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: Belgium
20,000 march against closure of Volkswagen factory in Brussels
By our correspondents
6 December 2006
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More than 20,000 workers marched through the centre of Brussels
December 2 to protest the threatened closure of the Volkswagen
factory in the suburb of Forest. Some 5,000 Volkswagen workers
from the Forest plant took part in the protest, supported by relatives,
workers from other industries, white-collar workers, young people
and the unemployed. Numerous nationalities were represented on
the march, with most of the demonstrators coming from Brussels
and other surrounding cities.

Delegations from other Belgian companies, which are also threatened
by job lossesi.e., Kraft Foodprotested with their
own banners against redundancies. Other banners bore large cartoons
alluding to the sex scandal involving the German works council
boss, Klaus Volkert. In his official capacity, Volkert received
nearly 700,000 euros a year from the company plus expenses for
his girlfriend in Brazil.
There were few political slogans on the protest. Posters and
banners proclaimed Solidarity for jobs and the names
of various trade unions. Workers from the factory assembled around
a broken auto chassis bearing a coffin. Retirees from the company
carried a poster with the message: Retirees support youwith
rage in our heart.
While there was no mistaking the deeply felt anger and indignation
on the part of demonstrators, the trade union organisers of the
protest intended it as a boost to their credibility while permitting
workers to let off steam harmlessly. The unions had called for
an international demonstration and indicated that
workers from Volkswagen factories across Europe would attend to
protest the destruction of jobs and the transfer of production
from one location to another. We will not allow individual
Volkswagen locations to be played off one against the other,
was the formulation used by Germanys biggest industrial
trade union, the IG Metall, in its appeal to attend the protest.
In fact, the deal struck by IG Metall for revised working times
at the companys main factory in Wolfsburg, Germany, was
the most important precondition for the decision by company management
to switch production of the companys Golf model away from
Brussels.
The trade unions also neglected to organise any real mobilisation,
and just a few VW workers from other plants attended the Brussels
protest. The solidarity delegations consisted mainly
of union officials, who had been instructed by the bureaucracy
to attend, and had travelled to Brussels at the last minuteusually
in their own cars. Although the German Wolfsburg factory has a
total workforce of 50,000, only one coachload of trade union representatives
and workers attended the demo.
The cynical character of the organisers attitude was
made clear when five members of the IG Metall were heaved up onto
the speakers podium to express their international
solidarity, despite the fact that the union had made no
real effort to mobilise VW workers throughout Europe to defend
the jobs under threat in Brussels.
The general secretary of the Belgian trade union FGTB (Fédération
Générale du Travail de la BelgiqueGeneral
Labour Federation of Belgium), Anne Demelenne, was applauded when
she declared: Colleagues, we must now transform our rage
and revolt into energy and determination. The fight is only beginning.
It is a struggle for jobs. In reality, such a claim is completely
hypocritical, bearing in mind that the trade unions have already
accepted the transfer of the Golf model from Brussels to German
plants.
A proposal has been made to the Volkswagen Brussels plant,
which would involve the possible production of an Audi model (A3)
beginning next year and the model A1 in 2009proposals that
are by no means definite and that, if carried through, would have
disastrous consequences for VW workers employed in other plants
in Spain and Portugal. Meanwhile, the company is sticking rigidly
to its plan of shifting Golf production to two German plants.
Discussions are currently taking place for a retirement and part-time
employment plan for around 1,000 workers at Forest, and another
thousand will simply be sacked.
At the protest rally, the FGTB spokeswoman declared We
must save as many jobs as possiblea formulation that
makes clear that the trade unions reject any principled fight
against redundancies. It goes without saying that the same trade
unions have absolutely no prospects of a struggle to establish
new jobs to resolve the problem of high levels of youth unemployment
in Belgium.
A team from the World Socialist Web Site distributed
copies of a leaflet (in French and German) calling for the building
of defence committees that function independently from the official
works councils and trade unions. The leaflet makes clear that
a principled defence of all jobs at all locations is possible
only on the basis of a socialist and internationalist perspective.
Many workers read the leaflet and expressed their interest
in the demand for international defence committees independent
of the bureaucracy. At the same time, they had many questions
regarding how such committees could be put into practice. A number
expressed their opinion that the trade unions had failed to measure
up to the demands posed by the globalisation of production. Below,
we reproduce a number of comments by those taking part in the
demonstration.
J. M. Waroquier: I work in
the sheet mill at the Volkswagen factory in Forest, and there
is a 99 percent chance we will loose our jobs in the department.
We only learned of the social disaster that confronts us just
two weeks ago. We hope that the trade unions can make a good job
of things. It is difficult to objectively judge what they are
doing because they keep everything secret.
When asked about the necessity of developing an international
struggle, Waroquier said: I think that would be great, but
unfortunately it is somewhat utopian. We can already see how difficult
it is to unite the Walloon and Fleming nationalities in Belgium.
I have my doubts whether such unity is possible on a worldwide
basis. It would be terrific if it succeeded because workers have
the same problems everywhere.
Lucien is a teacher in a state school: I think the action
has to continue and must spread. One cannot count on the union
leaderships in this respect. At the very least, one must mobilise
throughout the country, but even better would be European solidarity
and beyond. With regard to the Iraq war, he said: It
is necessary to challenge the entire capitalist system. But what
is missing at present is a vanguard, a party for the working class.
Najar has worked for 20 years at
Philips in Belgium and attended the demonstration as part of a
large delegation from his factory: I work in the same field
as the VW workers. We came to express our solidarity with those
Volkswagen workers who will lose their jobs. I know many people
who work at the VW plant. In addition, we endorse a social Europe
that has the interests of the individual at its heart. We have
had enough of transfers of production, which have devastating
consequences for workers and their families. All of this takes
place in the interests of profit. We are dissatisfied with the
government, which just lets all this happen. It offers absolutely
no protection against the companies and entrepreneurs.
Ulric: I do not work in the automobile industry, quite
the opposite. I work for an ecological alternative, the bicycle.
That does not prevent me, however, from coming here and expressing
my support: for a social Europe and for investment, in order to
guarantee jobs for us here, but also on an international level.
What is taking place today is bound up with the fact that we probably
did not react quick enough to the consequences of the globalisation
of the economy, and what that means for us concretely today, as
well as for all other workers in India, China or Africa.
When questioned on the trade unions he said: I think
the trade unions are not sufficiently forward-looking. Therefore
we need a reorganisation. From a historical standpoint, the role
of the trade unions is of great importance. I am aware that I
am able to benefit today from the struggles carried out in the
past. But for too long the trade unions have failed to think globally.
One example is the environmental question, which is important
for the future. It concerns us and the entire world.
Adil P. is Sudanese and has lived in Belgium for 10 years as
a so-called sans-papier (i.e., an undocumented worker):
I came with my comrades to support the Volkswagen workers.
Because I have no proper [permanent residency] permitalthough
I have been here for 10 yearsI suffer just as much as they
do. That is why I am here. I want to support them to ensure that
we all have work and can lead a reasonable life. We would like
the government to change its politics so that we have all a job
and proper living conditions. All of Europe must fight for this,
it really is a huge problem. When one is without a proper job,
then it is just as discriminatory as to be living without a permit;
it is just the same.
Kristof van Baarle is conducting a poll for the University
of Antwerp: Of course, I am here in solidarity with the
people being dismissed. I think whats taking place at the
demo is good, and it confirms the research I have been doing that
many people who do not work at Volkswagen are nevertheless prepared
to show their solidarity with the affected workers, and that is
important.
Joseph Dammicco works at the Kraft
Food Belgium group, which is currently transferring its coffee
department from Lüttich to France and Berlin: Our workplace
has been closed, it has been shifted to Lavérune and Berlin.
We are in the same situation as the Volkswagen Forest workers.
Our workplace and production are being transferred although the
company is making significant profits.
The trade unions are being overwhelmed by globalisation
with transnational companies laying down the playing field. The
only factor that counts is profits, and that is unfortunate. Therefore,
a maximum mobilisation of the rank and file is necessary. One
must try to spur the trade unions into action so that they force
the bosses to take a stand and measure up to their obligations.
This situation has persisted since there had been a Europe dominated
by the bosses and the companies. If we do not fight for a social
Europe, then we are heading for disaster. It is necessary for
workers to organise, and that there is a common plan of action
that is the same for everyone in Europe, that is the only solution.
See Also:
Volkswagen strike in Brussels enters third
week
German VW workers express solidarity with Belgium colleagues
[2 December 2006]
Support the struggle of Volkswagen
workers in Brussels!
Set up defense committees independently of the works council and
trade unions!
[25 November 2006]
Belgian Volkswagen factory
occupied
"It is high time to wake up and become political"
[25 November 2006]
Strike and occupation at Volkswagen
works in Belgium
[23 November 2006]
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