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DESCRIPTION:Rally At SF Chinese Consulate\nPresident Xi-Jinping Rehire The Mineworkers 
 Union Of Nabia Rossing Branch Leaders NOW!\nStop The Union Busting Campaign 
 In Namibia\n\nSpeak-Out At San Francisco Chinese Consulate\n\nMonday May 
 19, 2021 4PM\nGeary St. & Laguna St. San Francisco\n\nOn Monday May 19, 
 2021 9 trade union leaders of the Namibian Mineworkers Union Rossing branch 
 are supposed to be having an arbitration because of their illegal firing by 
 the state owned Chinese National Nuclear Corporate CNNC Rossing 
 mine.\n\nThey were fired by the company in August 2020  after they opposed 
 giving up healthcare benefits, union seniority rights and opposing the 
 introduction of Chinese workers to replace Namibian unionized 
 workers.\n\nThese  Chinese workers actually have  worse labor conditions 
 than the Namibian workers working from 7:00 AM to 10:00 PM at night. This 
 undermines the conditions of the Namibian workers.\n\nChinese companies now 
 control the entire uranium mining sector are engaged in attacking the union 
 members at all the mines that they operate.\nThe Namibian Mineworkers Union 
 Rossing branch leaders are appealing for workers throughout the world to 
 call for their rehiring and also for the Chinese government to stop it’s 
 flagrant violations of Namibian labor laws.\n\nWorkers at the Rossing mine, 
 the Husab mine and other mines face an organized national union busting 
 campaign to destroy their trade unions.\n\nNamibia workers faced the 
 brutality  and occupation  of the South African apartheid regime now face a 
 re-colonization by these state owned corporations from China.\n\nTrade 
 unionists and workers will be speaking out about their defense and why 
 international solidarity means supporting the Namibian miners. The San 
 Francisco Labor Council has also unanimously called for the rehiring of the 
 Rossing miners.\n\nOur fight is not with the working people of China whom 
 we support but the bureaucrats of the CCP who have no compunction attacking 
 the workers and unions of Namibia where unemployment is from 40 to 
 50%.\n\nSolidarity Has No Borders!\nStop Union Busting At The Rossing 
 Mine\nFor more info (415) 533-5642\n\nSponsored by\nUnited Front Committee 
 For A Labor Party UFCLP\nFreedom Socialist Party, CWG\nInternatonal Labor 
 Solidarity Committee For The Namibian Miners 
 ILSCNM\nhttps://ilscnamibia.wordpress.com\n\nNew mine owners trample on 
 Namibian workers’ rights\nA state-owned enterprise from China bought a 
 huge stake in the Rössing Uranium Mine and immediately began downgrading 
 working conditions before dismissing \nunion 
 leaders.\n\nhttps://www.newframe.com/new-mine-owners-trample-on-namibian-workers-rights/?fbclid=IwAR0It41cLPe9FbvpvLCv6nBTiVsfVoTL89lIQa4fEKFjfZyaKSqbsulEXWo\n\nBy: 
 Anna Majavu\n15 Apr 2021\n\n15 April 2019: A sign at the Rӧssing mine near 
 Arandis, Namibia. It is one of the oldest and largest open-pit uranium 
 mines in the world and lies in the Namib Desert, about 70km from 
 Swakopmund. (Photograph by Christian Ender/ Getty Images)\nA bitter dispute 
 between the Mineworkers Union of Namibia (MUN) and China National Nuclear 
 Corporation Rössing Uranium Limited (CNNC RUL) is heading to arbitration 
 in Swakopmund from 19 to 21 April 2021. \n\nCNNC RUL, which bought a 68.62% 
 stake in the Rössing Uranium Mine from Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio 
 Tinto Zinc in July 2019, has been heavily criticised for how it runs the 
 mine – including its unfair labour practices. \n\nRössing is one of the 
 largest uranium mines in the world, and the MUN has spent decades 
 negotiating excellent collective agreements and policies for its 780 
 members, says Johannes Hamutenya, the union’s Rössing branch 
 chairperson.\n\nHamutenya worked for the mine for 14 years before he was 
 fired in August 2020, along with eight other members of the MUN Rössing 
 branch executive committee: Julius Ashipala, Albertos Alexander Hennes 
 Haraseb, George Martin, Samuel Shindume, Fillemon Ihuhwa, Paulus Shikongo, 
 Hafeni Nalusha and Ruben Snydewel.\n\nHamutenya says the union was 
 concerned when it heard CNNC RUL wanted to buy into the mine because the 
 company had no experience in dealing with independent trade unions, which 
 are not permitted in China.\nAnswer the siren call and make the elites fear 
 it\nNamibia’s mine and energy minister Tom Alweendo told Reuters in 2019: 
 “We have no objection to the sale provided that the buyer abides by 
 what’s expected of him by our laws.” But Hamutenya says within months 
 of taking ownership, CNNC RUL was circumventing the law.\n\nNamibia’s 
 Labour Act says it is an unfair labour practice to unilaterally alter any 
 term or condition of employment. But the new owners insisted on changing 
 MUN’s recognition agreement with the Rössing Uranium Mine, which has 
 been in place for 33 years, Hamutenya says. CNNC RUL also asked to 
 renegotiate the recruitment policy; to remove the union’s offices, 
 archives and boardrooms at the mine; to do away with safety officers and 
 affirmative action monitors; to renegotiate the performance and conduct 
 procedure as well as the disciplinary code; to reduce annual and sick leave 
 days; and to rewrite the retrenchment policy. \n\n“The retrenchment 
 policy is the best in Namibia. The Chinese and Namibian management wanted 
 all these documents renegotiated so that they could have more power to do 
 what they want,” says Hamutenya. The new managers also wanted to do away 
 with pay scales. “They wanted to breach the Affirmative Action Act by 
 paying employees as they see fit, whereas it says jobs of equal value must 
 be compensated equally. Eventually they said they won’t give us a salary 
 increase if we refuse to renegotiate. They threatened to nullify all the 
 collective agreements, which is unlawful.”\n\nHe says CNNC RUL then 
 lobbied the national leaders of the mineworkers union to “discipline” 
 the Rössing branch. The dispute eventually came to a head in August 2020 
 when the committee told their lawyers that four managers had been hired 
 from China without the correct visas. There was an exchange of letters 
 between the union and CNNC RUL’s lawyers, which was covered by the media. 
 Police then arrested the managers, who were released later that night and 
 allegedly left the country.\n\nAfter that, the nine branch executive 
 committee members were charged with gross negligence, bringing the company 
 into disrepute and breach of confidentiality. They were fired.\nUnfairly 
 dismissed and unable to find work\nNew mine owners trample on Namibian 
 workers’ rights\n“I have been applying for several vacancies but, 
 despite my experience, I have not even got a single call. Our names seem to 
 have been put on a list, and it will be hard for us to find good employment 
 in the country,” says Ashipala, who was the MUN branch secretary for 
 information and publicity, and worked for the mine for nine 
 years.\n\nVice-chairperson Haraseb, who worked for Rössing mine for over 
 16 years, says, “I did not plan for early retirement and my retirement 
 funds were very low. I just bought a house five years ago, and I still have 
 15 years to pay it off. We are struggling to make ends meet, and it is very 
 hard on us.”\n\nShikongo was the vice-treasurer of the MUN Rössing 
 branch. “I worked for the company for the past 14 years without any 
 record of misconduct on my name until this,” he says. “It is really 
 discouraging as my work helped the company. Labour law allows unions and 
 labour relations to exist. But now my future plans are crippled. My 
 children are four and seven years old, and I worry every day how to provide 
 for those little ones. It is a career massacre that was committed on us 
 because we now cannot get employment after being dismissed.”\n\nThe 
 artisans hunting for work on the streets\nSnydewel has worked at Rössing 
 mine for more than nine years but was a full-time shop steward for MUN for 
 only 10 months when he was dismissed. “My wife is working but it 
 doesn’t cover our expenses. I have to take care of seven family members. 
 There is a ripple effect as I had to let my helper go and she has a family 
 of her own. I am in debt on my bond repayment,” says Snydewel.\nThe 
 secretary of the branch, Martin, worked for 13 years at Rössing mine. 
 “Our kids go to school every day. We have to pay for school. We have to 
 pay for food. Namibia has an unemployment rate of between 30% and 50%, and 
 the Covid-19 pandemic has hit the job market. It has hit us very badly. My 
 wife is stressing. She is not sleeping. I was just doing my job for the 
 union. It is not even that I was fired fairly. We were all unlawfully 
 dismissed,” Martin says.\n\n“We had the best medical aid in Namibia and 
 now we cannot afford it. My water and electricity bills are in arrears. I 
 cancelled my life insurance policy. We asked our union head office to pay 
 us an allowance because we were fired for doing union work but they 
 refused. They are only covering our legal bills,” says Hamutenya.\nWith 
 the arbitration looming, the union leaders wrote to Chinese president Xi 
 Jinping asking him to reinstate them. The letter says that during the 
 meetings held to discuss the impending takeover, “we were repeatedly 
 reminded of the role the Peoples’ Republic of China played during the war 
 of our liberation. It seems the saviour has become the killer.”\n\nTwo 
 months ago they wrote to Namibia’s president Hage Geingob. They haven’t 
 had a response from either president. \nThe mine is also 10% owned by South 
 Africa’s Industrial Development Corporation, which did not respond to 
 questions. Similarly, the manager of corporate communication for CNNC RUL, 
 Daylight Ekandjo, said: “This matter is sub-judice and being dealt with 
 through the office of the Namibian Labour Commissioner, we can therefore 
 unfortunately not address your related queries at this stage.” \n\nIn 
 solidarity with workers \n\nAn international labour solidarity campaign has 
 been started, to pressure the CNNC RUL to reinstate the axed union 
 leaders.\nThe Geneva-based IndustriALL, a global union federation for 50 
 million members of mining, energy and manufacturing unions in 140 
 countries, wrote to CNNC RUL on 21 January saying: “This anti-union 
 approach to labour relations is against existing collective bargaining 
 agreements that the company has signed … and threatens the sound 
 relations that exist between workers and the company.”\n\nMutenya is 
 hopeful, but recognises that the fight is much bigger than the individuals 
 involved: “Our fight is so difficult because it is a political fight. The 
 politicians are involved. It is the relationship between China and the 
 Namibian government. So we workers on the floor, we mean nothing.”\n\nSan 
 Francisco Labor Council Unanimous  Resolution for Rehiring the Namibian 
 Miners Rossing Union Branch 
 Leadership\n\nhttps://sflaborcouncil.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/04-12-21-Resolution-For-Namibia-Miners-1_1.pdf\n\nWhereas, 
 the right off all workers to have the right to protect their health and 
 safety, working conditions and benefits; and\n\nWhereas, all workers have 
 the right to have an independent union not controlled by employers or 
 governments; and\n\nWhereas, the Namibian National Workers union was 
 founded in the fight against the South African apartheid regime which 
 controlled Namibia; and\n\nWhereas, the management of the Rossing Mine was 
 taken over in 2019 by the state-owned China National Nuclear Corporation; 
 and\n\nWhereas, this corporation promised to protect the rights and 
 conditions of the workers at the Rossing mine which is the largest producer 
 of uranium in Namibia; and\n\nWhereas, the new management sought to bribe 
 the leadership of the Namibian Mineworkers Union Rossing Branch; 
 and\n\nWhereas, in return for these company bribes the company wanted 
 concessions on the number of contract workers and other conditions and 
 rights; and\n\nWhereas, the company has sought to attack the healthcare 
 benefits of the miners that would limit their healthcare; and\n\nWhereas, 
 the company sought to replace staff at the mine with Chinese employees; 
 and\n\nWhereas, the company has unilaterally violated labor conditions and 
 rights, violating not only the union contract but Namibian Labor Laws; 
 and\n\nWhereas, the company has also taken illegal action to harass, bully 
 and terminate the 9 NMUW Rossing Union executive board members of the 
 Rossing Union Branch; and\n\nWhereas, this action is an attack not only on 
 the Namibia Miners Union Rossing Branch officers and members but on all the 
 workers in Namibia; and\n\nWhereas, there needs to be an international 
 campaign to return these unionists to their jobs and also to end the 
 systemic violations of the Nambia Mine Workers Union Rossing Branch 
 contract and pertinent labor rights; and\n\nWhereas, these unfairly 
 dismissed union officers and their families are without any financial 
 support for their survival,\n\nTherefore Be it Resolved the San Francisco 
 Labor Council calls on the China National Nuclear Corporation to 
 immediately return the nine Namibia Mineworkers Union Rossing Union 
 executive board members to their positions with back pay and also end 
 management violations of both the contract and the protections under 
 Nambian Labor Laws, and\n\nTherefore Be it Finally Resolved that the San 
 Francisco Labor Council send letters to the China National Nuclear 
 Corporation and the government of China calling for their re-instatement of 
 the nine NMUW Rossing Union Executive Board members and forward this 
 resolution to other affiliated bodies for concurrence.\n\nAdopted 
 unanimously by the San Francisco Labor Council on April 12, 2021. OPEIU 29 
 AFL-CIO 11 \n\nAdditional media:\nRossing Mine workers stage demonstration 
 in Swakopmund\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XAoBNjeQaA\n\nSeattle APRI 
 Panel On The Mineworkers Union Of Namibia Rossing Mine Leaders Struggle For 
 Justice\nhttps://youtu.be/IHiTopeOyGg\n\nThe Namibia Mineworkers Union 
 Rossing Branch & The Struggle of The Namibian Working 
 Class\nhttps://youtu.be/1LCD5ZuAgvc\n\nNamibian Rössing Mine Workers Face 
 Covid-19 & Attacks From State Owned China National Uranium Corporation 
 \nLimited (CNUC)\nhttps://youtu.be/pHsDDqy_WPU\n\nNamibia Rössing, union 
 in wage 
 deadlock\nhttps://www.namibian.com.na/.../R%C3%B6ssing-union-in...\nChina 
 and Namibia Rössing Workers on Collision 
 Course\nhttps://www.facebook.com/informantenam/posts/3090166147716991/\n\nNamibia 
 MUN claims China National Nuclear Corporation is falling short of its 
 Rossing 
 promises\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nLuFIxwcIM&feature=emb_logo\nhttps://www.nbc.na/.../mun-claims-china-national-nuclear...\n\nNamibia 
 Rössing uranium mine union members face dismissal by Chinese 
 owners\nhttps://www.namibian.com.na/.../R%C3%B6ssing-union...\n\nSwapo, 
 what is 'Socialism with a Namibian 
 Character’?\nhttps://www.namibian.com.na/.../Letter-of-the-Week--Swapo... 
 \nNamibia says China can buy Rio's uranium stake if it respects 
 laws\nhttps://www.reuters.com/.../namibia-says-china-can-buy...\n\nAnatomy 
 of a Bribe  & Fish Rot 
 Files\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FJ1TB0nwHs\n\nFor more 
 information:\nSeattle APRI\nwww.facebook.com/APRISEATTLE\nPetition For 
 Reinstatement of the Nine Mine Workers Union of Leaders of Namibia Rossing 
 Uranium 
 Limited\nhttps://www.ipetitions.com/petition/the-reinstatement-of-the-nine-unlawfully-and\n\nInternatonal 
 Labor Solidarity Committee For The Namibian 
 Miners\nhttps://ilscnamibia.wordpress.com \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/04/15/18841675.php
SUMMARY:Pres Xi-Jinping Rehire The Mineworkers Union Of Nabia Rossing Branch Leaders NOW!
LOCATION:SF Chinese Consulate\nGeary St. & Laguna St. San Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/04/15/18841675.php
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