This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 19, June 19-25, 2005
LABOR WATCH
Lepanto Strike on Its 3rd Week
The mine workers’ strike at
Lepanto’s Mankayan mines is on its third week but negotiations between company
and the strikers on wage increases are on a deadlock.
By Abi T. Bengwayan MANKAYAN, Benguet – Going
on its third week of strike, the Lepanto Employees Union (LEU) refuses to back
down even with Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) Secretary Patricia Sto.
Tomas’ decision pegging the general wage increase at P25-P27-P29. The workers’
demand for benefits, meanwhile, is at a standstill except for the P10 increase
in housing allowance as specified by DoLE. The LEU remains steadfast
in its call for a P29-P29-P33 wage increase, benefits, and the reinstatement of
terminated union officers. “Daytoy a desisyon ket
saan a mangsungbat kadagiti rason nu apay a napan kami nagstrike, saan a
nakabatay iti pudno a pangkasapulan mi a mangmangged nudiket pabor daytoy iti
kumpanya” (This [DoLE] decision does not resolve our demands. In essence, it
favors the mining company), LEU President Ninian Lang-agan said June 16. He added that the union
remains firm in its decision to go on strike. Company management said it
could only afford a P21-P27-P29 wage hike because it is not earning. Workers to
refute this, saying that although Lepanto has the means to expand its operations
it refuses to increase workers’ wages. Union and management
representatives met on June 16 in the afternoon upon the latter’s request to
negotiate, but the workers stood their ground. Lang-agan called on his
fellow workers to intensify their strike for just wages and benefits.
“Tiempo na itatta,
daytoy dawdawten tayo a nayon a ganar. Ket patibkeren tayo garud daytoy a laban
ta ammo tayo daytoy dawdawaten tayo” (This is the time for our call for just
wages and benefits. But we should be more determined to push for our demand
because it is just), Lang-agan said before the miners at the picketlines.
Lang-agan said that the
company is doing everything it can to break the union’s solidarity. “Ar-aramiden da amin
tapno mangburak ti panagkaykaysa tayo. Saan tayo koma nga agpa-allilaw kadagiti
alok ti kumpanya” (The company is so desperate that it has resorted to
breaking up our unity. But let us not allow this. Let us not be deceived), he
told the LEU membership. Desperate
measures Tony Baggay of Kilusang
Mayo Uno – May 1st Movement)-Cordillera said that company management
is using union busting when it terminated union officers and still pushed with
its counter proposals. He added that Sto. Tomas’ pronouncement is futile when it
did not say anything about reinstating the officers. “Saan met laeng a
nakasurat ditoy desisyon nga awan koma ar-aramiden ti kumpanya a retaliation kas
ti panagikkat kadagiti nagstrike a mangmangged no malpas ti welga ket agsubli
kami iti trabaho” (It was not stated in this decision that the company will
not retaliate by dismissing workers who participated in the strike upon
returning to work), Lag-agan added. Miners expressed disgust
with the labor secretary’s decision since it was very close to the company’s
proposal. “Kunak man sumensentro
ti DoLE ditoy a gusot. Apay ngay nga isuda ket maka-kumpanya?” (Why does the
DoLE seem to be on the company’s side?), a miner at the Nayak picketline
asked. KMU-Cordillera spokesperson
James Tulipa criticized Sto. Tomas’ decision, adding that countless workers
suffered due to her anti-worker decisions. Tulipa cited the Hacienda Luisita
massacre on Nov. 16 last year where brutal dispersals caused the death of
several workers due Sto. Tomas’ Assumption of Jurisdiction (AJ) order.
Nordis also learned from
the workers that management has been going around convincing workers with
records of absences without leave to report to work. Otherwise, such records
would allegedly be used against them. Workers also condemned
company management for using the miners’ children to weaken their determination
to pursue the strike. On June 16, company staff members delivered drawings of
students from the Lepanto High School and Lepanto Elementary School to picketers
at the Tubo gate. The drawings depicted the children’s ambitions, including
essays regarding their fathers as heroes. The striking workers
described the drawings and essays as part of the company psywar to weaken their
determination to strike. On June 16, company
representatives attempted to open the Tubo gate, but the workers did not allow
this. Just and
equitable? According to DoLE, the
mining industry was in a slump for the past 20 years due to “depressed commodity
prices,” including “political turmoil, and nationalistic policies”. These
factors consequently led to the foreign investors’ lack of interest in the local
mining industry, Sto. Tomas said in her decision. Yet, independent research
group IBON Foundation reports that gold, as a commodity, reacts inversely to
crisis such that in cases of global economic recession, the demand for gold
increases, and similarly in instances of wars and currency turmoil. IBON
clarifies that gold is the traditional store of value such that investors buy
golf when prospects of other assets are at risk. Sto. Tomas’s order further
states that the company has plunged into a negative P12.735 million in 2003.
Yet, the KMU-Cordillera reports that the company raked in retained earnings
amounting P2.573 billion in 2003. LEU auditor Ronald Maslian
questioned the company’s incapacity to grant reasonable wages when it could go
expanding its operations, such as the three recent Applications for Financial
and Technical Assistance (AFTA). These AFTAs covering 77,549 hectares in Benguet
(AFTA 024); 81,000 hectares in Ifugao, Nueva Vizcaya and Benguet (AFTA 025), and
another 81,000 hectares in Ilocos Sur and Abra (AFTA 026). AFTAs 025 and 026
were applied for under Shipside Incorporated and DDCP, according to the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). Workers have been preparing
for possible dispersal since the DoLE’s return-to-work order on June 9. Violent
dispersal swept the Mill Site picketline in the 2003 strike, where two miners
succumbed to cardiac arrest. Maslian recalled then that the women were not
spared when they were also dragged and hit by local police who implemented the
return to work order. With a report from Aldwin Quitasol / Posted by Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
Northern Dispatch
Posted by Bulatlat