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South Korean president threatens to sack striking power workers
By Terry Cook
25 March 2002
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Striking power workers in South Korea last weekend rejected
a government ultimatum directing them to return to work by 9am
today or face dismissal. The return-to-work order is part of further
harsh measures announced by President Kim Dae-jung at a cabinet
meeting last Tuesday aimed at crushing the protracted strike by
more than 5,000 workers.
Kim told the cabinet meeting that the strike was unjustified
and illegal. Plans to sell the five Korea Electric Power
Corp (KEPCO) thermal generating plants and to restructure state-owned
utilities, he said, are not subject to the collective bargaining
agreement with the labour unions.
Declaring his government would uphold free-market principles
and laws banning public-sector walkouts, the president
warned he would take stern action, including the mass firing of
strikers and the prosecution of union members spearheading
the strike. A government spokesman warned: For those
fired this time, there will be no opportunity in the future to
come back.
The cabinet decided to suspend salary payments to the strikers
and to withhold severance payments to compensate KEPCO for the
alleged cost of the strikeabout 25 billion won ($18.99 million).
The ministers also endorsed plans to train over 400 soldiers to
help run the plants along with management and contract workers.
The first 200 will be deployed into the power plants within four
weeks, and the remainder by April 15.
The strike has become a crucial test of Kim Dae-jungs
economic restructuring program. The power workers walked off the
job on February 25 in opposition to the governments plan
to sell its 54 percent share in the five plants.
The company has already fired 197 key workers for rejecting
an earlier return-to-work order. Legal action is also planned
against several management-level KEPCO officials who the government
has accused of colluding with union members to stage the
illegal strike.
While the government is cracking down on workers, the power
union and its peak union body, the Federation of Korean Trade
Unions (FKTU), have left the strikers to face the increasing state
repression on their own.
As the cabinet met last week, the power union called off a
strike vote by 3,700 workers at the Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power
Company. Union head Kim Byung-ki claimed that the vote could not
proceed due to strong interference by the company.
Management dispatched workers to scattered work locations making
a vote difficult. Even so, the union seems to be in no hurry to
reorganise the ballot. Kim Byung-ki told the media: Well
resume it later, though at the moment its not clear when.
The company produces about 40 percent of the countrys
electricity needs. The continuing production at nuclear plants,
along with the limited output from the five strike-bound units,
is allowing the government to maintain the supply of power.
Even before cancelling the strike ballot, the FKTU had left
the power workers out on a limb. They originally stopped work
along with the FKTU-affiliated gas and rail unions as part of
a combined campaign against the governments privatisation
plans and for a shorter working week. Within 48 hours the leaders
of the Korean Gas Corp Workers Union (KGCWU) and the Korean
Rail Workers Union (KRWU) called off strike action and cut separate
deals, which effectively allow the sell-off of gas and rail services
to proceed.
The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), South Koreas
second largest peak union body, which claims to be more militant
than the conservative FKTU, has also helped to isolate the power
strike. KCTU leaders promised to call a strike of thousands of
auto industry workers to back the utility workers but only held
a four-hour sympathy stoppage by workers from Hyundai
Motors and Kia Motors.
Even though the KCTU has 500,000 members, the union has only
organised limited protests. On March 13, the KCTU Leaders Council,
comprising the heads of all its affiliated unions, endorsed a
resolution to call a national strike in solidarity with the power
workers, but not until March 25.
The KCTUs actions have only encouraged the government
to step up its repression. On March 18, KCTU president Dan Byung-ho
was sentenced by the Seoul Court of First Instance to a two-year
jail term after being found guilty of five charges arising from
his role in coordinating a strike in June 2001.
On the same day, the Ministry of Government Administration
and Home affairs announced it intended to take legal action against
10 leaders of the Korean Union of Civil Servants under a law that
prohibits public servants from joining labour organisations. The
recently formed union had applied for affiliation to the KCTU.
The government, which faces local elections in June and a presidential
poll in December, is coming under criticism from international
investors over the slow pace of privatisations. While Kim Dae-jung
is not eligible to stand for a second term, he is determined to
crush the power strike and set an example to deter other public
sector workers.
Kim came to power in 1998 with the backing of the KCTU and
other unions based on his reputation as a democrat
and an opponent of the previous military regimes. One of his first
steps on assuming office was to amend the labour laws to abolish
the countrys life-long employment system, thus opening the
door for mass sackings. Over the last four years, he has not hesitated
to use his predecessors repressive methods to break strikes
and protests. As in the case of the power workers, Kim has been
able to rely on the KCTU and FKTU to confine the opposition and
anger in the working class.
See Also:
Unions isolate striking South Korean power
workers
[9 March 2002]
South Korean government
faces backlash over police violence against Daewoo workers
[21 April 2001]
South Korean president
boasts to US investors of crackdown on Daewoo workers
[17 March 2001]
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