The Socialist

The Socialist 10 February 2010

Fight University Cuts

Fight university cuts


Fighting leadership needed in Unison - Nominate Roger Bannister for general secretary

Greenwich Unison backs victimised branch secretary


Preying on the living and dead

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory

Fiddling MPs: Jail the whole lot of them!

Vulnerable lose out on benefits

Socialist Women: Fighting for equality through socialism

Fast news


Civil service strike ballot: Vote 'yes' for action

Boycotting the 2010 SATS in schools

Coventry youth workers' strike

Metaldyne workers strike

Stoke: Axiom workers in overtime ban

Saving jobs and services in Worcestershire

Workplace news in brief


Hazel Blears must go

TUSC: Wellingborough socialists make a stand


PCS young members network conference

Bristol job centre workers fight transfer


Trade unions in Britain - are they ready for the coming battles?


Northern Ireland: An agreement to cement division

Sri Lanka President Rajapakse removes his rival, Fonseka

Tamil Solidarity -: Successful northern conference


Trotskyism on trial


Armed forces: Release Lance-Corporal Joe Glenton

Trade union rights for service personnel

 
 
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Trade union rights for service personnel

UK SERVICE personnel urgently need the right to join and organise in a trade union. In several other countries, including some whose soldiers are currently serving in Afghanistan, service personnel have trade union rights.

Danish soldiers have had a trade union for over 50 years and won collective bargaining rights in 1973.

Over 2,500 Spanish military personnel demonstrated in Madrid before Christmas under the slogan 'Dignidad y Derechos' - Dignity and Rights - for improvements to their career prospects, and gained support from other trade unions for their fight.

Dutch soldiers, including those serving alongside UK soldiers as part of the Nato deployment in Afghanistan, can join a trade union. AFMP, one of three unions for military personnel, is affiliated to the Dutch union confederation FNV, and defends service personnel's rights, welfare and conditions.

It takes up political questions, calling for example for the resignation of the military leadership who turned a blind eye to the massacre of Muslims in Srebrenica in Bosnia in 1995.

On the Afghan conflict, AFMP chairman Wim van den Burg says that troops are "citizens in uniform" who have "similar qualms" about the Afghan deployment as the rest of the population.

"The decision of course remains for the government and parliament.... but we've been in Afghanistan for four years with little progress. We're pushing for troop withdrawal. It's important the voice of the military is heard," says van den Burg.

In Ireland PDFORRA is the union for soldiers, sailors and aircrew and is affiliated to the Irish Conference of Public Service Associations. It increasingly aligns itself with the Irish working class' struggle to resist attempts to make them pay for the crisis.

Having seen service personnel used to break strikes such as those by ambulance staff and bus workers, in 2009 its general secretary Gerry Rooney demanded assurances that service personnel will never again be used in that way.

A trade union for UK service personnel which could take up issues around welfare (sub-standard accommodation in barracks, medical and psychiatric facilities etc.) and could also ask the right questions about military deployments, would be a huge step forward.

In 2008 an official survey on the ArmyNet website revealed that nearly three-quarters of serving soldiers would welcome a 'federation'; support today could well be higher.

The trade union movement has a responsibility to ensure that working-class youth in the forces, many conscripted by unemployment, do not have their lives ruined by what they experience on the frontline or by the system's negligence.

Socialists, as well as continuing to campaign against the war in Afghanistan and for the immediate withdrawal of the troops, should also support the right of these troops to organise in a union.

Paul Gerrard Manchester Socialist Party

In this issue

Fight university cuts


Unison general secretary election

Fighting leadership needed in Unison - Nominate Roger Bannister for general secretary

Greenwich Unison backs victimised branch secretary


Socialist Party news and analysis

Preying on the living and dead

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory

Fiddling MPs: Jail the whole lot of them!

Vulnerable lose out on benefits

Socialist Women: Fighting for equality through socialism

Fast news


Socialist Party workplace news

Civil service strike ballot: Vote 'yes' for action

Boycotting the 2010 SATS in schools

Coventry youth workers' strike

Metaldyne workers strike

Stoke: Axiom workers in overtime ban

Saving jobs and services in Worcestershire

Workplace news in brief


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

Hazel Blears must go

TUSC: Wellingborough socialists make a stand


PCS young members

PCS young members network conference

Bristol job centre workers fight transfer


Socialist Party feature

Trade unions in Britain - are they ready for the coming battles?


International socialist news and analysis

Northern Ireland: An agreement to cement division

Sri Lanka President Rajapakse removes his rival, Fonseka

Tamil Solidarity -: Successful northern conference


Unison witchhunt

Trotskyism on trial


War and occupation

Armed forces: Release Lance-Corporal Joe Glenton

Trade union rights for service personnel


 

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Related links:

Trade union:

triangleStop the health cuts!

triangleKiln workers enter third week of strike

triangleClass survey diverts focus away from power of working class to change society

triangle24-hour general strike

triangleBuilding TUSC in the unions

Afghanistan:

triangleHuddersfield Socialist Party: The future for Afghanistan

triangleAfghanistan war: end this 'pointless waste of life'

triangleReconstruction after war: Who Gains And Who Loses?

trianglePoppy mania for bosses...

Troops:

triangleStep Up Action Against This Bloody War

triangleQuick Victory But Lasting Turmoil

triangleOpposing Imperialist War...

Unions:

triangleUniversity backs down: students and workers win!

triangleTrade unions recommend more cuts in Neath/Port Talbot