed that the strikes were
- eroding the party's control. Since the 1930s, no one had
- personified the state's ideal Soviet worker better than the
- propaganda hero Alexei Stakhanov, the coal miner who reputedly
- produced 14 times the daily norm. But there were no
- Stakhanovites in the Soviet Union's biggest coalfields last
- week. Wildcat strikes by more than 300,000 workers paralyzed
- some 250 mines and factories in the Kuzbass and Donbass basins,
- resulting in a 6 million-ton loss of production. The walkout
- spread as far as the coalpits in Vorkuta in the far north and
- Karaganda in the Kazakhstan Republic in Central Asia. And there
- were rumblings that railroad workers might join in on Aug. 1,
- an action that could paralyze the country. "Such developments
- create a threat to the realization of the great plans we have
- decided upon," warned Gorbachev, referring to his
- economic-reform program.
- </p>
- <p> In front of Communist Party headquarters in the Ukrainian
- city of Makeyevka, 5,000 miners in battered helmets, their faces
- and overalls black with coal dust, staged a sit-in to demand
- better working and living conditions; their ranks eventually
- swelled to almost 150,000 from 94 mines. Far to the east, in the
- Kuzbass in Siberia, the numbers were even greater. About 180,000
- miners abandoned their pits to occupy central squares in nine
- cities, plastering reviewing stands with homemade signs
- proclaiming DOWN WITH BUREAUCRATS and KUZBASS: CLEAN AIR, MEAT
- FOR EVERYONE, WE DEMAND SOCIAL JUSTICE.
- </p>
- <p> The strike spread with electrifying speed. The first 77
- Kuzbass coal miners walked off the job in Mezhdurechensk on July
- 10. The following day 12,000 workers from five mines in the area
- joined them. They drew up a list of demands, including better
- pay, more vacation, higher pensions. Their overriding complaint:
- despite Gorbachev's calls for greater local autonomy in managing
- the economy, bureaucrats in Moscow continued to wield arbitrary
- control over the mines and were holding back the bulk of their
- profits. Many local officials openly sympathized with the
- strikers. "Why not? They breathe the same air we do," said
- Timuras Avaliani, 57, of the Kuzbass regional strike committee.
- </p>
- <p> The strike soon spread to nine other cities in the Kuzbass.
- Grimy miners complained that when they came up after six hours
- underground, they could not find a bar of soap to wash with;
- the ration is one bar every two months. "Who can tell us what
- to feed our husbands?" shouted a woman protesting empty shelves
- in the stores. Many called for complete independence from
- central planning, insisting the miners could run things
- themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow quickly dispatched a high-level delegation to meet
- the strikers, led by Politburo Member Nikolai Slyunkov. Mikhail
- Shchadov, the minister in charge of coal mines, had earlier
- told the workers that they were not prepared for the
- independence they were demanding. But after negotiating with
- local strike leaders into the early hours of the morning, the
- Moscow delegation finally agreed to sign a protocol promising
- that the region's mines could decide on their production levels
- and investments. The state would raise miners' pay for night
- shifts by $50 a month, a 40% increase, improve food supplies and
- spend more of the mines' profits on local housing. Slyunkov also
- promised to increase supplies of food and soap.
- </p>
- <p> Sensing victory, the Mezhdurechensk miners went back to
- work, but the strikes were just beginning elsewhere in the
- Kuzbass and the Ukraine as workers pressed for assurance they
- would share in the government concessions. At week's end the
- strike in Kazakhstan was winding down, but workers in the
- Donbass still held out over pension questions, prompting a
- government pledge that all the issues would be considered
- without delay.
- </p>
- <p> Strikes are not technically illegal in the Soviet Union;
- the Marxist tenet that they are unnecessary in a proletarian
- paradise has not kept them from happening. Until the Gorbachev
- era, Communist rulers used bullets or gifts of consumer goods
- to quell unruly workers. But under the impact of perestroika and
- glasnost, work stoppages have become part of the economic
- landscape.
- </p>
- <p> As he pushes ahead with reform, Gorbachev is having to
- contend not just with strikes but also with constitutional
- revolt in the independence-minded Baltic states and a wave of
- ethnic violence in the Caucasus and central Asia. Only last week
- bloody rioting that left 20 dead erupted between minority
- Abkhazians and the Georgian majority in a Black Sea region of
- western Georgia. Some 3,000 Interior Ministry troops were
- dispatched to help local police quiet the unrest. But the
- audacious mining walkout has presented Gorbachev with the most
- serious labor challenge he has had to face, and casts in graphic
- terms the cruel dilemma of perestroika: how to raise
- productivity and living standards at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev appears to be attempting to turn the strike wave
- into a deeper popular commitment to his aims. While he sounded
- a warning that labor unrest "could damage everything we are
- doing," he spoke almost admiringly of how the strikers were
- behaving "in a responsible, organized and disciplined fashion."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, it would be difficult for Gorbachev to oppose the
- workers' calls for greater independence from the dead hand of
- Moscow ministries. That is a central ingredient in his plans to
- revitalize the Soviet economy by encouraging local initiative.
- But to be effective, the idea of self-reliance and
- experimentation had to evolve into more than just a prescription
- issued from the Kremlin. Gorbachev can take satisfaction and
- possibly draw some political strength from the evidence in
- Kuzbass and Donbass that workers may be stirring from the
- "stagnation" of the Leonid Brezhnev years. The daily Sovetskaya
- Rossiya put it succinctly: "Perestroika, which has until
- recently been a `revolution from above,' is getting strong
- support from below."
- </p>
- <p> Yet no matter how pleased Gorbachev may be to see a
- political awakening among the indifferent Soviet citizens, he
- must recognize that some of their economic demands are
- potentially threatening. In addition to their attacks on the
- bureaucracy, the strikers are demanding better food and housing
- and more consumer goods. The government has responded by flying
- in tons of supplies as a palliative, setting a costly and
- hazardous precedent. Most of the Soviet population eats poorly
- and lives in inferior housing. If workers everywhere rise up and
- demand more and better, the system's stability could be
- endangered.
- </p>
- <p>-- Paul Hofheinz/Prokopevsk and John Kohan/Moscow
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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