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Fijis nurses strike in defiance of military junta
By Frank Gaglioti
30 July 2007
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Fiji Nursing Association (FNA) members went on strike on July
25 to oppose a 5 percent pay cut and the axing of jobs by the
lowering of the retirement age from 60 to 55 across the public
sector. The nurses union leadership was compelled to call
the strike despite concerted threats from the countrys military
regime and the capitulation of most other public sector unions
to the juntas dictates.
The 1,676 nurses left only a skeleton staff to cater for emergencies.
The nurses want the full restoration of the 5 percent pay cut.
That the strike has occurred at all expresses widespread hostility
to the juntas austerity measures, which have placed the
brunt of the nations economic crisis on the backs of working
people.
Nurses are part of the countrys working poor and the
pay cut is having a devastating impact on their already straitened
living standards. In the 17 years to 2004, 65 percent of Fijis
nurses, including many senior staff, left the country to get a
better job abroad.
The countrys health system confronts an overall shortage
of doctors, a lack of protective equipment and basic facilities.
A striking nurse told the Fiji Sun on July 28: Life
as a nurse is so difficult and today we have to show the country
how important our role is and that without us, the hospitals cannot
run.
In a bid to demonstrate its fiscal responsibility and woo foreign
investors, the junta slashed government spending by $F200 million
($US120 million) in a revised budget in March. Coup leader Commodore
Frank Bainimarama is heavily dependent on Labour Party figures
in his ministry and their connections with the trade union apparatus
to impose the measures.
Labour leader Mahendra Chaudhry is the finance minister and
drew up the budget. Former Labour deputy leader Poseci Bune is
public service minister, in charge of imposing the pay and job
cuts. Most of the public sector unions have refused launch industrial
action over the budget, despite strike ballots in favour of action.
On July 11, the Confederation of Public Sector Unions (CPSU)
agreed to an offer to restore just 1 percent of the cut pay. The
FNA, along with the Fiji Public Service Association and the Fiji
Teachers Union, also accepted the offer and agreed not to strike,
but later pulled out of the agreement. FNA general secretary Kuini
Lutua said her members were very unhappy with the 1 percent
restoration.
Determined to defeat the nurses strike, Bune told the
Fiji Times: [T]he government cannot afford this and
it cannot treat nurses differently from the rest of the civil
service. The regime has mobilised police against picketing
workers. All police have been placed on 12-hour shifts and leave
has been cancelled. On July 20, the military and police held exercises
that were broadcast on national television as a means of intimidating
the nurses.
On July 24, the Fiji Sun published the juntas
contingency plan, which includes threats to impose the Public
Order Act that bans any public assembly. Any worker who strikes
for more than seven days would be considered as having resigned
their job. On July 28, six striking nurses on Taveuni were forcibly
evicted from state-supplied residence by out of uniform police.
One of the nurses protested: They were really rude and used
dirty words on us.
The government is obviously fearful that a protracted strike
by nurses could attract support from other sections of workers
and become a focus for political opposition. Bainimarama warned
last week: [P]eople who are going on strike for political
reasons will be dealt with severely. For its part, the FNA
leadership is determined to limit the campaign. General secretary
Lutua told AAP the union did not follow any political party
because they [nurses] have always lost out in the end when politics
comes in.
In a July 24 editorial, the Fiji Sun noted the dangers
posed for the regime: [If] the nurses are able to force
the government back to the negotiating table with an offer the
country cannot afford, the prognosis for Fiji is probably worse.
For there are bodies of workers watching the progress of this
strike and any sign of weakness will be noted and acted upon.
Rather than turning to other layers of working people, the
FNA leadership is appealing for Bainimarama to intervene. Lutua
told Fijilive.com on July 26: We are thinking of
negotiating our demands with the government but as yet nothing
has been decided.
Other trade unions have isolated the FNA. The Fiji Islands
Council of Trade Unions (FICTU) is holding meetings with the junta
to find a means of calling off strike action scheduled for August
2. Viti National Union of Taukei Workers general secretary Taniela
Tabu told the media: No one wants the strike to go ahead
and we are ready to negotiate with the government.
Bune praised the FICTUs demands as realistic, saying
They (were) taking into account the governments financial
position. On July 26, Chaudhry said the government didnt
have the money and appealed to the nurses to go back to
work and continue the dialogue.
The unions have tacitly supported the junta since Bainimarama
seized power last December. No union leader opposed the coup or
the increasingly repressive measures used to silence any criticism.
The army has arbitrarily arrested and physically abused opponents.
At least two individuals have died after being detained by soldiers.
The economy confronts a crisis. The Reserve Bank of Fiji announced
on July 27 that GDP is expected to contract by 3.1 percent this
year, up from an earlier estimate of 2.5 percent. Tourism, one
of the countrys main income earners, has declined, with
arrivals for the year to April down 4 percent compared to the
same period a year ago. The Fiji Islands Visitors Bureau expects
an overall decline of 5.7 percent in tourism for 2007.
Inflation is around 7.1 percent, up from an earlier 3.5 percent
projection. Working people and the unemployed have been the hardest
hit by rising prices, particularly for food. These deteriorating
living standards, as well as the juntas ruthless methods,
are fuelling the growing opposition to the military regime.
See Also:
Fijian military junta targets
bloggers
[24 May 2007]
Fiji: Public sector workers
vote to strike despite military regimes threats
[16 April 2007]
Canberra prepares rapprochement
with Fijian military junta
[6 April 2007]
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