Iran: democracy struggle continues
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January 19, 2010 -- Labor Notes -- Iran has seen incredible tumult in the last few months, with massive street protests challenging the government, even as the US and allied nations continue to threaten the Iranian government under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
But most people in the US know little about Iranian society, and especially its working class. Iranian workers have been organising for more than a century but today largely have to function in a secretive, underground way. It is therefore very fortunate that we have obtained an interview with a labour organiser (whom we shall call Homayoun Poorzad), who is based in Tehran, the capital city of Iran.
Labor Notes: How has the Iranian labour movement fared under the Ahmadinejad regime?
Homayoun Poorzad: This has been the most anti-labour government of the Islamic Republic over the last 30 years. The 1979 revolution was not regressive in every sense; it nationalised 70 per cent of the economy and passed a labour law that was one of the best in terms of limiting the firing of workers. This is a target for change by capitalists, both private and those in the government bureaucracy.
The economic crisis has helped Ahmadinejad ram through a new agenda. This is also aided by the acceleration of the percentage (60 per cent to 70 per cent) of the workforce who are temporary contract workers.
Iran, like other countries, has had an import mania—from food to capital goods. Many local firms are being driven to bankruptcy. Workers’ bargaining power has suffered, with labour supply far outstripping demand. The Ahmadinejad government has been “bailing out” firms, but the government is running out of money.
The situation for labour is at its lowest status since the start of the 20th century, leaving out the years of the two world wars.
What government actions have led to tensions with Iranian workers?
The Ahmadinejad government is trying to make it easier to fire workers. There have also been massive privatisations, including turning over many firms to the Revolutionary Guards and the armed forces. Again, this has intensified the pushing of more workers into temporary contracts.
In addition, there is a “subsidies reform law” that is imminent. Previously, the government has provided the equivalent of billions of dollars to subsidise utilities, transportation, gasoline, heating oil, electricity and water—for both individuals and factories. What people pay is as little as 5 per cent to 18 per cent of the actual costs. Two years ago gasoline was about 40 cents a gallon. This bill would double or triple costs in a few months and eliminate many subsidies over a period of five years.
This will have a double effect: it will lead to massive inflation, but the main damage will be that when factories’ costs increase, it will lead to massive layoffs. We believe this will spark huge labour actions, in somewhere between three months to a year.
How does this situation relate to past developments with workers’ struggles and rights in Iran?
There have been major reductions in labour actions in the last five or six years. Most workers can't afford to strike, and temporary contract workers have virtually no rights. Full-time workers can engage in peaceful protests, according to the Iranian constitution, around working conditions or being paid on time. That leaves more than 8 million workers prevented from organising themselves. Six years ago, under former president Mohammad Khatami, the situation was better. International Labor Organization (ILO) covenants were signed, which provided some freedom to organise, combined with some encouragement by certain government spokespeople.
It must be said that since the Islamic Revolution, it has been harder in many ways for workers to organise than even under the Shah.
After 1979, there were workers councils (these were politicised organisations). But after 1982, they were expelled and replaced by the Islamic Workers Councils. They pushed the politics of the regime and stymied independent labour action, but they did defend some workers. They have an umbrella organisation called the Workers House, which has a newspaper and is represented in the Iranian parliament. In order to maintain its base, it has opposed changes in the labour law, and its representative was the only outspoken opponent of the new subsidies cutbacks legislation.
The older workers of the earlier revolutionary period are still respected by younger workers and in that way exert an indirect influence on labour activism.
What sectors of the workforce are active?
The main sectors of the workforce in Iran are in oil and gas, followed by automobiles, steel, textiles and mining. There are over a dozen nuclei of unions underground and 10 or 11 sectors of the workforce involved, despite the fact there are many less labour actions than 10 years ago.
The best example of recent labour activism is the bus drivers' union in Tehran. They have set up workshops and classes on organising, the history of the labour movement, and legal and constitutional rights for workers. In a work stoppage around wages and working conditions not long ago, they brought Tehran, a major city, to a halt. Even the baseej [the Islamic paramilitary assigned to communities and worksites, at the centre of the recent repression] were sympathetic to their strike; the mayor of Tehran addressed more than 10,000 of their members.
After a second strike, the union was banned and the security police arrested their leaders, including Mansoo Osanhoo. [After last May 1, other Iranian labour leaders were also arrested--see the US Labor Against the War website.] More than 40 of their leaders were fired and some are still unemployed. The government started privatisation; over half the buses are now “owned” by individual drivers. There has also been an attempt to co-opt the bus drivers with some small benefits and pay raises.
The other important union involves the sugar-cane workers. They are active in an area near the oil fields and have massive (over 90 per cent) support of these agricultural workers and their families. After petitioning for work improvements and meeting with bureaucrats, which led nowhere, they took direct action and blocked a freeway. They have been involved in a three-year struggle.
What has been the role of workers in the recent post-election protests? How do workers view the election of Ahmadinejad?
Some people in the US saw Ahmadinejad as a populist; but workers are not fooled; they know it is a police state, with a right-wing ideology. He has a base in small towns and rural areas amongst the poor. The regime gives handouts of money and coupons to such people before the elections.
The recent protests are often portrayed as just a middle-class movement, but workers are in support of the Green Wave actions. The protests are centred in Tehran, especially in the northern part of the city, which is more middle class. There are less agents there of the regime, like the baseej, so people are not so easily identified. That is the second reason there are not many workers currently out on the streets in these protests. If they are arrested, they would lose their jobs and starve; middle-class demonstrators don't face starvation as a result of their activities.
Overall, there is an ongoing danger from a core of religious radicals, especially the baseej, who believe that by imprisoning and torturing those opposing the Islamic state, they are gaining access to paradise.
The labour movement does not identify with any political faction in the current struggle, but once the labour movement becomes strong, it can effect an overall change in policies, including at the international level. We could stop people such as Ahmadinejad from making such an outrageous speech in the UN about the Holocaust.
What is the Ahmadinejad regime's agenda in this crisis?
First, the whole regime supports an IMF-type structural adjustment [which usually includes privatisation, deregulation and government cuts to education, public health and social safety nets].
Second, the government is desperate, facing a possible US or Israeli attack, and is seeking funds for its political agenda. They are sensitive to other oil producers (and their unions), but any outside intervention (even more sanctions, which we believe are not now helpful) will allow them to label any Iranian labour activists as agents of foreign powers.
Third, there will be major layoffs, which would be aggravated by sanctions as well as government policies, which can lead to huge labour actions, especially among industrial workers.
It is a unique opportunity to go on the offensive and push the government.
The current regime desperately wishes to join the World Trade Organization, which requires meeting certain ILO guidelines. Therefore, union members and leaders in the West can pressure their national and international federations to demand union organising rights in Iran as well as freeing imprisoned labour leaders. Hopefully, there could be a delegation sent by such federations to Iran and perhaps a committee of trade unions to demand such rights.
[Bill Balderston is from the Oakland Education Association and US Labor Against the War. The Network of Iranian Labor Unions can be reached at niluinfo@gmail.com and a new website, Iranlaborreport.com. This interview first appeared at Labor Notes, a US-based magazine for trade union activists.]
Network of Iranian Labor Unions (NILU)
Iran Labor Report -- There is a fiction going about in some progressive circles around the world according to which Ahmadinejad is a great nationalist crusader, that he is a champion of the poor and that he is a man of the people. This is certainly shocking to the ears of most Iranians (including many Iranian workers) who consider their president to be a demagogue and a petty dictator. Let’s look at the facts in detail:
Subsidies Rationalisation Plan. The government’s Economic Reform Plan first introduced in March 2008 followed up by the Doctor-Jekyll-like Subsidies Rationalisation Plan is a carbon copy of the IMF prescriptions for neoliberal restructuring. Its centrepiece is the wholesale axing of national subsidies within five years starting from January 2009.
One of the few victories of Iranian working class from the 1979 revolution has been the constitutionally guaranteed right of the Iranian people to make free use of billions of dollars in assistance provided in the form of state subsidies. Gasoline users, bakeries, city bus commuters and consumers of public utilities are among the tens of millions of people who have benefited to one degree or other from this policy.
For instance, bus commuters in urban areas pay only about a tenth of the fares they would have otherwise paid. Gasoline is only 40 cents per litre. Cooking gas is a fifth of its so-called market rate.
It is important to note that these benefits were not a result of an act of generosity or some kind of government largess but an achievement wrought by the sacrifice and blood of millions of Iranians. It is now all coming to an end. Ahmadinejad's government has brazenly set about ending this 30-year arrangement with a fanatical zeal. Starting this January, subsidies will be cut in large increments. In this, the government is supported by the majority of the country’s ruling factions who expect to grab various chunks of the bonanza. (Significantly, opposition figure Mir Hossein Mousavi has sharply criticised the plan as ill advised and misguided.)
There is nothing novel or redeeming about the Subsidies Rationalisation Plan. Ahmadinejad’s price liberalisation scheme is nothing but a regurgitated version of the infamous shock therapy treatment devised by the late Milton Friedman of the University of Chicago fame. It was first applied in Chile in the late 1970s and later in east and central Europe with devastating effect for the poor and working classes.
Privatisation. Ahamdinejad has dutifully signed on to the so-called Amendment to Article 44 of the Constitution, which envisions the wholesale dismantling of the public sector and its handover to crony capitalists.
According to the government’s own 2008 statistics, one third of the state assets have already been privatised (US$37 billion out of $110 billion) of which 78% occurred under the Ahmadinejad administration. This too is a carbon copy of the IMF model for structural adjustment. In fact, despite abundant national resources, Ahmadinejad is eager to have Iran join the World Trade Organization at the earliest possible date. Too bad the WTO has only allowed his government observer status!
The only difference between privatisation in Iran and privatisation in the rest of the world is that it is not really the private sector that ends up with the public enterprises in question. Rather, it is the Revolutionary Guards Corps of Iran (RGCI) and its sundry subsidiaries—followed by less powerful players—that have grabbed the prized state assets. It would be a real stretch of imagination to call these RGCI-controlled entities as Iran’s private sector. In the last year alone, tens of billions of dollars in state assets were handed out to the RGCI in no-bid, below-market-price sweet deals. For example, last October, in the stock market’s largest transaction ever, an $8 billion purchase was made of the country’s telecommunication industry in a sweet deal that is costing the RGCI next to nothing.
In other words, the Iranian people are getting the worst of both worlds! They are gradually losing their public ownership rights while a small clique of hard-line military men and militocrats with absolutely no managerial or technical skills are calling themselves the new masters of the country. Already, many fraudulently “privatised” firms are being run to the ground or cannibalised of choice assets thanks to the inexperience, greed and venality of the RGCI.
Income redistribution. Much has been made of Ahmadi’s pseudo-leftist Robin Hood-style rhetoric to steal from the rich and give it to the poor. The last four years have seen, thanks to the huge oil income windfall, possibly the largest-ever budget increase in Iran’s 2500-year history; yet, all that Ahmadinejad and his defenders have to show for are the so-called Justice Shares; small salary increases for selected groups; and some paltry micro-credits for low- or middle-income families.
The much-touted Justice Shares have an uncanny resemblance to the voucher privatisation scheme that was practiced in Russia during the 1990s. The plan led to the destruction of the state sector and the accumulation of power and wealth in the hand of mafia oligarchs.
As for the salary increases, the 2007-2008 inflation rates of 36% and 33% swept away whatever income boost the government had promised to prospective voting blocs. As for micro-credits, according to the minister of trade, 56% of the micro-credit allocations “failed to reach their goals” with the majority given out to favoured individuals.
In short, as far as Iran’s working people are concerned, Ahmadi’s economic performance is at best poor and probably abysmal. But what of his social and political policy?
Social Policy. Since coming to power in 2005, Ahmadinejad has once again unleashed the loathsome religious "vice squads" on the population of the urban areas. In the last four years, hundreds of thousands of young people, particularly young women, have been subjected to searches, arrest and humiliating behaviour for such innocuous infractions as wearing boots in winter. Ahmadinejad has also closed down 48 newspapers and magazines; rolled back the limited social and cultural freedoms won in the old administration and generally allied himself with the most retrograde social forces in the country—possibly in the world—such as the fire-breathing ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi. The budget for the arts have been cut by 62% while that of the hard-line religious centres have increased exponentially.
Women, particularly working-class women, have seen their status eroded or under severe attack. For example, in 2007 the government introduced a bill on the floor of the parliament called the Family Protection Act which nullified a woman’s legal right to be notified of her husbands’ intention to seek a second wife and to annul it once it has occurred. In the end, Iranian parliament members, no doubt fearing a backlash from their own wives and daughters, voted the disgraceful bill down. But they didn’t veto another bill which made it obligatory for female civil servants to refuse overtime work and pay on the grounds that “women’s true place was at home”.
Democratisation. To our knowledge, Mr. Ahmadinejad has never had the pretense of being a democrat and we would certainly not want to contradict him on that score.
Anti-imperialism. It is a grave mistake to brand anyone who rails against the United States as an anti-imperialist. If that were the case, Osama Bin Laden and his murderous followers would have been the greatest anti-imperialists the world has ever seen. Ahamdinejad’s anti-Americanism is fueled by a desire to become the region’s new hegemon and nothing else. Iran’s working classes have no interest whatsoever in seeing their rulers exploit other nations’ peoples and resources.
By Sholeh Irani
January 16, 2010
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2010/822
Ashura, or mourning days for Shia Muslims, has deep historical roots in Iran. Mourning occurs through processions, passion plays and other such ceremonies dating back to pre-Islamic Iran.
In 1978, the Ashura days proved decisive in overthrowing the dictatorship of the US-backed Shah.
Ashura ceremonies gave the opposition a chance to gather in their thousands in 1978-79. The Shah’s police respected the holy Ashura and did not brutalise the protests.
However, that is not the case under the current regime.
Bloody Ashura
During the last days of December, the people of Iran shed their fears and took to the streets to demonstrate under the slogan “Down with supreme leader”. Riot police and pro-regime militias attacked them.
The protesters — including the young and old, workers and students — fought back. They threw stones and set garbage on fire, causing the police to run.
There was no international media presence and internet coverage was limited. The video clips that did reach YouTube surprised all and sundry.
Such scenes of people fighting the regime without fear have not been seen on Iranian streets since the 1979 revolution.
The regime hit back. At least 15 people were shot dead, among them the nephew of Mir Hussein Mousavi, the “reformist” candidate widely believed to have won the June presidential elections.
The regime’s answer was the mass arrest of protesters and political activists all over the country.
Since December 27, many people have been arrested from their homes. Gatherings of more than five people have been banned. The streets have been taken over by armed soldiers and military trucks.
The regime’s radio and TV stations began hectic propaganda against the resistance, declaring the protesters “foreign agents”.
Some members of parliament signed a letter demanding a state of emergency be declared so that all those found guilty of “war against Allah” could be hanged within five days of the verdict.
In reply, students at many big universities went on strike, boycotting classes and refusing to take exams. News of workers’ strikes have emerged and a proposal for a general strike is being discussed.
Opposition forces have hailed the people’s rediscovered confidence. Many commentators in the Iranian media have declared the “time of disempowerment is over”.
At the same time, a debate has started over “protester violence”. The radical wing of the movement argued it is not violent for the masses to defend themselves from attack.
The reformists and some from the liberal left, however, have argued that to avoid further state repression, it is necessary to apply the brakes on the mass movement.
Sahabi, a famous liberal known for years of opposition to the regime, wrote an open letter to exiled Iranians and asked them not to urge violent means of opposing the regime in protests. He warned of dangers from both the extreme left and right raising the level of tension between the religious and secular forces opposing the regime.
Mousavi’s compromise formula
Mousavi has presented a five-point plan for the movement. He argued that he was a supporter of the masses, not a leader. He pointed out that it was not him that urged people to take to the streets during Ashura, but rather a spontaneous people’s initiative.
At the same time, his statement expressed strong concern for Iran’s “Islamic order” and security.
His five points were: the state should be answerable to people and other institutions; electoral laws should be democratised; political prisoners should be freed; there should be freedom of expression in the media; and people should have the right to freedom of association and political organisation.
Mousavi’s proposals are being hotly debated by the regime as well as the opposition. Some in the regime welcomed them as a potential compromise formula.
The opposition has divided into two camps. The radical left, as well as many in the reform movement (religious as well as secular), have deemed the proposal an attempt to save the regime from the people’s rage. Many described it as an attempt to impede the revolution started spontaneously by the masses.
In general, reformists and the liberal left have welcomed the plan as the only way to avoid violence and chaos.
Some on the liberal left have argued that the process has unfolded so fast that, with the regime fearing for its life, a bloodbath could be the result. They think Mousavi’s initiative could lead to an “unhurried change”.
The counter-argument is that a lull in protests would weaken the people and strengthen the repression. The radical left has argued the more the people raise their voices, the stronger they become. They say the more people take to the streets, the less support there is for the regime
The Ahmedinejad regime has officially rejected Mousavi’s proposals, but opponents have said the split in the regime has widened as a result.
In the meantime, the regime continues arresting activists, who are receiving longer jail terms than in the past.
[Abridged from Swedish socialist publication Internationalen. Translated for Green Left Weekly by Farooq Sulehria.]
From: International News, Green Left Weekly issue #822 20 January 2010.