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Italy: 10-million-strong general strike protests pension cuts
By Marianne Arens
28 October 2003
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On Friday, October 24, an estimated 10 million workers and
office employees took part in a general strike with the central
aim of protesting the pension policy of the government of Silvio
Berlusconi. One-and-a-half million peopleincluding pensioners,
students and the unemployedparticipated in rallies in the
centres of Italys main cities. They carried banners with
slogans such as Defend our future and Better
to die young than live to a ripe old ageif Berlusconi gets
his way!
The new draft law for pensions was agreed to on October 3 by
the Council of Ministers. It proposes that from 2008 employees
must have paid at least 40 years of contributions, or have reached
a minimum age of 65 (60 for women), before qualifying for a pension.
Until now it was possible to retire in Italy at 57 after 35 years
of contributions. An earlier pension was possible if an individual
could demonstrate that he or she had paid 37 years of contributions.
From 2008, all those who have paid less than 40 years of contributions
must reckon with considerable reductions to their pensions. Against
a background of growing unemployment and an increase in short-term
low-paid jobs, it will become increasingly difficultand
in many cases impossibleto attain the necessary 40 years
of contributions. Average unemployment for young people under
24 in Italy affects one in three of the workforce, and in the
south of the country this figure rises to 50 percent.
For four hours, the strike on Friday paralysed air, train,
ship and bus travel and brought transport to a stop in all the
major Italian cities. The Italian airline Alitalia had to cancel
155 flights, and 50 percent of national trains were affected.
Many schools, banks, museums, libraries, post offices, courts
and public institutions remained closed the entire day. City cleaning
and sanitation workers struck, and only emergency services were
maintained in the hospitals.
Participation in the strike by workers in the private sector
was more sporadic. In Sicily, there was a nearly complete strike
by the workers at the Fiat car factory, Termini Imerese, at the
petro-chemical company in Gela and at the shipyards of Palermo.
In the major industrial areas of the north, between 50 and 70
percent of the workforce joined the strike action.
The three biggest trade union federationsthe CGIL, CISL
and UILhad called the strike. The rank-and-file trade union
COBAS also took part and organised its own demonstration in Rome.
In Naples, where around 80,000 took part in demonstrations
and rallies, the main speaker was trade union secretary Luigi
Angeletti (UIL). He was confronted by angry workers from the asbestos
industry, who object to the new laws that would prevent workers
in dangerous industries from taking early retirement. They carried
banners with slogans declaring Injustice is the priority
for this government and chanted You idiots, you foolswhat
good is your prattle. We want action.
In Turin, Florence and Bologna, the demonstrations were estimated
at around 70,000, with 60,000 turning out in Genoa. Two-hundred-thousand
took part in the Milan protest, including workers from the Alfa-Romeo
(a subsidiary of Fiat) factory of Arese. This factory is threatened
with closure, together with the Fiat factory in Sicily. Milan
was the city where Berlusconi grew up, and for many the size of
the demonstration came as a surprise. None of the trade union
heads addressed the Milan rally. Around half of those taking part
were workers in so-called precarious jobs, unemployed,
pensioners and the poor, who loudly expressed their disgust with
the Berlusconi government but withheld their applause after the
speech by a representative of the UIL.
The demonstration in Rome proceeded from the Piazza della Bocca
della Verità to the Piazza Navona, and demonstrators carried
a huge papier-mâché mouth of truth (Bocca
della verità), which was to play the role of oracle and
test the truthfulness of those who placed their arm in the mouth.
A trade unionist wearing a Berlusconi mask put his hand in the
mouth in a spoof aimed at emphasising the lies and broken promises
made by the Italian prime minister.
In any event, the spectacle expressed the impotence of the
trade union protestsno one has really been bitten by the
Bocca since ancient times. The trade unions pose no
real danger to the government, and two unionsthe UIL and
the Catholic CISLactually signed a deal with Berlusconi
in July 2002, the so-called Pact for Italy. Since
then, they have taken part in talks with the government on plans
to reform laws governing working conditions.
The latest four-hour general strike appeared to be the lowest
common denominator expressing the unity of the trade union movement.
The main aim of the biggest trade union, the CIGL, is limited
to taking part in talks with the government over restructuring
measures. The political perspective of the union is restricted
to supporting the opposition parties of the Olive Tree alliancea
coalition of left and bourgeois organisations that constituted
the government before Berlusconi came to power. In fact, the Olive
Tree has nothing to offer in the way of alternatives to the existing
government. During its own period in office, the alliance had
begun attacks on the fabric of the Italian welfare state, implemented
privatisation and cut social security payments in order to trim
Italys public finances in line with the dictates of the
Maastricht Treaty.
The leaders of the opposition used the October 24 general strike
as a platform to improve their public image. Marching through
the streets of Rome alongside Savino Pezzotta from the CISL was
a succession of leaders of the organisations that emerged from
Italys postwar Communist PartyFausto Bertinotti (Refounded
Communists), Piero Fassino (Democratic Left, DL) and Armando Cossutta
(Italian Communists). In a show of nationalism the CISL draped
the demonstration in a sea of flags sporting the Italian national
coloursred, green and white.
In Bologna, the general secretary of the CGIL, Guglielmo Epifani,
took part in the demonstration together with his predecessor,
Sergio Cofferati (DL), who is currently campaigning as the candidate
of the centre-left parties for the post of mayor in Bologna. Opposition
parties regard Cofferati as potential prime minister should the
Berlusconi government collapse.
The government and employers have attempted to play down the
significance of the strike. The chairman of the Italian Employers
Federation Confindustria, Antonio DAmato, was already declaring
on Friday at mid-day that only 30 percent of workers had struck,
while Labour and Social Affairs Minister Roberto Maroni (Northern
League) spoke disparagingly of this part-time strike.
In fact, the government is visibly nervous in the face of this
latest development. In 1994, plans to reform the Italian pension
scheme were the trigger for the eventual resignation of the first
government led by Silvio Berlusconi. Today, in contrast to the
trade union bureaucracy, broad layers of workers regard the Berlusconi
government with anger and contempt, opposing its attacks on the
welfare state and support for the US-led war in Iraq. Last year,
more than 13 million demonstrated against plans to abolish paragraph
18, which protects against arbitrary dismissal; and in the spring
of this year, 3 million took to the streets in Rome to protest
the Iraq war.
The government has been weakened over the past weeks by a series
of profound conflicts. At the beginning of October, Gianfranco
Fini, deputy prime minister and head of the neo-fascist National
Alliance (NA), who is acting as Italys representative to
the European Union, made a surprising call for the introduction
of voting rights for assimilated immigrants. This was a tactical
manoeuvre aimed at strengthening the hand of the NA against the
notoriously racist Northern League, whose head, Umberto Bossi,
vigorously rejects such a move. On the issue of pensions, Bossi
made the demagogic claim that he would vehemently defend northern
pensions (pensions in the north will not be touched).
For his part, Roberto Maroni, who is also a member of the Northern
League, described the governments plans as inviolable.
The UGL trade union, which has close links to the National
Alliance, held its own demonstration in Rome against the pension
plans. The divisions inside the government have forced Berlusconi
to delay the official implementation of his reforms
to 2008. He has also announced forms of relief for workers who
voluntarily agree to work longer.
Another indication of the weakness and nervousness of the government
was the massive police presence on the day of the general strike.
On the same day, the papers were full of reports of the arrest
of six persons alleged to be members of the Italian Red Brigades.
Hundreds of police raids and searches in the earlier hours of
the morning carried out throughout Italy were obviously aimed
at intimidating those planning to take part in the mass mobilisation
and tar them with the brush of terrorism.
Italian minister of the interior Giuseppe Pisanu declared that
those who had been arrested were responsible for the murder of
Massimo DAntona and Marco Biagi (two advisors to the Labour
Ministry). Biagi was responsible for drafting
the law for massive changes to working conditions due to come
into effect October 24the day of the general strike.
The trade unions have threatened additional and longer strikes
for October 30. A strike is planned for November 7 by FIOM engineering
workers supported by a number of alternative trade unions. The
government is planning to tighten up the laws governing the right
to strike and has already offered police protection to employers
who would be affected by the November 7 strike.
See Also:
Berlusconi and Europe
[16 July 2003]
After the fall of Baghdad:
Hundreds of thousands demonstrate in Rome
[14 April 2003]
200,000 protest in
Rome vs Berlusconis legal reforms
[19 September 2002]
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