"Struggle or death" – Pakistan telecoms workers fight privatisation

"Struggle or death"

Pakistan telecoms workers fight privatisation

"THIS IS the biggest challenge to President Musharraf of
Pakistan from the trade unions on the question of privatisation since
he came to power in 1998."

These words from Azad Qadri, (a member of the Socialist Movement
Pakistan – CWI in Pakistan – and National Deputy Secretary General of
the Lions Unity Union), drew a roar of approval from the 6,000 Telecom
workers occupying the headquarters of the Pakistan Telecommunications
Company Ltd (PTCL). The occupation is part of their national strike
against privatisation.

Khalid Bhatti, Socialist Movement Pakistan and Kevin Simpson, CWI

61,000 PTCL workers have been on all-out strike since 26 April 2005
as part of a campaign for wage increases, better conditions and an end
to the attempt to privatise the company by the government. Since the
beginning of the strike not a single PTCL depot has been open around the
country – the strike is solid.

These workers have not received a wage increase since 1998 – but just
in the last year petrol and diesel prices have increased by 250%. And
yet the company made, according to some estimates, between £300
million-£400 million in profit in the same period.

A nine-union Action Committee has been set up to coordinate the
struggle. The workforce is extremely radicalised and angry. They
distrust some of the union leaders intensely. Some union leaders were
forced by the workers to publicly swear an oath on the Koran not to
betray the strike!

Socialist Movement Pakistan (CWI in Pakistan) members are part of the
leadership in one of the Telecoms unions, the Lions Unity Union and have
played a leading role in the strike. The Trade Union Rights Campaign –
Pakistan (TURC-P), which Socialist Movement members are involved in, is
a national platform fighting in defence of union rights and against
privatisation. It has organised an international solidarity campaign and
produced thousands of leaflets to be distributed throughout the country
on the strike.

This struggle, still in its opening stages, has extremely high
stakes. For the Pakistani elite and military, continued super-profits
and its massive privatisation programme are under threat. For some
companies directly involved in the bidding for PTCL shares, this is
about a rip-off of gigantic proportions. The privatised sections of the
company are expected to be sold for $2.5 billion but even independent
capitalist economists calculate they are worth double that.

Defending jobs and conditions

For the Pakistani working class this is about defending jobs and
conditions of millions of public-sector workers and their families. But
unlike in Europe, this is a struggle between a fingertip hold on bare
survival and being driven over the edge into starvation and destitution.
This is why the slogans of the strikers often resonate with the chant:
"Struggle or death".

Telecom workers have already been told that 50% of the workforce is
surplus to requirement because of new technology. Privatisation will
mean these workers are sacked. And given the experience in Pakistan of
privatisation up to now, new private companies will conduct a ‘slash and
burn’ operation on the conditions of the rest of the workforce.

Management have conducted a carrot and stick approach in the
negotiations – attempting to exhaust the strike in an attempt to cause
divisions amongst the unions. In the negotiations they offered a 20%
wage increase and concessions on back holidays for the workforce. But
management also insisted that the trade unions sign an agreement not to
campaign against privatisation.

The state has also intervened in this strike, deploying paramilitary
police at the main depots, raiding the homes of trade union activists
over the weekend and now beginning to use military helicopters to
conduct surveillance of the picket lines.

In a reaction to this, over the weekend the Action Committee dropped
all their demands apart from calling for an end to privatisation.
Management left the negotiations and the Action Committee publicly
announced that they would no longer be prepared to have further talks
with them. The unions also warned that any further arrests would lead to
the shutting off of the entire telecommunications system, crippling
industry and the economy.

The government is under huge pressure. The bidding process for the
privatisation is due to be completed by 10 June. Obviously no company is
going to bid for a company whose workers are out on strike. But if the
government makes a concession on privatisation of PTCL, this will put
their whole privatisation programme in doubt. This is why there is a
danger that the government could attempt to use overwhelming military
force to crush the strike.

But in a desperate attempt to keep talks going, the government’s
Privatisation Commission called the unions into negotiations on Tuesday
31 May. The next week could be decisive for the struggle.

This strike is one which socialists and trade unionists
internationally can assist. Hundreds of messages of protest were sent
over the weekend to the Minister of Telecommunications and IT, while the
TURC-P received similar numbers of solidarity letters. Trade union
leaders say these messages were instrumental in forcing the state to
temporarily withdraw its harassment tactics.

At a mass meeting of 6,000 telecomm workers on Monday, solidarity
letters from Socialist MP, Joe Higgins and PCS President Janice Godrich
and many others were read out to huge cheers from the audience.