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- From: New Liberation News Service <nlns@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: Mex.OIl Workers Interview
- Message-ID: <1992Dec11.182618.24338@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Fri, 11 Dec 1992 18:26:18 GMT
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- /* Written 9:23 pm Dec 10, 1992 by theorganizer@igc.apc.org in igc:carnet.mexnews */
- /* ---------- "Mex.OIl Workers Interview" ---------- */
- Mexican Oil Workers
-
- Editors' Note: The Organizer editorial board members Mya Shone and
- Ralph Schoenman spoke with three Mexican oil workers laid off in
- the struggle for democratic unions and victims of the mass layoffs
- as the Mexican government moves to privatize the nationalized oil
- industry. All were attending the International Conference in
- Defense of the Cuban People convened in Mexico City, Sept. 26-27.
- AImelda Becerril worked two years in Hidalgo. Ysidro Zamudio Ruiz,
- from Azcapozalco, and Bartolo Rosas Gomez, from Cuichapa,
- Veracruz, each worked eight years in the oil industry.
-
- Bartolo Rosas Gomez: I was very active in my section of the union
- Q Section 35 Q and was chosen by my fellow workers to be a
- representative to the electoral commission of the F.R.D. [the
- pre-party formation of Cuauhtmoc Cardenas' P.R.D.]. The union
- itself is affiliated with the P.R.I. [Salinas' ruling party], and
- Section 35 is the most tightly controlled of all the Mexican Oil
- Workers Union sections. The union leadership threatened me,
- warning me that I would have problems if I organized any
- demonstrations in defense of our rights. I told them outright: I
- am fighting for democracy; the workers are being treated like
- sheep. I was beaten and had to be hospitalized. I received death
- threats repeatedly, as did members of my family. All the windows
- of my house were broken the day before one of our demonstrations.
- Then I was fired from my job without reason and kicked out of the
- union. That was in 1988. Later that year, I was told that I would
- be reinstated in the union, but it never happened. Instead, I was
- blacklisted Q not only from working in the oil industry but from
- other work, too. The union leadership put out the word that I was
- 'against' the unions. In spite of that, I was able to mobilize
- the membership of Section 35 to join the national movement of oil
- workers that had developed in Mexico in 1988 around demands for
- compensation of workers when they were fired. According to the
- law, workers weren't entitled to compensation until they had
- worked three years, but the oil workers' contract, which wasn't
- being respected, specified conpensation after three months' work.
- I formed a committee, and even those who had attacked us
- physically in the union when we fought for other demands joined
- our committee. But some of the committee's leadership were willing
- to accept compromises even though they didn't have a mandate from
- the workers. When I objected, the union leaders had me banned from
- the very committee I had formed. I went to the rank and file to
- explain why I was no longer representing them. We have since
- formed an organization, the Association of Oil Workers of the
- Mexican Republic. It includes permanent and part-time oil workers
- and retirees. We are only 160 members now, but we expect most of
- the 131,000 oil workers who were fired in 1992 will join our
- association. Only 80,000 work in the oil industry today Q less
- than half [38%] of the oil industry workforce. The government is
- reorganizing the oil industry into separate sectors that can be
- privatized. These are the very oil and chemical firms that had
- been nationalized by Lazaro Cardenas in 1939. The mass layoffs of
- oil workers was imposed to make the industry look more profitable.
- This is a direct result of NAFTA.
- First the mass layoffs. Now the selloff. In Tula, a petrochemical
- firm has just been sold, with both Japanese and U.S. capital
- involved. Many of the Tula workers will be fired before December.
- Our association is struggling against privatization. We have five
- points of unity.
- 1. Protect part-time workers from layoffs.
- 2. Maintain pensions. (The government is trying to cut off
- retirement benefits.)
- 3. Struggle for a democratic basis for the Mexican Oil Workers
- Union.
- 4. Defend Mexican oil for Mexicans. (Mexican oil is produced for
- export revenues, and petrol products are thus expensive for us.)
- 5. Prevent privatization of the oil/chemical industry and demand
- the renationalization of privatized firms. We are trying to build
- our organization, to organize demonstrations and to help the
- unemployed oil workers form cooperatives so they can find
- alternative work. Our objective is to have a Latin American
- organization of oil workers that can link up with workers
- worldwide.
-
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