This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 15, May 22-28, 2005
LABOR WATCH
'Strike-Free' Cavite an
Election Ploy – Labor Groups
Militant labor groups in Cavite, a province south of Manila, are opposing an
accord signed by government, labor and business groups declaring the province
“strike-free”.
by Dennis Espada
DASMARIñAS, Cavite - Leaders of various
government agencies and labor and business groups recently forged a pact that
ostensibly aims to prop up a "strike-free" Cavite for the attainment of
industrial peace in the province.
Dubbed as "Social Accord for Industrial Peace,
Stability, Job Preservation and Strengthening of Employment in the Province of
Cavite," the covenant-signing was initiated by Cavite Gov. Irineo "Ayong"
Maliksi and Labor Undersecretary Danilo Cruz, together with at least 58
sectoral representatives from the national and provincial levels. The ceremonial
signing took place last May 16 at the First Cavite Industrial Estate in Barangay
Langkaan here, some 36 kms south of Manila.
The accord followed the creation of the Cavite
Industrial Peace Council and the Cavite Tripartite Industrial Peace Council,
which seek to resolve labor disputes without resorting to strikes and lockouts.
But the militant labor alliance, the Solidarity
of Cavite Workers (SCW) views the governor’s move as detrimental to worker's
rights.
Disgrace
Declaring Cavite as "strike-free" zone, SCW
said, is a public admission that Maliksi is enforcing a no-union, no-strike
(NUNS) policy across the province.
Maliksi recently boasted that strike incidents
have declined dramatically from 43 in 2001 to none last year.
Based on the SCW's experiences, no less than 21
unions it has organized inside the Cavite Economic Processing Zone (CEPZ) have
reportedly succumbed to union busting efforts by capitalists aided by the office
of the governor through the anti-labor armed group called CIPAG (Cavite
Industrial Peace and Advisory Group), the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE)
and the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA). No less than 11,000 workers
lost their jobs, were forced to take leaves of absence, harassed, charged or
arrested to deny them their right to form a union and collective bargaining.
"Going against workers' right as basic as the
right to strike is a disgrace for someone holding the highest position in the
provincial government," SCW chairperson Marlene Gonzales said in an email
message sent to Bulatlat.
The covenant-signing, Gonzales explained, does
not mean anything to the militant and progressive labor movement "because a
strike-free Cavite is not possible in the midst of the chronic economic crisis
and difficulties being experienced by the workers under his administration."
Sr. Ellen Belardo, RGS, a Catholic nun and
convenor of the Cavite May One Commemorative Committee, a broad pro-labor
multisectoral alliance, said, "In the face of worsening poverty...and confronted
by the government's renewed violent attacks on the people who dare express
dissent, we take firm commitment and resolve to uphold and defend the democratic
and political rights of the workers and the people."
Early election propaganda?
The militant labor alliance believes Maliksi's
motive for the ceremonial pact is to win the hearts and support of big investors
and business groups in preparation for the election showdown with the Remulla
clan in 2007.
Former governor Juanito Remulla (1979-1986,
1988-1995) was, and still is, known for his iron-fist rule and by brutally
implementing the NUNS policy during the dark years of Martial Law.
Remulla's defeat in the 1995 local elections led
to a wider democratic space for labor organizing and the re-emergence of genuine
and militant unionism in the province.
"Governor Maliksi should learn from the
experience of his benefactor (Remulla). Remulla's downfall in 1995 was
attributable to the collective action of the organized workers against his
candidacy," Gonzales warned. "Maliksi's blatant repression of worker's rights
and the unions would be the end of his political career." Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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