Source:
International Campaign for Human Rights
in Iran
Denial of Workers Rights a Pillar of
Government’s Policy of Repression
(9 November 2009) Four leaders of the
Syndicate of Workers of Haft Tapeh Sugar Cane Company (Syndikaa e Kargaran
e Karkhaneh Neyshekar), including Fereydoun Nikoufard, Jalil Ahmadi, Ghorban
Alipour and Mohammad Haydari have been summoned by intelligence officials and
arrested to begin serving prison terms, and are being held in Dezful prison, the
International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said today. Ali Nejati,
the president of the Syndicate, is expecting to be arrested at any
time.
“These
sentences and arrests are emblematic of the Islamic Republic’s denial of basic
workers rights in violation of Iran’s obligations as a member of the
International Labor Organization (ILO),” said Hadi Ghaemi, a spokesperson for
the Campaign.
“The denial of worker’s rights is a pillar of the
government’s policy of repression,” he said.
The Syndicate of Workers of Haft Tapeh Sugar
Cane Company was established in 2008 in Khuzestan province, and has nearly
5000 members. The union has been recognized internationally by the International
Union of Food Workers.
The Haft Tapeh Sugar Cane Company has
been one of the largest agricultural complexes in Iran, producing enough sugar
for domestic consumption. In recent years though, its workers were threatened
with the loss of their jobs as the company faced privatization and bankruptcy,
reportedly as a result of political decisions that exposed the company to
competition from imports.
On 24
October 2009, the Syndicate appealed to the ILO for help regarding the
persecution of their union and violations of ILO conventions 87 and 98. They
detailed their peaceful efforts to protest their unpaid wages, which was met
with no positive responses, and their subsequent formation in October 2008 of
the Syndicate, which they hold to be a legal entity based on Iran’s
obligations as a member of the ILO. The letter protests the fining and
sentencing of the leaders of the union and challenges the ILO to take action in
their defense.
“Neither the workers and people of Iran, nor the
international community, can accept that workers in Iran have no right to
organize independent labor unions, which is a basic human right. Such
persecutions can only increase social unrest in Iran and the isolation of the
Islamic Republic from the international community,” Ghaemi said.
The International Campaign for Human Rights
in Iran reminds that Mansour Osanloo and Ebrahim Maddadi, labor leaders
from Tehran Bus Company Union, as well as Farzad Kamangar, Hashem Khastar,
Rasoul Bodaghi and Jafar Ebrahimi from the teacher’s trade unions remain in jail
simply for their trade union organizing work, which is protected by
international human rights law.
The Campaign calls the authorities to
drop all charges against the trade unionists and release them along with all the
detainees who were arrested simply for exercising their rights to free
expression and free assembly.
... Payvand News - 11/10/09 ... --
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