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Iraq Conscientious Objector speaks out on labor rights at Labor Anti-War rally

by Rubble
U.S. Labor Against the War held a rally at the Embarcadero Saturday, March 21st, concurrent with the larger anti-war rally held in San Francisco. A sizable labor contingent marched together up Market Street to Civic Center in the rally. The event was part of a worldwide day of action on the 6th anniversary of the Iraq invasion and occupation. Besides continuing recognition of the need to stop this and other wars in order to preserve our domestic standard of living, unionists need to organize more than ever due to deteriorating domestic conditions. The economic downturn is resulting in draconian cuts to unionized public sector human services, while also serving as a phony pretext to attack and restucture labor rights and working conditions in both the public and private sectors. The speaker highlights the need for a broad expansion of labor rights in the U.S., including for military personnel and veterans. (2:45)
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U.S. Labor Against the War Labor Delegation to Iraq

U.S. Labor Against the War - a network of 186 local, regional, state, and national labor organizations representing more than 5 million union members - sent a delegation of six to the first International Labor Conference ever held in Iraq, March 13-14, 2009. At the Conference, three of the country’s major labor organizations announced the formation of a new labor confederation.

Hassan Juma’a Awad, President of the Iraqi Federation of Oil Union - speaking for his 25,000 members - condemned U.S. efforts to privatize Iraq’s oil industry through production sharing agreements that could cede control over Iraq’s oil to foreign corporations for as long as a generation. The conference adopted a resolution that described the U.S.-promoted draft oil and gas law as “hostile to the interests of the working class and consequently all Iraqis”

Two other resolutions are of note. One called for the immediate enactment of a basic labor law that complies with International Labor Organization standards for the protection of the rights of workers to organize, collectively bargain, and strike in unions of their choosing, free of government interference. The U.S. Occupation Authority and Iraqi government continue to enforce Saddam Hussein’s anti-union labor law that bans unions for all public workers and employees of public enterprises, including its oil industry. This law remains in spite of the fact that the U.S.-led leadership has overturned virtually all Hussein era laws.

The other called for an independent Iraqi state with a “non-sectarian, non-ethnic” government that defines people on the basis of human identity, regardless of their ethnic, religious, or sectarian background. Resolutions were also passed addressing the global economic crisis and privatization.

T.J. Buonomo, a former U.S. Military intelligence officer, and Aaron Hughes, a former U.S. Army sergeant, delivered remarks. They acknowledged crimes committed against the Iraqi people and apologized for the U.S. role in the economic and military occupation of Iraq. They denounced the manipulation of intelligence, bribing of Iraqi journalists, torture of Iraqi prisoners, suppression of worker rights, and attempts by the U.S. government and multinational corporations to control Iraqi oil. The address was met with a standing ovation and outpouring of emotions.

Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) sent a video recording form Washington, D. C. He expressed support for Iraqi labor and re-iterated his position that the invasion and occupation of Iraq is a gross violation of international law and that all U.S. troops should be completely withdrawn as soon as possible.

The information above was compiled and released by Michael Eisenscher, National Coordinator, U.S. Labor Against the War. Eisenscher was one of the six U.S. convention delegates to the Convention.
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The organizers state 4,000 people bothered to show up on Saturday, March 21 in San Francisco to protest the theft of our tax dollars for war. There are MILLIONS of union members in the Bay Area. The labor contingent was only a part of this peace march. If the labor unions did not bother to mobilize their millions of members, putting them on buses and trains, then their endorsement is a farce. For those of us who have been watching this insulting show for decades, and marching at peace marches as on Saturday March 21, including this writer, we can only wonder what it will take to wake people up. Do the public schools have to completely close for people to get angry? I just heard on SF Cable Channel 29 at 9 p.m. Friday night, March 27 on Labor on the Job that the SF State University library is barely functioning! Can you imagine a university without a library? Then we have the farce of a medical system, unaffordable to most, and for those who do not have Kaiser, promotes a huge amount of bills that must be submitted to an insurance company to reimburse on whim, and often not at all. Where are the complaints about the paper snowstorm that is the bankrupt American medical insurance system? Then there is the lack of any, much less affordable, public transportation, and the horror of the necessity of the private auto, with its deadly and maiming accident rate, its pollution and congestion. And worst of all is the unemployment, now officially over 10% in California, which means in reality it is at least 20%. When we have a million workers marching in every metropolitan area that is over 1 million people in tihs country, then we can boast about labor's sizable continent. For the record, there was no sizable labor contingent at the March 21 SF peace march.
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