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Posts Tagged ‘SME’

Primer III: Sindicate Mexicano de Electricitas, source

Posted by N. A. Jones on February 2, 2010

El Correo Ilustrado: Unemployment real and imaginary

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Posteado el: 02-02-2010 | Por : Che | En : Comunicados Oficiales SME , Noticias Mexico Posted on: 02/02/2010 | By: Che | In: Press Officers SME, Mexico News

Dos declaraciones oficiales hubo ayer que pierden veracidad frente a la realidad. Two official statements yesterday were losing accuracy versus reality. La de Felipe Calderón en Japón, quien presume su política para derrotar al crimen organizado, cuando en México las matanzas son a diario y enero fue el mes que marcó record de homicidios en décadas. The Japan of Felipe Calderón, who assumed his policy to defeat organized crime in Mexico if the killings are a daily and January was the month that marked record for homicides in decades.

La otra declaración, aún más irreal, es de Javier Lozano: promete que la reforma laboral es para abatir el desempleo en México. The other statement, even more unreal is Javier Lozano: promises that labor reform is to reduce unemployment in Mexico. Sin darse cuenta de que tres gobiernos –Salinas, Zedillo y Fox– repitieron esa promesa hasta el cansancio. Not realizing that three government-Salinas, Zedillo and Fox, “repeated ad nauseam that promise.

Los tres ignoraron el brutal fracaso –en los años 90, del siglo pasado– de los gobiernos neoliberales en América Latina al aplicar ese modelo de reforma laboral, recomendado por el Banco Mundial y el Consenso de Washington. The three ignored the brutal failure-in the 90s, the last century of neoliberal governments in Latin America to apply this model on labor reform, recommended by the World Bank and the Washington Consensus.

Y una afirmación más: no fueron 700 mil empleos, “sólo se perdieron 181 mil 271 puestos en este año”. And one more affirmation: there were 700 thousand jobs, “only 181 thousand 271 jobs lost this year.” Esa declaración parece de un infante jugando con números del Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS), porque el señor Lozano imagina que sabemos de la realidad lo mismo que él. That statement appears in an infant playing with numbers from the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS), because Mr. Lozano imagine that we know of reality as he did. El lunes en La Jornada, David Márquez señaló: “Para dar una idea más precisa de la magnitud real del déficit en el empleo, comparamos el aumento de la PEA (población económicamente activa) con el aumento de asegurados en el IMSS (empleo formal). On Monday in La Jornada, David Marquez said, “To give a clearer idea of the magnitude of the shortfall in employment, we compare the increase in the EAP (economically active population) with the increase of insured in the IMSS (formal employment) . Tomando las cifras promedio del tercer trimestre de 2005 (año en que el Inegi inició la Encuesta de Ocupación y Empleo, ENOE) y del tercer trimestre de 2009 (la más reciente), en esos cuatro años las personas aseguradas en el IMSS aumentaron en 921 mil 857, pero la PEA aumentó en 3 millones 772 personas, según el Inegi, lo cual significa que 2 millones de personas que se incorporaron a la PEA no obtuvieron un empleo formal”. Taking the average figures for the third quarter of 2005 (year that began Inegi Occupation and Employment Survey, ENOE) and the third quarter of 2009 (the latest), in those four years for persons insured in the IMSS increased in 921 mil 857, but increased by 3 million PEA 772 people, according to INEGI, which means that 2 million people joined the PEA did not get formal employment. Ése es el desempleo real, no el imaginado. That is the real unemployment, not imagined.

Llamamos a la sociedad y los trabajadores a rechazar más mentiras oficiales. We called the company and employees to refuse more official lies.

Foro Permanente Contra la Reforma Laboral, Manuel Fuentes, Fernando Amezcua, Sergio Espinal, Benito Bahena, Eduardo Miranda y 35 firmas más. Permanent Forum Against Labor Reform, Manuel Fuentes, Fernando Amezcua, Sergio Espinal, Benito Bahena, Eduardo Miranda and 35 signatures.

Via: La Jornada Via: La Jornada

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Posted on: 02/02/2010 | By: SME | In: Press Officers EMS, Plan of Action

Martes 2 de Febrero Tuesday, 2 February

10:00 hrs Concentracion en el Campamento del Zocalo 10:00 hrs Concentration Camp del Zocalo

Jueves 4 de Febrero Thursday, 4 February

17:00 hrs Asamblea General extraordinaria 17:00 hrs Extraordinary General Assembly
Ubicacion : Insurgentes #98 Location: Insurgentes # 98

IMPORTANTE: Buscar a su representacion en el planton del zocalo para verificar y firmar el documento de peticion de pago de Aguinaldo. IMPORTANT: Find your representation at the encampment of the socket to verify and sign the document request for payment of Aguinaldo. Fecha limite 4 de Febrero Date Limited 4 February

Lunes 1 de Marzo Monday, March 1

Foro: La guerra de exterminio del Gobierno Federal en contra el SME Forum: The war of extermination against the Federal Government against the EMS
Ubicacion: Casa Lamm Location: Casa Lamm

Posted in Primer Series | Tagged: | Comments Off on Primer III: Sindicate Mexicano de Electricitas, source

The Daily Bath

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 6, 2009

Coming clean on the matter….

Re: Primer 3: Sindicato Mexicano de Electricisdad

Think in term of the U.S.A.’s economy and energy being the prime drive of Obama’s green rhetoric. The last two winters had everybody clamouring for bank loans to pay the electricity bills. I doubt if many heed the call to insulate the home and learn to wear more sweaters and socks from November to March. When you finally hear from your local news that the current electricity grid can not support the current need, maybe you’ll start looking at electricians and public utility workers a little cockeyed and swear they are the enemy. I saw mentioned in an article that this is the type of powder keg situation that is expected in the U.S.A. before spring, I am estimating. Read and take a good look. The same socialist slant is the undertone in what President Obama drives in his persuasions.

The dearth, destruction and reorganization of the middle class has us all leaning on expert trade jobs to fuel some of the economy.  Core labour is what it is and what better cross-section of the American public to turn the affairs of domestic state on its head than those who are carrying all the weight.

This is W.H. Tespid passing the Mr. Bubble.

over and out…

Posted in The Daily Bath, Unconventional Solutions, Writing | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

Primer III.4:The Resistance: Their words

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 6, 2009

URGENT: THE SOLIDARITY OF ALL. LET’S SUPPORT THE SME.

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat – View as HTML
o Ignacio del Valle Medina on hunger strike. o The SME, a hindrance for the Dons of power. o We can see, we can see, the power of the SME! MEXICP CITY, DF
www.narconews.com/…/EL-CORTAMORTAJA-84-INGLES%5B1%5D.pdf

Mexico: The Murder of a Union and
the Rebirth of Class Struggle

Richard Roman and Edur Velasco Arregui

The Fightback: From Protest to Rebellion?

The government’s blitzkrieg attack on the SME has failed to destroy the resistance. Rather, the Mexican regime faces the broadest, deepest, and most unified resistance movement in decades. And, as importantly, it is a national resistance movement that is working-class centered – in its leadership, central issues, and symbols. The government has not been able to destroy the SME or the popular resistance. While the fight back has been growing, it does not have the strength to force a quick reversal of the government’s actions. A reversal by the government would stall the neoliberal project, alienate its already restless big business backers, and deepen the regime’s vulnerability. If the SME loses, this 95 year old democratic union will have been “disappeared” along with all the jobs, benefits and rights held by its members and retirees. And every other union or popular movement would know more clearly that its very existence is contingent on the whims and policies of the political elites and big business. There is a “catastrophic equilibrium,” a stalemate without any clear avenue of compromise or of a negotiated way out.

Federal Police

The anger and despair built on decades of massive cuts in real wages as well as to the very limited social net that existed for some sectors is now being intensified by the deep economic crisis of Mexico. The safety valve of jobs in the U.S. for millions of “excess” Mexican workers has been significantly reduced due to the U.S. economic crisis. Remittances which have supported many families and communities in Mexico have sharply declined. As well, the global economic crisis and swine flu have led to a great decline in jobs and income from tourism and Mexican oil income, which provides 40% of the Federal budget, has fallen with the decline in oil prices. And Mexico’s dependence on exports to the U.S. – 80% of Mexico’s exports go to the U.S., much of it as part of an integrated production process of the large corporations – has caused a sharp decline in employment in the maquila sector. Mexico’s decades-long neoliberal restructuring and deliberate depression of wages and working conditions has now been compounded by the sudden and deep global economic crisis.

The depression itself has restructured the labour market downward within Mexico and for Mexicans working abroad. But the big bourgeoisie in Mexico, as throughout the world, is seeking to use the crisis as a rationale for a further radical downward restructuring of the labour market. The Mexican government’s new budget is an austerity budget with massive cuts to public spending and increases in regressive taxation against workers and the popular classes. The fiscal class war became more public when López Obrador and the PRD members of Congress pointed out that the largest corporations in Mexico pay no taxes while the government seeks to impose even more of the tax burden on working people.

There has also been growing anger in communities over frequent blackouts, some that last for days, as a result of the inability of the government to keep the power company functioning without the expertise of workers who had long managed to keep a constantly and deliberately underfunded public utility running. Management and scabs have not been able to keep the power supply flowing and there have been spontaneous protests of various communities at the frequent blackouts. The government has tried to blame these problems on sabotage but all the workplaces are under military and police control.

Community anger is also likely to increase sharply when people begin to experience higher power costs to go along with poorer and less reliable service. The recent federal budget does not include any money for the LyFC nor does it include any extra money for the CFE, (the other public power company), the company that is slated to take over the jurisdiction of the LyFC (probably as a prelude to privatization by stealth or direct privatization). Most of the budget for the LyFC went to subsidize cheap power for consumers and business, with consumers paying only one-third to one-half of the real costs of energy production and distribution. This subsidy has been slyly eliminated along with the LyFC and residential consumers will certainly have to pay higher rates. What business sectors will also have to pay to make up the gap remains to be seen but if past and recent policy is a guide, big business will be spared the burden.

All of these factors – the effects of the deteriorating economy, the anger at regressive taxes, the frustration with frequent power failures in central Mexico, the coming increase in utilities bills, the general inflation of basic goods, and the little legitimacy of the President, are producing propitious conditions for a breakthrough in workers’ militancy. The challenge for the SME and for the movement of popular resistance is to create a viable strategy and program, one that provides understandings, hope, and direction for the growing anger and despair and can offset the systematic attempts of the capitalist media and the state to promote fatalism and individualism.

The SME itself can no longer act simply as a union. There is no path to regaining their collective rights without a change in the correlation of forces at the national level. While the SME is pursuing all forms of legal challenges, there is little optimism that court decisions will prevail in the end. The SME has been forced to become a political movement that, in addition to developing its strategy and tactics with its allies, has to redefine its own identity as an organization/movement. It cannot survive without transforming itself and the government, if not the whole power structure of Mexico.

The attempt of the government and the capitalist class to break the solidarity and combativeness of the SME has failed so far. The malicious and dishonest propaganda campaign against the workers carried out by both government and corporate media, the insistence on the irreversibility of the liquidation, the attempt to play on and sow new divisions in the union, the offering of special bonuses for accepting severance by November 14, the cutting off of medical care, the promise to SME pensioners that their pensions and benefits would not change, have all been in the service of dividing and demoralizing the SME. But the union now has greater solidarity than ever.

The pensioners have denounced the government’s offer and are continuing to battle alongside their SME brothers and sisters. On November 23, eleven female electricistas, some of them mothers, started an open-ended hunger strike outside the CFE headquarters in Mexico City and SME members have also started another hunger strike in Pachuca, Hidalgo. Two-thirds of the members employed at the time of liquidation have filed one or more legal actions against the government. Though around 50% of the workers accepted the severance money, many have said they did so under the coercion of economic hardship as well as threats and have challenged the legality of the whole process. The union has taken a compassionate position toward those who took the payout and many, if not most of them, continue as union members to battle against the whole process. Small farmers have already sent tons of corn, rice and beans to the SME. The PRD (Partido de la Revolución Democrática – Party of the Democratic Revolution) and members of the legislative assembly of the Distrito Federal (core part of Mexico City) have donated funds to the SME. After six weeks of resistance – with no strike fund and with the government having cut off all access to the union’s own funds – the movement is holding solid with growing support from other sectors. The SME union/movement has survived the blitzkrieg attack and is preparing for a long battle.

The SME has often been the organizer and fulcrum of broad fronts of class resistance, such as the Dialogo Nacional, started in 2004. The Dialogo Nacional has been a space for gathering the various forces of the opposition to neoliberalism together – the democratic union movement, popular organizations, and the left – to discuss an alternative vision to that of neoliberalism. It has not been an organizational structure but a once a year space for discussing and articulating a vision and ideas of struggle. It was, as one militant described it, a space with a fever of ideas and programs and a paucity of common organization and action. But the new situation demands more than ever that the national movement of popular resistance transform itself to an effective fighting organization or face annihilation.

The room for talk and symbolic protests has disappeared. The SME and National Front of Popular Resistance must deepen and spread militancy and class consciousness to wider circles of workers and more regions or be defeated. These processes of agitation and organization will necessarily develop unevenly and their outcome is uncertain. But it is essential for any effective challenge to the regime. For while Mexico City and the traditional strongholds of the left have a basis for a “war of maneuver,” for a quick and intense fight-back, the movement of resistance does not have that immediate potential in other areas of the country, most significantly in the key industrial zone of the state of Mexico, still Mexico’s most important industrial zone, and in the other industrial zones, which remain under the joint control of PAN or PRI state governments and charro unions. The systematic attempt by the main television networks, newspapers and the government, to portray the SME workers as privileged, inefficient, selfish and the union as corrupt, have to be overcome. These deliberate attempts to divide and confuse the working class have to be combated ideologically to build working class solidarity. The resistance movement has shown its awareness of this issue by making the two major television networks targets on their November 11 day of protest.

There have now been two national assemblies of popular resistance as well as escalating mass mobilizations involving wide sectors of the population. While workers are at the core of the resistance either through their unions or through currents inside charro unions, there is widespread and active participation from other organizations and sectors – campesino organizations, the APPO (Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca), students, intellectuals, popular movements, segments of “The Other Campaign,” and left parties and groupings. A total of 700 organizations supported the November 11 paro civico nacional (national civic strike).

The November 11 paro civico nacional saw significant actions in at least 22 of Mexico’s 31 states. The strongest actions were in Mexico City and in those surrounding states where the liquidated power company and the SME have a presence. As well, there were strong protests in traditional strongholds of the left where the SME has no presence, e.g. Oaxaca, Michoacán, and Chiapas. The teachers in the states of Oaxaca and Michoacán shut down almost all the schools in both states. These sections of the national teachers union are part of the CNTE (Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de Educación), an organized national alliance of dissident teachers’ groups in the SNTE (the national teachers union), a gangster-charro union with close to 1.5 million members. In Oaxaca, Section 22 of the teachers union and APPO closed down all the facilities of the CFE, the national power company which has a charro union and is being substituted for the LyFC. Many sections of the SNTMM (Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores Mineros, Metalúrgicos y Similares de la República Mexicana), the miners and steelworkers union, shut down workplaces for brief periods. (The SNTMM itself has been severely persecuted by the government and its president is in exile in Canada.) The spread and variety of the actions make it hard to calculate the number of people that participated. The SME estimates that 5 million people participated nationally; a more cautious estimate might be 3 million. Nevertheless, November 11 indicates a greater national extension of the protest movement.

The SME along with the PRD and the López Obrador movement are promoting a mass consumer campaign to refuse payment of electric utility bills. They argue that consumers have no contract with the replacement company, the CFE, though the government has announced that bills will now come from the CFE. This campaign to develop consumer solidarity with the workers could gain great traction as it meshes with the growing anger about blackouts. This campaign unites the workers’ concerns for their jobs and rights with the concerns of consumers, most of them workers themselves, for an adequate and affordable public service. As well it brings together the struggle for union rights with the López Obrador movement against electoral fraud and for the preservation of public ownership of energy.

SME meeting

The resistance has described the November 11 actions as a prelude to a general strike. An effective general strike will have to spread to areas outside the traditional strongholds of the Left to include key industrial locations. Most of these industrial areas are controlled by regime-linked gangster unions, often with protection contracts. An effective general strike would need to penetrate these areas that are walled off by authoritarian state governments and their gangster “union” allies.

The expansion of the movement to industrial sectors of the working class and other regions is as difficult as it is necessary. It will not be an easy or quick effort. It will take a daring political strategy and courage to overcome the tremendous obstacles that have led to failures in the past. The workers’ movement and the Left have had brief moments of massive national fronts of struggle that have been defeated by repression and internal divisions. In some of these attempts, as pointed out by Luis Hernández Navarro, “the logic of the immediate struggle of the sector with the greatest political force has ended up dominating and absorbing the demands of its allies. And the worry of being used as a maneuvering mass by other political actors and their electoral and parliamentary agenda continues weighing on the diverse social actors.” (Luis Hernández Navarro, “La Asamblea Nacional de Resistencia Popular,” La Jornada, Oct. 27, 2009). As well, a narrow trade union agenda of a strong component organization could be added, as is clear from the examples Hernández Navarro gives earlier in his column. The challenge for the Left is to develop a program and process that helps protect the movement from this danger pointed out by Hernández Navarro. But it should also be noted that dividing off part of the movement by concessions or electoral hopes involves an ability and a willingness to make concessions and an ability and a willingness to conduct (somewhat non-fraudulent) elections. Neither of these options seems likely in the present context and certainly is not possible in regard to the power workers without a big defeat for the government. The danger that Hernández Navarro points to is real but is more of a danger in normal times. Mexico is in a profound crisis of legitimacy and a deep economic crisis.

The movements that compose the national front of resistance are politically heterogeneous. While some have revolutionary perspectives, most have reformist perspectives, often with a hope or nostalgia for the real or imagined good old days of revolutionary nationalism. But there is a broad recognition that a change of direction is not possible without a change in the correlation of forces at the national level. This means defeating the PAN/PRI coalition that acts in the interests of Big Capital. As the government has slammed the door more and more on channels for redress and reform within the system, non-revolutionary movements are being driven toward direct action as the only way to reverse the recent actions and change the direction. It has become more clear to many that only the removal of the government could lead to free, honest and democratic elections. Some feel that a constitutional convention would also be a necessity.

SME workersMexican Electrical Workers Union members protest the summary firing of 44,000 members. Photo: La Jornada.

The efficacy of a general strike depends on its strength, both in its immediate execution and its ability to achieve its goals. An inadequately prepared or weak general strike is a potential disaster for the workers’ movement and the Left as the government will respond ferociously, unless its hand is stayed by the power of the movement. The SME and the resistance movement are organizing brigades of workers to build support for a general strike nationally. The challenges are huge but there’s no alternative to a national struggle to change the power balance within Mexico. The fact that a workers organization is at the organizational and symbolic center of a growing movement of popular resistance is a sea change with enormous implications.

The student revolt of 1968 and its crushing defeat had great repercussions for Mexico, leading to guerrilla movements and a liberalization of the political system. The 1987-1988 neocardenista mass electoral and then anti-fraud movement set into motion new layers of activists despite its subsequent corrosion and distortion by electoral instrumentalism. The 1994 Zapatista uprising created great hopes and encouraged new layers of activists and despite its subsequent political isolation, its inspiration continues to influence many indigenous and poor communities with the belief that another world is possible. The 2006 electoral and post-electoral anti-fraud mass mobilizations deepened the challenges to the legitimacy of the regime and also brought into action new layers of people, many of them working class. And now the devastation of neoliberal austerity, the economic crisis, and the lightning assault on the SME (and Mexican energy resources) have mobilized large layers of the population into renewed activity. Mexico could follow the paths of Bolivia and Ecuador where revolts from below overthrew governments and paved the way for honest elections and the triumph of the Left. Or it could continue to go in the direction of Colombia, to an increasingly repressive and authoritarian narco-state. With its vast common border with the U.S. and one in every five Mexican workers living and working in the U.S., the implications are enormous not only for Mexico but also for the USA. •

Edur Velasco Arregui is a member of the advisory committee to the Central Committee of the SME, an elected representative of university workers on the Federal Board of Conciliation and Arbitration (JFCA), former Secretary-General of SITUAM (Sindicato Independiente de Trabajadores de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana – Independent Union of Workers of the Metropolitan Autonomous University], and a Professor of Law and Labour Economics at Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana in Mexico City.

Dick Roman is a member of Socialist Project and a retired professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. He is also an Associate Fellow of the Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean, York University, Toronto and a Founding Fellow of Senior College, University of Toronto.


Resources

Posted in Activism, The Resistance | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Primer III.3:Mexico City Under Siege

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 6, 2009

Unions Take Over Mexico City to Support Electricians

Posted by Kristin Bricker – December 5, 2009 at 12:33 am

Thousands of unionists and supporters shut down Mexico City during morning rush hour on Friday.  They were protesting President Felipe Calderon’s recent decision to unilaterally close the government-owned Luz y Fuerza del Centro electricity company.  In the middle of the night this past October 10-11, Calderon sent thousands of soldiers and militarized Federal Police to take over Luz y Fuerza buildings and fire its workers.  Thousands of Federal Police continue to occupy the power company buildings.

Specifically, the unionists who took to the streets on Friday turned out to support the Mexican Union of Electric Workers (SME), the union that represents Luz y Fuerza workers, in their demand that the Calderon administration negotiate with the union.  They want to negotiate the reinstatement of SME’s 44,000 workers and continued pensions for its 22,000 retirees.

Unions, civic associations, peasant organizations, student groups, and neighborhood associations from across the country traveled to Mexico City to support the SME as it took over Mexico City.  Some unions, such as those from Sinaloa, Chihuahua, Durango, Queretaro, and Zacatecas, arrived in a caravan that snaked through several states over a period of three days, holding rallies and picking up more supporters along the way.

The unionists and their supporters blocked the four main entrances into Mexico City for hours on Friday morning.  After holding their blockades for between one and two hours, they marched to the center of the city converging in Revolution Plaza.  Along the way, they picked up other contingents of unionists and students who were blockading key intersections within the city.

The SME and its supporters held a rally in Revolution Plaza, but the number of marchers far exceeded the plaza’s capacity.  By the time the contingent from Oaxaca and Chiapas arrived at Revolution Plaza, for example, they could not enter.  Instead, they flooded the streets around the Plaza.

During the marches and rally, some rank-and-file unionists drove off reporters and camera crews from Mexico’s corporate media with chants of “Que se ve la fuerza del SME!” (“Here you can see the power of the SME!”).  The SME and its supporters have been extremely critical of the corporate media’s pro-government/anti-union slant in its coverage of the Luz y Fuerza closure.

After being chased away by unionists, some camera crews returned to the rally without their press credentials in an attempt to slip in unnoticed.  Rank-and-file workers recognized them and chased them out of the area.  While there was no official rule in place prohibiting the corporate media’s coverage of the event (at least one corporate media camera crew managed to film the rally) the incidents do reflect the rage rank-and-file workers feel about how the corporate media has portrayed them.

On the other hand, unionists received independent media with open arms and went out of their way to facilitate interviews with union spokespeople.

National Support

One of the most striking aspects of Friday’s mobilization was the broad national support for the SME.  Some states, such as Oaxaca, sent thousands of union members to participate in the takeover of the nation’s capital.

Unions from other states, however, were unable to send large delegations due to labor disputes in their own regions.  Between 50-70 people came from San Luis Potosi, for example.  Those 50-70 people, however, represented at least ten different unions.

Guadalupe Cervantes came to the mobilization as part of a two-person delegation from the San Luis Potosi Independent Union of State Government Workers.  She explains that her union couldn’t spare more members.  “We’re in planton [round-the-clock picket].  At this moment we’re suffering repression at the hands of the state government.  However, even though our presence here is small, we had to come support the SME.  It is very important to support the SME because this is all part of a plan to do away with unions.  If the government can do something like this to the SME, what will it do to the rest of the unions?”

A representative from the Glassworkers Union in San Luis Potosi reports that his union is in a similar situation.  “Former US Ambassador Tony Garza’s wife owns the factory where we bottled beer for Grupo Modelo.  We’ve been locked out for nearly two years.”  He says that the state government collaborated with Grupo Modelo’s union busting and attempted to impose government-controled leadership on the union, which celebrated its first democratic union election in 2006.  Despite his union’s dire situation, he says they had to send a delegation to take over Mexico City in solidarity with the SME.  “The government can’t do this to the SME. It has such a long history of struggle.”

Countless small delegations such as these added one or two thousand people to the approximately 5,000-person human blockade that shut down the eastern entrance to the city.  The blockade at the eastern entrance appears to be one of the smaller ones that occurred on Friday.

One of the largest non-SME delegations that participated in Friday’s blockades was the contingent from Mexico City’s National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).  Students and unionized professors and other university workers came out to support the SME.  UNAM students remember that the SME supported them in their successful 1999 student strike against tuition increases.  “Yesterday it was the UNAM, and today it’s the SME” is a commonly heard phrase on the UNAM campus and at SME events.

Women’s Hunger Strike

Meanwhile, on Friday ten female SME members entered their twelfth day of hunger strike outside of a Luz y Fuerza administrative building downtown.   The women are consuming only water.

Narco News spoke with Monica Jimenez Acosta, the coordinator of Women Electricians in Resistance on her eleventh day of hunger strike.   She explains that she is the third generation of electricians in her family.  When Felipe Calderon used the Federal Police and the military to fire SME members, they didn’t just put Jimenez out of work; her brothers, sisters, cousins, and uncles also lost their jobs on that fateful night.  Jimenez, a single mother, used her MX$8,000 (US$630) monthly salary to support herself and her daughter.  She worked at Luz y Fuerza for ten years.

Jimenez says that the women decided to hunger strike because they felt that the government has gone too far.  “They threw us into the street as if we were criminals.”  She explains that the Women Electricians in Resistance sought an audience with political parties, federal agencies, and the Calderon administration.  The government’s response?  “They kicked us and beat us with billy clubs.  And they told us, ‘Why don’t you sell junk food at traffic lights?  Why don’t you set up a stand to sell telephones or quesadillas?  If you’ve got a husband in Luz y Fuerza, why doesn’t he take construction classes, and you can cut hair?  If you like the night life, why don’t you learn to mix drinks and work in a bar?’  This is complete and utter cynicism.  It’s a lack of respect.  Why don’t they make their mothers work those jobs?”

Jimenez explains that over one hundred female SME members signed up to hunger strike, but that after medical screenings and other considerations, it was decided that eleven women would go without food.  However, their round-the-clock picket has the support of hundreds of people at any given time.  Those people guard the camp and keep the women’s spirits up with visits from clergy who lead prayers for the swift re-opening of Luz y Fuerza and mariachis who serenade the hunger strikers on their birthdays.

Thus far the SME has not announced what its next move will be as it continues to pressure the Calderon administration into negotiations.  However, SME’s suddenly unemployed members are keeping themselves busy.  A commission of SME workers recently returned from Europe where they rallied support in several countries.  SME workers have reached out to non-labor organizations, they’ve traveled the country to tell their story, and they hold regular events in Mexico City such as movie screenings, panel discussions, and speaking engagements in universities.

Posted in Activism, Economic Growth, Primer Series, The Resistance | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Primer III.2: Sindicato Mexicano de Electricisdad

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 4, 2009

Mexican Government Seizes Power Plants, Liquidates Dissident Union

Dan La Botz
|  October 13, 2009
Federal Police seized the plants of the Central Light and Power Company of Mexico, firing 45,000 workers and crushing the independent Mexican Electrical Workers Union. Photo: María Luisa Severiano.

Over the weekend Federal Police seized the plants of the Central Light and Power Company of Mexico, which provides electricity to Mexico City and several states in central Mexico. The government of President Felipe Calderón announced that the company would be liquidated and all its approximately 45,000 workers fired, which would mean the destruction of the Mexican Electrical Workers Union (SME). Another 20,000 retirees are also now severed from their former employer and their union. The government’s action directly affects at least 250,000 workers and their families in the Federal District and states neighboring the capital.

The government wants to eliminate SME because the union has been a leading force in organizing to oppose Calderón’s economic policies, and in particular its plan to privatize the electrical industry. The government will apparently put the Central Light and Power facilities under the control of the Federal Electrical Commission whose workers are represented by a union loyal to the government. The union argues that this will be the first step to privatizing the industry, though the government denies this.

UNION DETERMINED TO RESIST

At the moment 500 Federal Police officers have taken control of over 100 Light and Power plants, reportedly roughing up some workers in the process. The plants occupied by the police are being run by management and by workers from the Federal Electrical Commission.

The union had reported about 10 days before that the government was preparing to seize the plants.

The union did not physically resist the police seizure of workplaces, but called upon its members to remain calm, and declared that it would organize a peaceful and legal resistance to the takeover and the liquidation of the company. While so far there has been no serious violence, in the past the government has been quick to use force to suppress union resistance. Federal Police have been used in the last three years to attempt to break strikes of miners and steelworkers. In other past instances of government-union conflict in Mexico, such repression has led to deaths and beatings, while the government has then indicted union leaders, resulting in convictions and long jail terms.

NO SURPRISE

While the government moved suddenly over the weekend to seize the plants, its actions were no surprise. The Calderón government and its predecessors have often expressed their desire to dissolve the Central Light and Power Company and to privatize electrical power generation.

Secretary of Labor Javier Lozano declared in September that SME’s internal elections were invalid and that General Secretary Martín Esparza and other officers would not be recognized by the government. Without legally recognized officials, the union cannot engage in contract negotiations or other activities.

Last month members of a dissident group in the union, tacitly supported by the government, had also carried out an armed attack on the union hall and robbed union documents and checks.

The government justified its actions by arguing that the Light and Power Company was both inefficient and exorbitantly expensive. The SME had won higher wages and benefits for workers, though the union argues that the financial problems were caused by the government’s failure to properly invest in the company, its mismanagement, and its failure to bill both government agencies and favorite private companies—such as luxury hotels—for its services. The government said it was prepared to spend about $2 billion to pay workers severance and retirement.

PIVOTAL MOMENT

While there is little new about the government’s attack on unions and its massive use of police and military force, this is not just one more incident. This is a turning point.

The attack on the Electrical Workers Union—a union central to resisting government policies and to building labor and social movement coalitions, and located in Mexico City, the center of political opposition to the government—may well turn out to be a watershed.

As journalist Luis Hernandez Navarro wrote in the Mexico City daily La Jornada, “The police and military attack against the electrical workers represents a serious setback in the precarious democratic life of the country. It provokes a huge short circuit. It establishes an unfortunate precedent. By attempting to use violence to solve a conflict created by the government itself, it takes us back to the darkest stages of authoritarianism.”

UNION SAYS TAKEOVER A ‘DECLARATION OF WAR’

General Secretary Esparza called Calderón’s action “unconstitutional.” He called upon SME’s 65,000 active and retired members to remain calm and resist provocation. At the same time a union statement said that members would defend the nationalized electrical industry, their union, and their constitutional rights. Members gathered in front of the SME union hall and also rallied at the Monument of the Revolution in Mexico City.

A union statement issued early Sunday morning said, “They have declared war on us and we are going to respond, always exercising our Constitutional rights and guarantees, of that there is no doubt.”

Tens of thousands of workers—members of the Mexican Electrical Workers and their allies—have been rallying and marching in Mexico over the past three days. Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the man who claims he actually won the 2006 presidential election, has put his movement behind the electrical workers, holding a huge rally in Mexico City on Monday. The left-of-center Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) also came out in support of the union, and its representatives and senators have worn Light and Power workers uniforms to the Mexican Congress to express their solidarity.

SME leaders have called upon Mexican unions and unions of other countries to rally to their support.

The union said that with the military having occupied the power plants, it was no longer in a position to ensure the delivery of electrical power in the region.

Power outages have occurred in several Mexican neighborhoods and the Mexican media have attributed these to workers’ sabotage. The union denies it is engaged in sabotage and blames the government for the power failures.


 
The Mexican Electrical Workers Union (SME) has asked for international solidarity in resisting the government liquidation of their company, the termination of the workers, and thus the destruction of the union. To protest this action, please follow this link to Labor Notes’ Solidarity Network. 

Posted in Activism, Economic Growth, The Resistance | Tagged: | Comments Off on Primer III.2: Sindicato Mexicano de Electricisdad

Primer III.1: Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas (SME)

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 3, 2009

CONGRUENTE

Countdown Timer

  • Resistencia del SME:
    1 month, 2 weeks, 3 days, 20 hours, 37 minutes, 8 seconds ago

http://www.sme.org

Plan de Accion

3 de Diciembre
17:00 hrs “Los documentos secretos de Calderon en contra del SME” Por Antonio Gershenson. Jesus Ramirez Cuevas, Dip. Jaime Cardenas, Alfredo Jalife y Jose Antonio Almazan
Ubicacion Insurgentes #98

4 De diciembre
Caravanas:
1. 8:00 hrs. parte del metro Guelatao (Zaragoza)
2. 10:00 hrs. parte del metro Taxqueña (Tlalpan)
3. 8:00 hrs. parte de Constituyentes y Reforma
4. 8:00 hrs. parte del metro Deportivo 18 de marzo

11:00 hrs. marcha sobre Insurgentes, de la Rectoría de la UNAM (Insurgentes)

Todos los contingentes arriban al Monumento a la Revolución.

11:00 Conferencia de prensa (Sanborns “Los Azulejos”)

De 11:00 a 13:00 hrs. recibimiento de caravanas en el Monumento a la Revolución.

17:00 hrs. Concentración de todos los contingentes en la Junta de Conciliación y Arbitraje (METRO FERRERIA) (a las 18:00 hrs. es la audiencia del SME).

Grupo Fórmula

El Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas (SME) llevará a cabo una manifestación mañana, la cual iniciará desde las 8 de la mañana en distintos puntos de la ciudad, sin embargo no culminará en la sede de la Junta Federal de Conciliación y Arbitraje (JFCA) en Azcapotzalco, como se tenía planeado.

El vocero del sindicato electricista, Fernando Amezcua, en entrevista con Ciro Gómez Leyva, anunció que la JFCA modificó para el día 11 de diciembre la audiencia solicitada por el sindicato ante la demanda de reinstalación y pago de salarios caídos, que se tenía para mañana.

Posted in Primer Series, The Resistance | Tagged: , | Comments Off on Primer III.1: Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas (SME)

In the aftermath:Mexico

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 3, 2009

International Solidarity with SME urgently needed

 

 

Call for

* Day for International Action in Embassies on December the 3rd.

* To send International Delegations

* To provide economic support

Your support to the Mexican Electricians Union (SME) is crucial for the workers’ resistance.

As you are aware, on October the 10th the government of Felipe Calderon, served by police and army, occupied the installations of national public enterprise Luz y Fuerza del Centro (LFC) – which provides electric service to 25 million users in Central Mexico – and ordered its “extinction”, leaving 44 thousand workers unemployed and 21 thousand pensioners in helplessness, in an open violation of the Constitution, the Federal Labor Law and the most basic human rights.

The pretext is an alleged enterprise ineffectiveness or insolvency, caused patiently by the government for years, but with the real goal of destroying the Mexican Electricians Union (SME) and its collective agreement, forged during almost a century, and to advance privatization of the electric industry. The government stubbornness remains despite the huge demonstration of popular support for SME held on October the 15th, in which more than 350 thousand people participated, and the National Civic Strike carried out one month after the blow, on November 11, involving about 2 million people. The government and its media apparatus have ignored it and continue their slander campaign against SME.

Instead of decreasing, the tension is rising. The regime seems prepared to repression and barbarism in order to not giving up-as it has done before against the miners union, which has caused the death of several workers and jail or exile for their leaders-and in the other hand SME is ready to take its defense to the end. It is a confrontation that also involves large sections of Mexican People, which not only sympathizes but joins to this fight all grievances suffered because of the neoliberals.

The coming weeks will be decisive and critical. This is why we are making a call for trade unions, social and civil rights organizations in the world, and also to defenders of workers, labor and human rights and democratic freedoms, to:

* Participate in International Day of Solidarity with the SME on December the 3rd, performing protest acts in Mexico ’s embassies in your country. The Day coincides with the great mobilization that national organizations will made, consisting of caravans from all around the country in way to Mexico City on December the 4th, an historical and symbolic day since a day like that in 1914 the Emiliano Zapata and Pancho Villa’s armies took Mexico City.

* Send international missions in order to testify about what happens in our country in this chain of injustices against the electrical workers and the people of Mexico , to spread this in your countries and to plead for a just solution. You could join United States and Canada trade unions that are coming in the first days of December, or instead come about December the 14th, the day on which the SME is celebrating its 95th anniversary and there will be acts of great importance.

* To make an extraordinary and urgent effort in order to make financial contributions to support the resistance of electrician workers, because on that depends the success of this fight that is so important for Mexican people and for the international cause of defense of public services and the workers’ rights; each passing day the situation of the tens of thousands of arbitrarily dismissed electrical workers and their families is more critical and that is used by the government to blackmail and pressure them; especially now that winter and holidays approach, basic survival and welfare of these families represent an emergency situation and appeal to the most basic solidarity commitment. We hope your organization can truly have the possibility to give immediate and significant support. For a decent Christmas for electricians and workers in struggle!

Your economic contributions can be deposited in SME’s account for international transfers:

Bank’s Address: BBVA PLAZA MEXICO D.F.

Name of the Bank: Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A.

Bank Identification Code: (SWIFT / BIC (Bank Identification Code) BCMRMXMN

Account number: 0168715246

Account holder: MARTIN ESPARZA FLORES AND FERNANDO MUÑOZ PONCE (UNITED ACCOUNT)

Holder Address: Insurgentes 98, Col. Tabacalera, del. Cuauhtémoc, CP 06470, México, D.F.

To contact or to coordinate your possible participation in these initiatives, you can write to the origin address of this urgent action or directly to the following SME addresses:

Fernando Amezcua, Relations Secretary: samezcuacf@sme.org.mx

Humberto Montes de Oca, Internal Secretary: pp_mdo@yahoo.com.mx

José Manuel Pérez Vázquez, Relations Secretary’s collaborator: jm_perezvazquez@yahoo.com

Posted in Primer Series, The Resistance | Tagged: , | Comments Off on In the aftermath:Mexico

Mexico: Unionist Grassroots Resistance

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 3, 2009

Grassroots Movement Grows in Mexico, as Unionists Escalate Opposition to Government

Thursday
December 3
5:13 pm
Posters calling for solidarity with SME line the streets throughout Mexico City.   (Photo by Micah Williams)

By Micah Williams

MEXICO CITY—As the Mexican government refuses to budge in its decision to disband a state-owned electricity company, firing 44,000 unionists in the process, a national grassroots movement is growing that politicians may not be able to ignore for long.

The Mexican Electricians Union (Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas) represented all electricians of the Light and Power Company of Mexico (Luz y Fuerza del Centro), one of Mexico’s two state-owned electricity companies, along with the Federal Electricity Commission (Comision Federal de Electricidad). As reported on this blog, the Mexican government unexpectedly announced Luz y Fuerza’s dissolution on October 11, citing the company’s supposed inefficiency and waste. The move also entailed the mass firing of SME’s 44,000 members.

Many of the electricians say this is no coincidence. SME is democratic and fiercely independent in a country where the majority of unions are corrupt, bureaucratic, and foot soldiers for the country’s political parties. It is also one of the country’s strongest, and has opposed President Felipe Calderon’s past efforts to privatize the country’s electricity.

The union demanded the order’s reversal with a mass march of over 300,000 electricians and their supporters in the central plaza of Mexico City, a mere four days after the order was issued. A month later, the union carried out a one-day national strike on November 11 with the participation of students, rural workers, and unions throughout the country, grinding the world’s third largest city to a halt with highway blockades and massive marches.

Yet the government has refused to budge. Recent attempts to introduce legislation overturning the liquidation order in the Mexican Congress have failed, and Calderon insists he’s not changing his mind.

Rather than decapitating the union, however, the president’s decision has brought together an incredible progressive coalition in a country famous for its fragmented left. In their view, the elimination of Luz y Fuerza is an attack on unions and workers throughout Mexico—and they’re heading to the streets daily in SME’s defense.

Students in solidarity

Last Thursday, November 26, the union and the student solidarity committee at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico’s largest and most prestigious university, held an all-day concert, “Por la Luz y Con la Fuerza,” with over 10,000 in attendance. The sight was a strange one for this American author: a college soccer field packed with people under 25 who thought unions were relevant and worthy of their support—and even cool.

Union support was palpable throughout the day, with almost every group that took the stage stopping between songs to speak about SME’s struggle. (More than a few sarcastically dedicated songs to “that bastard Felipe Calderon.”) SME General Secretary Mart’n Esparza was greeted with cheers and chants as he spoke between bands, thanking the students for their participation and calling the university/union coalition an “historic alliance.”

Ana Espino, a law student at UNAM, is a member of this alliance. She linked her involvement in the movement as a member of the solidarity committee to her own family—her father works for Pemex, Mexico’s national oil company.

Calderon’s push to privatize the company is giving foreign energy companies like Halliburton crude oil wet dreams, but Espino (and much of her country) view such efforts as an attack on her family and an unabashed attempt to plunder the country’s collective wealth. The liquidation of Luz y Fuerza and the privatization sure to follow, Espino said, is a testing ground to see how much the neoliberal government can get away with.

“If they attack SME, they could attack Pemex and their union next,” she explained, “and I wouldn’t be able to attend university. I’m not going to wait until they fire my father to act.”

Espino’s comments echoed that of many participants in the movement: the assault on Luz y Fuerza is not just against 44,000 electricians, but against all Mexican unions.

Standing in the back of the field, Isidro Oscar Chavez Arinas unzipped his official Luz y Fuerza jacket to gesticulate more easily while speaking. A 19-year veteran of the company now without income or job prospects, Chavez Arinas stressed the importance of SME’s links with students.

“The government is very afraid of us getting together with the students, because the students think, they’re smart,” he stated. “They know that what happened to Luz y Fuerza was unconstitutional. The students were fighting with us [in the one-day national strike] on November 11, and they’ll continue to fight with us.”

Turning toward the stage, Chavez Arinas proclaimed, “They thought they could get rid of SME. Instead, now all of Mexico is with us.”

Camped out on a hunger strike

From a distance, the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) building appears emblematic of the kind of “progress” President Calderon and his cadre of free market boosters have attempted to achieve over the last two decades: its postmodern design of polished glass and red steel beams stretch high into the sky, an architectural flourish whose sole purpose seems to be the flaunting of private wealth generated from relentless attempts to chip away at the country’s nationalized electricity industry.

Approaching the office by foot, however, gives a different view of the CFE and the effects of Mexico’s race to deregulate and privatize. While a privileged few have enjoyed immense affluence as foreign companies have snatched up Mexico’s resources, the majority of the country has seen their lot worsen. The latter currently sits defiantly at CFE’s door, camped out and on hunger strike in protest.

SME has taken over almost the entire block on which the CFE building is located. Lamp posts and sidewalks, formerly bare, are now adorned with red stencils of the Luz y Fuerza and SME logos. Electricians and their families mill about, discussing the latest developments in their struggle; some are camped out in tents 24 hours each day. The entire entrance to the CFE building is covered in union propaganda, with the Virgen de Guadalupe and the Mexican flag situated at the center.

In front of the entrance sits Monica Jimenez Acosta, a Luz y Fuerza electrician and SME member of 10 years. One of the ten women on hunger strike in protest of Luz y Fuerza’s elimination, she speaks with unexpected vigor for someone who has only consumed water for more than a week.

“We went to many people in the government to negotiate, to come to a solution,” she recounted. “But no one in the government would listen to us. What else can I do?”

The issue, Acosta says, is not just about SME or the country’s nationalized electricity. “They want to slowly privatize everything and eliminate the real unions,” she argued. “They don’t want workers, they want slaves.”

Acosta insists she will be on a hunger strike until the union’s demands are met and Luz y Fuerza workers are re-instated.

SME’s uncertain fate

The union’s future remains unknown, although worker morale remains high. SME actions continue daily, the hunger strike has no end date in sight, and more large protests are planned in the near future. Friday, the union plans for a “symbolic takeover” of Mexico City, convoking several mass marches and a citizens’ congress “in defense of the nation.”

Plans for a general strike throughout Mexico are also underway, most likely in early January if the conflict is not resolved by then. With the country celebrating both the bicentennial of its independence and the centennial of the Mexican Revolution, many expect 2010 to entail widespread actions by social movements—from community groups to guerrillas—throughout the country.

For now, though, Acosta and nine other electricians are sitting at the entrance to the Comision Federal de Electricidad. Until the government offers a satisfactory proposal, she’s not leaving and she’s not eating.

“We’re going to be here until our bodies give out,” she said defiantly. “I’d rather die here in the street, with dignity next to my compañeras, than slowly starve to death in my home.”

Posted in Primer Series, The Resistance | Tagged: , | 3 Comments »

Sindicato…

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 3, 2009

SME toma instalaciones de CFE en Paseo de la Reforma

Cientos de elementos de la PFP son movilizados

Jueves 26 de noviembre de 2009, por difusion, Radio Combate

Hoy jueves 26 de noviembre, cientos de elementos de la Policía Federal Preventiva (PFP) fueron enviados al campamento que mantienen mujeres del Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas (SME) frente al edificio central de la Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE) en Paseo de la Reforma.

En punto de las 9:00 a.m., los elementos de la PFP descendieron de una docena de camionetas para apostarse a los lados del campamento esmeita. Las mujeres, quienes ya cumplen una semana en huelga, avisaron a sus compañeros para que reforzaran el plantón y estar atentos ante cualquier provocación.

A las 11:00 a.m., eran cientos de trabajadores del SME quienes ya se encontraban apoyando a las mujeres y convocaban a no caer en provocaciones por parte de la policía.

A las 11:30 a.m., cientos de smeitas que protestaban frente a un hotel al lado del monumento a Cristóbal Colon por la presencia del Secretario del Trabajo, Javier Lozano, marcharon de este hotel al edificio de CFE para apoyar a sus compañeras, quienes recibían el apoyo de diferentes sindicatos y personas en un mitin ante la atenta mirada de policías de alto rango de la PFP.

A las 12:00 p.m., los cientos de policías se retiraron del plantón, mientras cientos de trabajadores gritaban «aquí se ve la fuerza del SME, aquí se ve la fuerza del SME».

Portafolio

1 Mensaje

 

En el 2001 intentaron de privatizar el ICE en Costa Rica.

No lo lograron. Aqui encuentran un documental para que la gente vea que las luchas pueden ser exitosas!

Aqui hay un Video (54 min) sobre estas manifestaciones: http://fabzgy.org/files/Combo_ICE.avi (click derecha – Gurardar como)

Ver en línea : Costa Rica: el Combo ICE, componentes y trayectoria histórica

Responder este mensaje

((( AUDIO )))

 

- Solidaridad desde Brasil para las trabajadoras del SME en huelga de hambre, 1:39 min.

 

Posted in Primer Series, The Resistance | Tagged: , | Comments Off on Sindicato…

Mexican Conflicts

Posted by N. A. Jones on December 3, 2009

El conflicto se prolonga: es la hora de la solidaridad

Concluye el primer round de la resistencia electricista

Miércoles 25 de noviembre de 2009, por robot

El miércoles 18 de noviembre hacia las 3 de la tarde, Radio SME informó que el Congreso decidió aplazar una vez más la discusión sobre la viabilidad de una controversia constitucional contra el decretazo. Príistas y panistas acordaron abordar el tema el 24 de noviembre, día en que vence el plazo para entregar al Poder Judicial la controversia.

Martín Esparza lanzó acusaciones severas de corrupción contra el director de CFE, Elías Ayub. Entre otras cosas, Ayub habría beneficiado con contratos a transnacionales como Techint y habría recibido dinero de dichas empresas. La sede de Techint en Ciudad Monstruo recibió la visita de los electricistas ese miércoles 18. Durante el mitin en la ciudad yupie de Santa Fé, Esparza mencionó que entre otros favores, Elías Ayub ayudó a Techint a comprar la firma Tamsa en 70 millones de dólares, cuando su valor era de 800 millones. También se denunciaron los 772 permisos otorgados a trasnacionales del sector de la energía eléctrica en el presente sexenio y en el de Vicente Fox –los cuales fueron a 20 años–, que dejan utilidades por cerca de 750 millones de dólares anuales a empresas como Repsol, Iberdrola, la propia Techint. Estas empresas producen electricidad con gas barato comprado en Perú, que es facturado al precio internacional, obteniendo altas ganancias pues el gobierno le compra la electricidad con el dinero de nuestros impuestos.

La situación en las instalaciones foráneas sigue tensa. El miércoles 18, cientos de electricistas y compas solidarios marcharon en Pachuca para reiterar su exigencia de que el decretazo sea anulado. Informaron que la solidaridad no ha dejado caer la lucha pues además de colectar vívires y ayuda económica, los jubilados siguen entregando sus cuotas sindicales y aportarán un día de salario. La marcha electricista intentó entrar al Palacio de Gobierno y ante la presencia policíaca se produjo un choque… la paciencia se agota.

El mismo día, el sindicato telefonista, en su clásica línea zigzagueante, declaró que seguirá apoyando al SME entregando ayuda, pero pondrá a consideración de la base ir a la huelga nacional, ya que el día del paro, les descontaron el día ¿Pues no que si derrotan al SME seguirán los telefonistas, Señor Hernández Juárez?

El 19 de noviembre, Mónica Jiménez Acosta, coordinadora del Movimiento de Mujeres Electricistas en Resistencia contó la respuesta de doña momie, Margarita Zavala, esposa de Calderón, ante la petición de que interviniera en el conflicto electricista: “sólo nos dijo que nos habían corrido por el bien del país. Nos propuso que nos uniéramos para poner salones de belleza o que nos inscribiéramos en cursos para aprender a preparar bebidas y trabajar en bares. Fue un insulto, una humillación para las mujeres electricistas oír eso”. El gobierno sigue pegándole con todo al SME y ahora transmite un anuncio donde hace aparecer a los electricistas como corruptos que pedían 1500 pesos por mantener el servicio eléctrico: ya va siendo tiempo que el sindicato emprenda una demanda por difamación contra el gobierno federal.

Y en otra acción de la resistencia hormiga, decenas de smeítas impidieron que contratistas de CFE sacarán cables subterráneos en la esquina de Ignacio Mariscal y Jesús Terán, en la colonia Tabacalera, cerca de la sede sindical. De acuerdo con los testimonios de electricistas, CFE y sus empresas contratistas están usando equipo y enseres propiedad de Luz y Fuerza, lo cual viola las disposiciones de la extinción pues todo el patrimonio de la empresa está bajo resguardo y no puede ser usado por CFE.

Más datos sobre los privilegiados de Luz y Fuerza. De acuerdo con denuncias del SME hechas el día 20 de noviembre, el sueldo del director de Luz y Fuerza del Centro, Jorge Gutiérrez Vera, era de 242 mil 456 pesos mensuales, incluido sueldo, compensación garantizada y ayudas por renta, transporte y despensa, con un sueldo diario de 7 mil 975 pesos. El contralor interno, Rogelio Arturo Aviña Martínez, ganaba 156 mil 663 pesos al mes o 5 mil 153 diarios. 10 subdirectores ganaban 174 mil 320 pesos al mes, incluidas las prestaciones y 53 gerentes recibían cada uno 129 mil 415 pesos. Echando lápiz tenemos que estas 65 personas recibían poco más de 9 millones de pesos al mes o más de 108 millones de pesos al año ¡Así Mr Fecal no hay dinero que alcance! En contraste el salario promedio de los 44 mil smeítas fue de 5 mil 933 pesos al mes o 197.96 pesos al día.

Ese mismo viernes 20, se llevó a cabo la Tercera Asamblea Nacional de la Resistencia Popular. Convocada para fijar un horizonte para la huelga nacional, la reunión sólo marcó la “posibilidad” de realizarla en enero, buscando conjuntar la resistencia electricista con el repudio del paquetazo fiscal y las revisiones contractuales de inicios de 2010. Además de los evidentes acuerdos de seguir apoyando por todos los medios a los trabajadores y sus familias, la Asamblea decidió una serie de acciones para los próximos días:

Concierto Masivo de solidaridad – 26 de noviembre en Ciudad Universitaria de la UNAM

Asamblea Politécnica – 26 de noviembre 13 horas en la Escuela de Economía del Politécnico

Asamblea Estudiantil representativa – 28 de noviembre en el Auditorio del SME

Encuentro SME – Atenco – 30 de noviembre en San Salvador Atenco

Toma de la Ciudad Monstruo y movilizaciones en el resto del país – 4 de diciembre

4ta Asamblea Nacional de la Resistencia Popular – 14 de diciembre

Referéndum popular por la revocación del mandato de Felipe Calderón – 5 de febrero

Un rasgo muy particular de esta Tercera Asamblea fue la ausencia de personajes políticos o representantes de partidos y organizaciones políticas…

En el marco de esta Asamblea, se informó que los compas Ismael Espinoza Ramírez y Manuel Santos Crisóstomo fueron dejados en libertad bajo fianza, acusados de lesiones y tras ser reclasificados los delitos iniciales. Puedes consultar las intervenciones hechas en la Asamblea

El sábado 21 de noviembre se realizaron dos movilizaciones más. En Ciudad Monstruo, hijos de trabajadores electricistas vistieron los uniformes de trabajo de sus padres y lanzaron consignas afiladas mientras marcharon hacia la sede de Luz y Fuerza en Mariano Escobedo. “Calderón, dejé de ir a la escuela por tu culpa”, “Calderón, gracias por mandarme al hambre”, “Soy 100% SME”, “Queremos arbolito de Navidad, queremos marchar; Calderón, ya deja de robar”, coreaban los niños. En Cuernavaca, cientos de trabajadores del Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas, maestros del Movimiento Magisterial de Bases y ciudadanos de Morelos, realizaron una marcha exigiendo echar abajo el decreto de extinción de LyFC y la Alianza por la Calidad de la Educación. Niños y familiares acompañaron a los electricistas, quienes realizaron un performance donde simulaban la lucha que actualmente mantienen contra el «decretazo».

El domingo 22 de noviembre, Esparza y un contingente electricista participaron en el peje mitin donde el dirigente smeíta refrendó la cercanía de su grupo con el lópez obradorismo, al tiempo que reiteró las denuncias sobre los expedientes negros con que se buscaría encarcelar a la dirección del SME y sobre la suspensión de los servicios médicos a los electricistas por parte del IMSS.

La semana inición con noticias fuertes. El lunes 23 de noviembre el Departamento de Justicia de Estados Unidos informó de la detención de John Joseph O’Shea, acusado de haber sobornado a funcionarios de CFE para obtener contratos en favor de su empleador, la empresa Sugar Land, filial de una empresa suiza, ya saben las empresas de clase mundial como CFE se codean con los gigantes… del fraude! Mientras se sigue ventilando la cloaca, el director de CFE, Elías Ayub se aventó la puntada de afirmar que esta semana empezaremos a recibir los recibos por el consumo de energía correspondientes al bimestre pasado. Para taparle el ojo al macho, el cobro para los particulares se basará, dicen, en el consumo mínimo anterior y darán 15 días para pagar…

El 23 de noviembre finalmente se instaló la anunciada huelga de hambre de mujeres smeítas: 11 compañeras se plantaron frente a las oficinas de CFE en el cruce de Reforma e Insurgentes. Sus demandas: revocación del decreto de extinción de Luz y Fuerza del Centro, retorno al trabajo de los 44 mil sindicalizados despedidos y respeto a su contrato colectivo de trabajo. Ellas son: Teresa Figueroa, Evelyn Muñoz, Diana Sánchez, Carla Ledesma, Isabel Pérez, Elena Colín, Judith García, Alejandra Rojas, Mónica Jiménez y Cielo Fuentes. En Pachuca, 10 smeítas más iniciaron un ayuno frente al hospital 1 del IMSS denunciando la suspensión de los servicios médicos que implicó el decretazo y llamando a los trabajadores del IMSS a solidarizarse con la lucha electricista. En Toluca, los sindicalistas se manifestaron ante la sede del PRI para exigir que los diputados de ese partido apoyen la controversia constitucional en el Congreso de la Unión, recordando que la mayor parte de los liquidados habitan en el Estado de México.

A través de Radio SME, Martín Esparza informó que Humberto Montes de Oca y Pipino Cuevas viajaron a Europa para denunciar el despojo que ha sufrido el SME y pedir que la Unión Europea presione a Fecal.

En la sede del SME, los compas Ismael Espinosa y Manuel Santos denunciaron los abusos y torturas de que fueron objeto a manos de policías federales el 11 de noviembre durante su detención y traslado. Además de que se presentaron evidencias de que ellos fueron los agredidos, los compas no descartan presentar una demanda contra los policías que los golpearon ese día. Escucha su testimonio

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