The International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) has intervened in the emerging industrial dispute between Patrick Stevedores and the Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) to remind Patrick, a number of international shipping companies, and even the Australian government, that they are undermining the human rights of the port workers to collectively bargain for a fair industrial agreement.
30 Sep 2020
https://www.itfglobal.org/en/news/australian-wharfies-rights-must-be-respected-itf
Patrick
should accept MUA ‘olive branch’ and end conflict
ITF General Secretary Stephen
Cotton said the global union federation was increasingly concerned at the
rhetoric emanating from of the Australian government, as Prime Minister Scott
Morrison this week threatened to send troops to break the port workers’ legal
industrial action and deny them their rights under Australian legislation and
international law.
“We have a situation where these dock workers have followed
the letter of the law. They have worked round-the-clock to keep supply chains
flowing during this pandemic and keep shelves stocked. Now it comes time for
these workers to stand up to stop their employer’s deep cuts to their workplace
conditions, and they have their own government piling on against them, frankly,
in an hysterical and anti-democratic manner.”
"As I understand it, the MUA has not once, but three
times now, offered to roll over the existing agreement to avoid unnecessary
conflict at a difficult time for Australia and the world,” said Cotton.
Cotton said the MUA had worked hard to ensure the dispute
did not adversely affect the Australian people, “the same people that these
dockers have proudly kept supplied through the pandemic”. On 2 September 2020,
the MUA wrote to Patrick requesting measures to ensure medical supplies could
make it through any protected industrial action.
“More than a fortnight ago, the MUA offered to suspend all
industrial action at Patrick terminals if the company would suspend its
attempts to strip away existing workplace conditions and resume meaningful
negotiations. The company rejected this offer.”
“It is clear to international observers that while the MUA
is extending olive branches, Patrick Stevedores and their allies in the
Morrison government are intent on escalating this conflict as part of Patrick’s
plot to slash the wages and conditions of these essential workers.”
“It appears that Patrick Stevedores is attempting to
manufacture a crisis at Port Botany, so that the company can advance its plans
to slash 30 pages of workplace conditions.”
“This dispute carries the long shadow of the 1998 Waterfront
Dispute when a previous Liberal Party government supported the covert training
of a strike-breaking workforce and Liberal ministers used their platforms to
demonise dockers and their families.”
"Let us be extremely clear: the international union
movement will not idly stand by and allow a repeat of what was attempted in
1998. We will use all our global strength and extensive networks to defend the
rights of these Australian workers, even if the Australian government will
not,” said Cotton.
Global
shipping lines put on notice
ITF Maritime Coordinator Jacqueline Smith said the ITF would be having conversations with at
least two major international shipping companies whom the federation believes
have involved themselves in the dispute on the side of the port company.
“We understand that ships have been needlessly diverted
from Botany to other Australian ports, despite there not being any industrial
action taking place intended to slow down or stop cargo,” said Smith.
“There is a risk that these companies could create the false impression that the dockers of Port Botany are somehow responsible for the companies’ decisions to divert their ships. The dockers are not responsible.”
“We encourage all companies in the maritime sector to
uphold workers’ fundamental rights to collectively bargain and defend their
hard-fought workplace conditions: on and off the water. Conduct by shipping
companies which suggests that they may be supporting one side or the other
undermines the reputation of these companies in a significant and irreparable
way,” said Smith.
Dockers
solidarity to stop ‘virus-like’ pay cuts from spreading
ITF Dockers’ Section Coordinator, Enrico Tortolano, said that dockers’ unions across the world were
now getting prepared to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the MUA.
“The ITF Dockers’ family throughout the world will do
everything we can to prevent an industrial hatchet job on our Port Botany
sisters and brothers,” said Tortolano.
“It is very telling that Patrick Stevedores have so far
been unwilling to roll over the existing contract and instead are demanding big
cuts to the workers’ conditions.”
“For the best part of a century, dock workers have been the
front line of bringing all working people better wages and conditions. It seems
now, in the midst of this pandemic, that dockers are once more asked to hold
the line and stop wage and condition cuts from spreading like a virus through
society,” said Tortolano.
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий