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Police break up picket line at Philippine port
By Dante Pastrana
4 April 2008
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Last Saturday, Philippine police violently dispersed more than
100 sacked workers, who had been picketing at the gates of the
port at Dumaguete city, the capital of Negros Oriental province.
Ten people were reported injured, including four workers, a child
and five police personnel.
Formerly stevedores at the port and members of a local chapter
of the Associated Labor Union-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines
(ALU-TUCP), the picketers were officially sacked on March 11,
following the takeover of cargo handling operations by Prudential
Customs Brokerage Services Inc (PCBSI).
For more than two weeks, however, the workers had managed to
block entry and exit of cargoes from the port through a mixture
of cajoling, appeals and threats. They had previously subsisted
on wages as low as 56 US cents an hour, but now face a worse future
of desperate unemployment.
Last Friday Prudential obtained a temporary restraining order
from the National Labor Relations Commission, declaring the workers
actions an illegal strike. The next day, local police,
backed by the city mayor, forcibly cleared the port gates with
a police truck. According to the Sun Star Daily, the truck
almost hit workers and even their wives and children. Enraged,
the workers fought back with stones and bottle throwing and, soon
after, managed to restore their picket lines.
Another attempt to disperse the picket on Sunday was called
off amid concerns that it might provoke a response from other
sections of workers. The Sun Star Daily reported that an
assistant secretary of the transportation and communications department
asked local police to let the situation cool down.
On Wednesday, the Philippine Port Authority (PPA), a government
corporation, halted all further operations in the port. A halt
was even called to passenger services, which had run for weeks
without hindrance from the pickets. Port manager Renato Tolinero
told the Philippine Daily Inquirer: Its disheartening
to close the port. Everybody is a loser. Nobody is a winner with
this kind of situation. We have to make sacrifices to solve this
problem.
All these steps are designed to intensify the pressure on the
port workers. Local businessmen immediately called for action.
The Negros Oriental Chamber of Commerce and Industry (NOCCI) warned
that the closure of the port would have an immediate effect
on prices of local goods.
The plight of the port workers is the product of two decades
of market reform, labour flexibilisation and privatisation
under successive administrationsfrom Corazon Aquino and
Fidel Ramos to Joseph Estrada and now Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
In 1994, heavy and passenger cargo handling operations in all
Philippine ports were privatised. Port services have since become
a lucrative business, with workers stripped of job security and
forced to work as casuals on low wages. In 2004 alone, income
remitted by port services contractors to the PPA was more than
$US17 million. Contractors profits would have been much
higher.
Workers in the Dumaguete city port organised a union in 1999
and obtained a collective bargaining agreement from the previous
port services contractor. The arrangement was short-lived. In
2002, two years before the agreement expired, the contractor ceased
operations. The PPA absorbed the port workers but, backed by the
Civil Service Commission, insisted that no employer-employee relationship
existed with the workers and refused to negotiate a new agreement
in 2004.
As reported by the Sun Star Daily in 2006, Cipriano
Sabanal, the local chapter vice president, pointed out: The
PPA pays our salaries, can fire and hire, and controls our work
and still they say that they are not our employer? In late
2006, PPA tendered out the port services, underscoring its determination
to privatise the port operations. Prudential won the bid amid
allegations of influence peddling.
Then port manager, Noeme Calderon, gave assurances that Prudential
would absorb all port workers. But the new contractor quickly
insisted that hiring was a management prerogative. The company
was backed by the new port manager Tolinero, who insisted Prudential
had no legal obligation to absorb the workers.
Existing employees were considered as applicants and subjected
to a screening process. Not surprisingly, all officers and active
members of the unionaround 30failed to pass the screening
process. In the end, out of around 200 workers, Prudential only
absorbed 60.
The difficulties facing the sacked workers have been compounded
by the officials of the chapter and its federation, the ALU-TUCP.
On at least two occasions over the past fortnight, the union has
allowed the PPA to offload and remove cargo, undermining the effectiveness
of the picket. No attempt has been made to call for support from
other sections of workers in Dumaguete or at other ports, let
alone more broadly. The picketers have been effectively been left
isolated.
The ALU-TUCP emerged during the Marcos dictatorship as a mechanism
for suppressing the working class. The federation is run as a
personal fiefdom by its head, Democrito T. Mendoza, who has a
vested interest in the privatisation of port services. He chairs
the board of the workers-owned Oriental Port and Allied
Services Corporation (OPASCOR), which operates the Cebu International
Port, one of the most profitable ports in the Philippines. Starting
with the retirement benefits of retrenched Cebuano port workers,
OPASCOR, by 2006, was estimated to have $5 million in assets.
OPASCOR reportedly contributes more than 70 percent of the revenue
of the Cebu Port Authority, the government corporation that nominally
owns the port. Mendoza also has interests in another port services
contractor in Cagayan De Oro city, Mindanao.
OPASCOR itself participated in the bidding for the Dumaguete
port services in 2006. It is not surprising therefore that the
ALU-TUCP made no attempt to defend the port workers claim
that they were regular employees of the port authority. Such a
move would have called into question ALU-TUCPs own role
as a contractor and exploiter of cheap labour. That is also why
no concerted union campaign has been organised to support picketing
workers now.
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