WHILE GENERAL Musharraf has received praise from Western
governments for his participation in the US-led ‘war on terrorism’, there has
been no criticism of his vicious anti-working class policies.
These include,
steep price hikes in basic foodstuffs, stepping up the pace of privatisation
and a vicious clampdown on the rights of trade unions to organise.
KEVIN
SIMPSON, recently in Lahore, spoke to railway worker trade union activists,
including Faisal Wahid, the national general secretary of the Railway Workers’
Union (workshops) which has 23,000 members.
COMPARED TO five years ago, the railway colony of Lahore
where all railway workers live and work has an air of demoralisation and fear.
The military regime installed military officers in all workshops to spy on
workers and take action if opposition developed. Despite these repressive
conditions and with the threat of mass sackings, the Railway Workers’ Union
(workshops) organised militant struggles against the Musharraf regime.
Railway workers’ main anger was directed against
Musharraf’s draconian Industrial Relations Ordinance 2002 which destroyed
workers’ rights.
Under IRO 2002 the railways’ management ended piecework
payments. This meant that on average railway workers lost 2,500 Rupees (£25)
from a monthly wage of 4,500 Rupees (£45). This began a whole tidal wave of
attacks: the ending of benefits for retired railway workers; the stopping of a
monthly payment of 250 Rupees (£2.50) to help railway workers pay for
utilities and, worst of all, the introduction of commercial rents for the
shacks that most railway workers live in.
As a result of these attacks, the Railway Workers Union
(workshops) began to organise a series of worktime protest actions –
demonstrations, rallies. In effect, this amounted to unofficial and illegal
strike action under a military dictatorship. Management was shocked by the
tenacity of the movement and retreated. They promised to reintroduce piecework
payments and gave a guarantee not to victimise any trade union activists.
However, the failure of the corrupt and right wing leaders
of the big trade union federations to organise serious solidarity action for
the railway workers and also against the IRO 2002, meant that management moved
onto the attack once again.
Victimisation
DURING THE movement of the railway workers, trade union
leaders like Faisal Wahid were imprisoned and even held in solitary confinement
for two weeks. He faces treason charges for speeches made to protesting workers
which attacked the generals.
Over 7,000 railway workers were sacked including 500 trade
union activists. Using illegal measures, the railway management transferred all
the leading trade unionists to different posts thousands of kilometres away
from where their families lived and where they had worked for decades.
Faisal Wahid was reposted to Hyderabad and the Deputy
General Secretary of the union was transferred from Hyderabad to Lahore, along
with 120 other trade union activists. The majority of union leaders transferred
refused to take up their new posts. As a result Faisal Wahid – and others –
have not been paid for two years.
"Many railway workers are frightened now,"
explained Faisal Wahid. "However, it was better to fight the government
than just sit back and allow them to stamp all over us. The most important
thing is to build solidarity with other workers in Pakistan and with trade
union activists internationally. That is why we have been involved in a
campaign of protest and pressure to force management to accept the merging of
our railway workers union with that of the Open Line union."
Determined united struggle can be successful – even against
the military. Musharraf has attempted to privatise the extremely profitable
Pakistan Telecommunications company on two occasions. One of the reasons this
failed previously was a decision by the eleven unions in the company to form a
joint campaign against privatisation to defeat the military’s plans.
These attacks, which have become commonplace under
Musharraf, will only be successful if the trade unions in Pakistan are
transformed along democratic lines and their corrupt leaders are driven out by
the membership.