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| Montes de Oca said that Mexico's President Felipe Calderon is trying to exterminate the SME union, privatize the electrical industry, and control the media.
(Gail Ryall) |
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SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Humberto Montes de Oca, interior secretary of
the Mexican Electricians' Union (Sindicato Mexicano de Electristras -
SME), was on his way to Washington, he told a meeting here recently.
His mission: to lodge a complaint with NAFTA authorities against the
Mexican government for labor violations.
He said he would also be asking the AFL-CIO for solidarity actions
and monetary support. Several central labor councils and the Service
Employees International Union (SEIU) have already agreed to help the
Mexican union.
Montes de Oca spoke here to an audience of mainly Latino union and
community activists, at a meeting sponsored by the Sacramento chapter
of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA) on January
24.
Standing in front of a banner reading "Derecho de no emigrar"
("Right not to emigrate") and speaking in Spanish with a translator,
Montes de Oca said that Mexico's President Felipe Calderon is trying to
exterminate the SME union, privatize the electrical industry, and
control the media.
He described how Mexico's federal police and army had attacked the
union-built and nationally owned electrical facility and violently
removed union workers on October 10, 2009.
Subsequently 44,000 workers were fired and replaced with non-union
employees, although Calderon does not have the constitutional authority
either to extinguish a public entity or to fire state workers.
At the same time, taxes were raised, subsidies for small electrical
consumers withdrawn, the minimum wage decreased and prices for basic
needs increased 30 percent.
SME filed a lawsuit over the illegal attack and decree, but a Mexican court rejected it..
Meanwhile, 18,000 workers continue to resist the decree, although
they have not been paid in 100 days. The government took over the
assets of the SME, which is now in financial crisis and cannot pay its
bills or its staff.
SME, Montes de Oca said, was formed in 1914, and is the only union
in Mexico which is not tied to any political party or government and in
which leaders are elected by secret ballot.
People's World