People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 46 November 17, 2013 |
WFTU Holds
Swadesh
Dev Roye THE World
Federation of Trade Union (WFTU) held its Asia
Pacific Regional (APR) meeting in Port The Indian
delegation comprised representatives from the
CITU, AITUC, AICCTU, TUCC and TUIs of Finance,
Construction and Energy. CITU
and its friendly organisations were represented by
Swadesh Dev Roye, Prasanta
Nandi Choudhury, Debanjan Chakraborti, Pradip
Biswas, Muthusundara and
Mahadevayya SIGNIFICANT
INITIATIVE The
significance of a WFTU meeting in The
inaugural session was addressed by, among others,
George Mavrikos and Swadesh Dev Roye, general
secretary and deputy general
secretary of WFTU respectively, J Solomon (general
secretary, NUBE), Ms Yao Li (deputy
head of Asia Pacific Division of ACFTU, Beijing)
and Debanjan Chakraborti (general
secretary, TUI-Energy). The working
sessions commenced with the presentation
of a general report by Mahadevan, Asia Pacific
region secretary of WFTU. More
than 50 delegates participated in the deliberation
on this comprehensive and
informative report. An important feature of the
contributions from the floor
was the concurrence on the idea that the working
class in capitalist countries
is facing by and large similar onslaughts in the
current capitalist crisis.
Many speakers highlighted the need for
strengthening united struggle for people
oriented and working class led alternative
socio-economic systems. Delegates
spoke on the experience of ongoing struggles in
their countries, with some presenting
videos of workers’ struggles on streets and the
murderous attack they faced in
different capitalist countries of the region.
The
deliberations continued till lunch break on the
second day. At the end of the deliberations,
Mavrikos made a brief speech on the
contribution of the participants and announced
full support of the WFTU
headquarters and other regions to the APR in order
to strengthen its organisation
and intensify struggles here on the issues facing
the people and working class.
DECLARATION
The draft
‘Malaysia Declaration’ was moved by
Mahadevan and was adopted unanimously with some
modifications suggested from
the floor. It captured the major areas of serious
concern for the working class
in the current situation, underscored the
fundamental flaws of capitalism, and stressed
the need for a radical transformation based on the
principles of economic
justice, equitable development, working people’s
participation in shaping their
destiny, food and energy sovereignty, and
universal access to all essential
needs, among other things. It detailed how the
current capitalist crisis has
clearly demonstrated that capitalism is incapable
of meeting the basic needs
and aspirations of the people. The meeting also
noted that the working class in
many countries is striving to rebuff the
capitalist-imperialist offensives by
organising independent and joint struggles for
trade union rights and against
joblessness, growing insecurity and lack of social
protection, ineffective and
indifferent labour administration, and against
hazardous working conditions which
result in serious loss of lives, limbs and job
opportunities, e.g. in the recently
Rana Plaza case in Dhaka killing 1500 workers. The
declaration incorporated a 15-point charter of
demands and an action programme. It said: “The
Malaysia Declaration hereby
gives a clarion call to the working men and women
of the Asia Pacific Region to
campaign, organise and agitate to achieve the
demands.” On
this occasion, WFTU
deputy general secretary Swadesh Dev Roye too
presented a paper delineating the
economic and political situation in the Asia
Pacific region in particular.
Among other things, it pointed out that while
almost all the developing
countries in Asia-Pacific region had adopted the
export-led growth route, the
discrediting of the neo-liberal economic doctrine
has totally exposed the non-sustainability
of this particular growth model that severely
neglects the local people and
domestic market. Job losses, as a result of the
economic crisis, have hit hard
the highly export dependent economies of
Asia-Pacific region. Further, the region
has become one of the world’s biggest sources of
migrant labour. Saying that
now it is rather unlikely that the US and
EU are able to absorb the products of the
developing countries, the paper
referred to the observation
made by the
UNDP Regional Centre for Asia and the Pacific
about the US. It said: “The IMPERIALIST
DESIGN However, with no sign of an
early and sustainable recovery in the The paper said in this situation
imperialist powers have turned the edge of their
hegemonic game towards the Asia-Pacific.
While Obama visited US imperialists are also
taking many steps to achieve a quantum jump in the
In order to
create political instability, agents of
imperialism have started propaganda to create
confusion among the APR people about
The
paper also pointed
out that many Asian countries have authoritarian
regimes which extensively use
state violence to repress the trade union
movement. In a nutshell, a hostile
socio-political climate haunts the trade union
movement in the region. The movement
here continues to face physical threats,
harassment, intimidation,
discrimination, imprisonment and murders. The
present capitalist crisis is also
being used as an excuse to deny trade union and
collective bargaining rights to
workers in the region. There is an increasing gap
between the stated policies
and the actual situation on the ground in so far
as workers’ rights are
concerned. Only 15 countries of the region have
ratified the ILO Convention 87
and only 19 countries have ratified ILO Convention
98. Right to collective
bargaining is available only to a miniscule three
to ten percent of the
workers. Such a situation adversely impacts the
wage level. Casualisation
of employment is further contributing in a big
way to this disastrous situation on the wage
front. The paper
then concluded by delineating the major
challenges before the APR trade unions and talked
of the way forward which the
WFTU has chalked out.