Solidarity, Winter 2013

Page 1

Solidarity

Issue Eight, Winter 2013 Contents

Workers in New Zealand helping workers overseas

Page 1 Railway workers project on track 800 Tamil workers organised

The Newsletter of the Unions Aotearoa International Development Trust

Railway workers project on track Although unions are registering in Myanmar at a rapid rate (there are now more than 515 unions), most of their leaders are very young and have little knowledge about unions or how to organise effectively. UnionAID is funding a six month pilot to assist the Myanmar Railways union leaders to recruit and organise as many of the 20,000 employees as possible. The project will be managed by Federation of Trade Unions Burma (FTUB) Human Rights Secretary, Min Lwin. He has just returned from Mae Sot on the Thai border where he has spent the last 24 years in exile. Our vocational training proposal in Dawei was unsuccessful in attracting government funding so this will be the focus of our efforts in Burma instead.

Railway worker unionists at launch of UnionAID project

Page 2 Tamil Nadu Economic Development Project meets objectives and more Radical changes at FTUB preschool Page 3 FTUB Occupational Training Centre a model for others Parami School leavers to learn trade skills Page 4 No word on the Burma Young Community Leaders Programme (BYCLP)

Sri Lanka project

800 Tamil workers organised Union membership is now 100 percent in two of the five factories organised under the UnionAID Sri Lankan partnership project with the Free Trade Zones and General Services Employees Union (FTZGSE). When the civil war in Sri Lanka ended, garment factories were set up in the north and east of the country to take advantage of the cheap labour and in response to the government’s

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intention to establish Free Trade Zones there. Under our project, a branch office has been established and two organisers, Ms Sody and Mr Ramachandran, appointed. Their success in managing unlawful dismissals or termination of jobs, failure to pay wages or overtime, and ethnic discrimination, has seen a rapid growth in union membership among the mainly female workforce.

You can help vulnerable workers in developing countries in our region get a fairer deal by making a small monthly donation by direct debit by emailing admin@unionaid.org.nz with your contact details. We will then contact you and make the arrangements. Unions Aotearoa International Development Trust is a registered charity - Reg. No.CC40251

unionaid.org.nz


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