Kõigil Töötajatel on Õigus olla esindatud Ametiühingu poolt!

Kõigil Töötajatel on Õigus olla esindatud Ametiühingu poolt!
У всех Работников есть Право быть представленными Профсоюзом!

понедельник, 2 апреля 2012 г.

ITF welcomes ‘common sense’ decision in Ports of Auckland dispute

ITF welcomes ‘common sense’ decision in Ports of Auckland dispute

30 March 2012

Global union the ITF (International Transport Workers’ Federation) is welcoming the news that wharfies in the Ports of Auckland are able to return to work after a lockout notice issued by port management was withdrawn.

Following hearings in the Employment Court on Friday, Ports of Auckland Limited (POAL) committed to returning to negotiations with the Maritime Union of New Zealand (MUNZ) and halting proposals to contract out stevedoring work, plans which would have seen 300 workers made redundant.

Reacting to the news, ITF president Paddy Crumlin who is also chair of the ITF dockers section, said: “This is a victory for common sense. It reinforces the fact that these 1998 Patrick-style assaults on workers’ rights and organised labour won’t be successful. It reminds everyone in the stevedoring and maritime industry that the only way forward is to negotiate in good faith for a collective agreement. Dockworkers of the world unite in a crisis and they won’t allow this sort of behavior from militant employers to prevail.”

He continued: “It’s a victory for the workers who have refused to cave in to the unscrupulous plans from POAL management to lockout the workforce and contract out labour on the ports. It’s a victory for MUNZ, the MUA and dockworkers around the world who have refused to bow to POAL’s demands and the ITF who have kept a close watch on the dispute.”

Despite welcoming today’s decision from POAL, the ITF was concerned to note a statement released by POAL CEO Tony Gibson, which questioned the productivity of MUNZ workers.

ITF dockers’ section secretary Frank Leys said: “This statement just hours after the decision to go back to the negotiating table was announced shows bad faith on Mr. Gibson’s part. It also emphasises the point that whilst we are celebrating this victory, we have won the battle not the war. The ITF and the international trade union community will remain vigilant over this dispute until the ink is dry on a fair and substantive collective agreement for Auckland workers.”

Leys went on to highlight the role of international solidarity in bringing about this u-turn decision: “This dispute has reached beyond the borders of the docking industry. There’s been action and support from seafarers, aviation workers, truck drivers, railway staff. This is about mass casualisation, the contracting out of an entire workforce, and it struck a chord with workers all over the world who are fighting every day to protect their jobs. International solidarity from union rank and file, the people on the ground who are doing the work which keeps our world moving, they got behind the workers here in Auckland and that’s played a huge part in securing this victory. It’s a giant step for the trade union movement, not just in New Zealand, but around the world as well.”


ENDS

For more information contact ITF press officer, Sam Dawson.
Direct line: + 44 (0)20 7940 9260

International Transport Workers' Federation - ITF:
HEAD OFFICE
ITF House, 49 - 60 Borough Road, London SE1 1DS
Tel: + 44 (0) 20 7403 2733
Fax: + 44 (0) 20 7375 7871

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