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Venezuela: Oil Workers will take street actions asking for their right to work

by TrastorTranslator (interfaz [at] cantv.net)
Venezuelan Oil Workers request that the workings at the contractors companies are started again. Text: Maria Fernanda Pineda
Translation: Trastor (from Panorama Newspaper - Maracaibo)
Panorama Newspaper, Maracaibo
Wednesday, January 15th 2003.

Oil Workers
Workers request that the workings at the contractors companies are started again.
Text: Maria Fernanda Pineda
Translation: Trastor

Workers Unions of Zulia state of the sector of contractors and services of the oil company (UNIONS: Sintrapez, Sinutrapetrol, Fedepetrol, Sintraip, Siptipcm, Sitramcol, Simprobioez, Stpez, Soep Tia Juana, Soep Bachaquero) conformed a union commission that threatens to take the next Friday the facilities from those companies contractors who continue denying the right to work.

Juan Cahuao, president of Sintrapez alleged that they have visited each Gate and each Port, "demanding our right to work, with some positive results, nevertheless, still several bosses refuse to open, for that reason, this Thursday will be a march in which all the workers of the COL will participate.

The destiny of this march will be the port of Zulima in Lagunillas and the purpose is requesting Pdvsa that gets committed with wages, with the labor liabilities and that PDVSA send a legal ultimatum to the companies that does not want to open".

Actions of street actions and of continuous dialogue have obtained the reactivation of a 35% of the area of production and segregation, the problems presents -according to Carlos Labrador, Secretary General of Sitramcol-, in the part of perforation and aquatic operations, which forces us to restrict the workings to only light crude extraction and production of some derivates. "Is lamentable that the State is losing around 4 billion bolivars because some persons includes Pdvsa in political matters and wants to use it as springboard to remove the President" added.

------------------------------------------
Original text in spanish:
---------------------

Panorama, Maracaibo,
miércoles 15 de enero de 2003.

Petroleros
Trabajadores piden que se reanuden las labores en las contratistas

Texto: María Fernanda Pineda

Sindicatos del estado Zulia del sector contratistas y servicios de la empresa petrolera (Sintrapez, Sinutrapetrol, Fedepetrol, Sintraip, Siptipcm, Sitramcol, Simprobioez, Stpez, Soep Tía Juana, Soep Bachaquero) conformaron una comisión sindical que amenaza con tomar el próximo viernes las instalaciones de aquellas empresas contratistas que continúen negando el derecho al trabajo.
Juan Cahuao, presidente de Sintrapez alegó que han visitado cada portón y cada muelle, "exigiendo nuestro derecho al trabajo, con algunos resultados positivos, sin embargo, todavía varios patronos se niegan a abrir, por eso, este jueves habrá una marcha en la cual participarán todos los trabajadores de la COL.

El destino será el muelle de Zulima en Lagunillas y la finalidad pedir a Pdvsa que se comprometa con salarios, con los pasivos laborales y que de un ultimátum jurídico a las empresas que no quieren abrir".

Las acciones de calle y de dialógo continuo han logrado la reactivación de un 35% del área de producción y segregación, el problema se presenta según Carlos Labrador, Secretario General de Sitramcol, en la parte de perforación y operaciones acuáticas, lo que obliga a restringir las labores a sólo extracción de crudo liviano y producción de algunos derivados. "Es lamentable que el Estado este perdiendo alrededor de 4.000 millones de bolívares por que algunos inmiscuyan a Pdvsa en el quehacer político y usarla como trampolín para sacar al Presidente" agregó.
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Please include links to the source page of articles, Trastor. Is there a direct link to the article at the Panorama Newspaper, Maracaibo?

In 1974 80% of oil income went to the state. Today 80% of Venezuelan oil income goes to the rich, and to "operating costs." Only 20% goes to the state. Chavez reforms will help reverse this in 2003. This is why the coup-plotters are in such a hurry to overthrow the fairly-ELECTED Chavez government, to prevent these reforms, and to reverse others already-implemented. Reforms that help the poor and lower middle class. Massive corporate-media disinformation, destabilization campaign going on inside Venezuela. Support President Chavez! Search Form, search shortcuts, and compilation of Venezuela news excerpts.  
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/12/1555816.php  Older version. Comments include latest Venezuela news sites, search shortcuts. 
http://la.indymedia.org/news/2002/12/25083.php  --Later version with more excerpts from articles. 

by Trastor
Maybe it is an only "printed in paper" newspaper?,
I will ask the person who sent me this news if Panorama has a web page, but I think is only in printed version, just maybe they have no internet pressence, I am going to ask, I am not sure
Here are the links:

The newspaper In the web is called:
PANORAMA DIGITAL

Oil Workers request that the workings at the contractors companies are started again.
Text: Maria Fernanda Pineda
http://www.panodi.com/hoy/1036263.html
--------------------------------------------------------------
Entire oil section of Panorama-Digital:
http://www.panodi.com/hoy/fpe.html
-----------------------------------------------------------
And here Panorama Digital HOME PAGE:
http://www.panodi.com/
-------------------------------------------------------------

(I will try if I can to put always the links in my future posts, eco man, thank you for this observation.)








by V
The US should stop buying oil from Venezuela and initiate any other economic sanctions necessary until the people wise up and remove Chavez.
by eco man
People around the world are already boycotting U.S. companies. For example; in the middle east where some McDonalds have had to close recently. American brands are sitting on the shelves in grocery stores. And much more.
by ns
'People around the world are already boycotting U.S. companies.'

It does not follow.
by SIku
fuck consum
by Peter Morris
As an outsider therefore being neither pro or anti Chavez the one illogical aspect is why for the sake of 6 months is the country set back several years.

In any other country workers in essential industries would be arrested for undertaking an illegal strike.

However due to the international media pathetic coverage I can't form any opinion as to which side is in the right or wrong.
by this thing here
>In any other country workers in essential industries would be arrested for undertaking an illegal strike.<

is it a "strike", instigated by the workers, to the dismay and alarm of the management, to protest the chavez government?

or is it a "lockout", instigated by the management, against the wishes of the workers, to protest the chavez government?

if this was a "strike", why would the workers be demanding to be able to work again?

you see, it is not a strike. it is a lockout. it is a denial of work. this distinction is crucial. as far as i am aware of, i have never heard of workers doing a lockout action against themselves.

"there was a light." "was it red or green?" "that doesn't matter. i saw a light." "like hell it doesn't matter. it's crucial to this entire thing."

"While in New York, President Chavez Frias will also officially hand over the presidency of the Group of 77 to Morocco and will hold a press conference at UN HQ scheduled for midday Thursday [Jan 16 2003], New York time. Opposition leaders Carlos Fernandez (Fedecamaras), Carlos Ortega (CTV), Juan Fernandez and Timoteo Zambrano are also in New York as guests of billionaire Gustavo Cisneros at a Council of the Americas $80 cover charge breakfast meeting tomorrow, Wednesday."
http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=1256

The April 2002 coup by media.
"The conspirators, including Carmona, met at the offices of Venevisión. They stayed until 2am to prepare "the next stage", along with Rafael Poleo (owner of El Nuevo Pais) and Gustavo Cisneros, a key figure in the coup. Cisneros, a multimillionaire of Cuban origin and the owner of Venevisión, runs a media empire - Organización Diego Cisneros. It has 70 outlets in 39 countries (9). Cisneros is a friend of George Bush senior: they play golf together and in 2001 the former US president holidayed in Cisneros's Venezuelan property. Both are keen on the privatisation [theft] of the PDVSA [Venezuelan oil company] (10). Otto Reich, US assistant secretary of state for Interamerican affairs, admits to having spoken with Cisneros that night (11). At 4am on 12 April [2002], to avoid bloodshed, Chávez allowed himself to be arrested and taken to the distant island of Orchila."
-- Maurice Lemoine. Le Monde Diplomatique. August 2002.
http://mondediplo.com/2002/08/10venezuela and
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/12/1551768.php and
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=20&ItemID=2321

The vast majority of Venezuelans are poor or poor lower middle class.

"The average annual salary of these 22 'strike' leaders is $426,000 U.S. dollars a year; almost 100 times the per capita income of the average Venezuelan citizen of $4,760 dollars per year."
-- Al Giordano of NarcoNews.com - December 22 2002.
http://www.narconews.com/Issue26/article571.html

"When the captain of the Pilin Leon first dropped anchor, he was expressing his solidarity with the anti-government strike in Caracas. But the tanker's crew were opposed to the strike and their captain's piratical action. When the marines boarded, on the orders of the embattled president Hugo Chavez, only the captain needed to be replaced. ... The trump card of the opposition, in April as in December, has been the state-owned oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela, often described as the fifth largest oil exporter in the world, and an important supplier to the US. Nationalised more than 25 years ago, it has been run over the years for the exclusive benefit of its employees and managers - its profits being invested everywhere except Venezuela. Before the arrival of Chavez, it was being prepared for privatisation, to the satisfaction of the engineers and directors who would have benefited. But with a block placed on privatisation by the new Venezuelan constitution, the company's middle class and prosperous elite has been happy to be used as a shock weapon by the leaders of the Pinochet-style opposition, and they have tried to bring their entire industry to a halt."
-- The Guardian, Dec 10 2002. Richard Gott: Racist rage of the Caracas elite.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,857027,00.html

"They also said that some banks are forcing their own employees to sign for 'el paro' ... that if they don't sign they'll be fired ... they mentioned that they will give interviews on this matter today (January 9, 2003) at the location of one of the banks that is using this scare tactic."
http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=1029

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