vrijdag 29 april 2011

ABVAKABO FNV bij protest tegen 'de Muur' in Palestina, te Nabi Saleh

Lot van Baaren van ABVAKABO's Palestinawerkgroep en lid van het Bondsbestuur nam op vrijdagmiddag 29 april tijdens haar bezoek aan Palestina deel aan de wekelijkse protesten tegen 'de Muur' in Nabi Saleh. Zie over de situatie daar  http://nabisalehsolidarity.wordpress.com/
We weten dat Bassem Tamimi, coördinator van het volkscomité in Nabi Saleh, op 24 maart door Israel werd ontvoerd en nog steeds gevangen zit; zie hierover dit eerdere bericht en dit bericht van 17 april ..
In de Bondsraad van 29 maart zegde het bondsbestuur bij monde van de voorzitter toe zich meer in te zetten voor het protest tegen de Muur.

zaterdag 23 april 2011

PGFTU herbevestigt haar BDS-oproep

PGFTU Reaffirms call for Boycott of Israel

http://www.bdsmovement.net/2011/pgftu-clarrification-6559

The following is a translation of a PGFTU statement to the Scottish Trade Union Congress. The Arabic version with PGFTU letterhead is available for download below.
The PGFTU has confirmed what was stated by its general secretary, Mr Shaher Saed, to the Unison delegation to Palestine during the period 27th November to 3rd December 2010. this as follows:-
“Mr Shaher Saed detested the attempts by some organisations to exploit the relationship between the Histadrut and the PGFTU for political gain and to undermine the international trade unions  efforts to defend the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people.”  Mr Saed has confirmed that the relationship between the PGFTU and the Histadrut is one of unequals. We live under an Israeli military occupation while trying to defend the rights of our Palestinians workers who are subjugated by the Israeli army which  deny them their rights and subjects them to all sorts of violations in contravention of international conventions on human and workers rights. We, in the PGFTU, call on all international organisations and trade unions not to use the relationship between the PGFTU and the Histadrut to justify establishing relationships with the Israeli occupation and its institutions that contribute towards strengthening the occupation.

Mr Shaher Saed has condemned specifically the Trade Unions Friends of Israel for trying to portray the relationship between the PGFTU and the Histadrut as a sign of normalisation between the Palestinian and Israeli trade union movements.

Mr Shaher has also accused the Trade Unions Friends of Israel of dishonest behaviour when dealing with PGFTU. The PGFTU was very clear about its relationship with the Histadrut which was specific to representing the Palestinian workers who work inside Israel. He also confirmed that the PGFTU refuses to normalise relations with the Histadrut as long as the occupation exists and as long as the racist practices against our people and workers continue.

Mr Saed welcomes and expresses PGFTU’s support for all workers and international organisations that take a stance against the Israeli occupation and its institutions that violate Palestinian human rights. Mr Saed holds in high regard the initiatives and decisions taken by friendly trade unions to boycott the institutions that are implicated in the occupation and its illegal practices.

Mr Saed has called on national and international trade unions to support the Palestinian national project to establish our independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital and to support the efforts of the Palestinian leadership in gaining recognition from their governments for a Palestinian state within the borders of 4th June 1967. We are certain of the trade unions positive and active role in supporting our just cause. We salute all trade unions in the world that have passed motions in support of our people against the Israeli occupation.

We at the PGFTU salute all international trade unions and we trust them to make the right decisions that reflect the values upon which the international trade union movement is built,  to help our independence, freedom, our right to return to our homeland, and building our independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.   We appreciate the role of the unions in rejecting the denial of the rights of individuals and nations. We further appreciate the unions’ support to all nations in their endeavour to freedom, justice, equality and development. It is time the world took a stance against the Israeli occupation.

It is time all world organisations decided to boycott all Israeli institutions implicated in the occupation and its practices, and to bring pressure on their governments to recognise the independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, support the right of all Palestinian refugees to return to their homeland, demand the release of all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, the removal of the racist separation wall, and the removal of all settlements from our land.

Long live the International Trade Union Movement

donderdag 21 april 2011

Zweedse pensioenfondsen & 'de bezetting'

Swedish AP funds call for Motorola to withdraw from West Bank

AP funds’ Ethical Council also in dialogue with France’s Veolia and Alstom

http://www.responsible-investor.com/home/article/swedish_ap_funds_ethical_council/

The Ethical Council of the four Swedish AP buffer pension funds (AP1, AP2, AP3 and AP4) is calling on US communications giant Motorola Solutions to pull out of the Israeli-occupied territories in the West Bank.

The Council wants the company, spun out of Motorola earlier this year, to cease delivery and maintenance of a custom-designed monitoring system for the settlements in the Palestinian territories. It states the settlements are located on occupied land and violate international humanitarian law.
It’s also calling on the Illinois-based firm to adopt a policy to prevent it contributing to human rights violations.

The AP funds – as well as other international investors such as the NOK3trn (€385bn) Norwegian Government Pension Fund – already exclude Israel’s Elbit Systems for building a surveillance system for parts of the separation barrier on the West Bank.

The Ethical Council is also calling on French engineering firms Alstom and Veolia to end their involvement in a tram project linking Jerusalem and the occupied territories.

The Council, which coordinates the environmental and ethical work of the AP funds – which have combined assets of SEK875bn (€97.5bn) – revealed the new engagements in its 2010 annual report.

It said it is in direct dialogue with 10 worldwide companies on various issues as at the end of the year. External consultants were in dialogue with up to 200 companies on behalf of the Council and other clients.

The Council also reported on its engagement with US retailer Wal-Mart (labour law issues) and London-listed Indian mining concern Vedanta (indigenous rights).

It said its “drawn out” and “stuttering” dialogue with Wal-Mart has so far only resulted in modest improvements. But it has concluded its talks with Vedanta, as its stated objective of getting the company
to suspend its operations in the state of Orissa have been achieved by the Indian government’s refusal of a mining licence. “Nevertheless, we will continue monitoring Vedanta for five years.”
Despite good results from its engagement with Canadian mining outfit Goldcorp over the Marlin Mine in Guatemala, the Council has decided not to remove it from its dialogue list for now, pending the implementation of planned measures.

Dialogue is inactive, pending legal proceedings, with US energy firms Chevron and Duke Energy. Chevron, the Council says, has been associated with environmental destruction in the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador – with the case now the subject of a legal case in the country.
As for Duke Energy, the Council is awaiting the outcome of a case between the company and the US Environmental Protection Agency on air pollution.

The long-running dialogue with Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold will continue, despite some success – via shareholder resolutions – to get the company to set up a Sustainable Development Committee.
Although a total of 11 companies are excluded from the AP funds’ investment universe, the Council advocates dialogue over exclusion. “A sale generally doesn’t solve the problem in the company and we therefore do our utmost to urge the companies to make a change,” said Nadine Viel Lamare, Chairwoman of the Ethical Council.

The companies that are excluded include nine blacklisted over cluster munitions: Alliant Techsystems, GenCorp, General Dynamics, Hanwha Corp., L-3 Communications, Lockheed Martin, Poongsan Corp., Raytheon and Textron. The others are Singapore Technologies Engineering (anti-personnel mines) and Elbit Systems (West Bank).

Britse vakbondsdelegatie in Jeruzalem bij Rode Kruis

British trade unionists visit Jerusalemite officials at Red Cross zie hier en hier.

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- The three Palestinian officials threatened with eviction from occupied Jerusalem met on Tuesday morning at the Red Cross headquarters a British delegation of trade unionists.

The trade unionists made their visit to Jerusalem in coordination with the UK Palestine solidarity campaign in order to witness the serious Israeli violations against the indigenous people of the holy city.

The Jerusalemite officials, two lawmakers and one former minister, briefed the delegation about their issue, especially the Arab and international moves being made to confront Israel's intents to expel them from the holy city after it exiled MP Mohamed Abu Atteir.
The issue of Palestinian prisoners was also raised during the meeting.

MP Mohamed Totah, one of the three officials who sought refuge in the Red Cross building to avoid expulsion from their native city, criticized the international community for being concerned about one Israeli soldier captured from his tank and ignoring the suffering of thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
"We are a nation under occupation, so why does the world blame us when we defend ourselves," Totah told the visiting delegation.

Palestijnse Vakbonden danken Schots Vakbondscongres voor BDS-steun

Palestinian trade union movement applauds the Scottish Congress of Trade Unions (STUC) for heeding the Palestinian Civil Society Call for BDS and calls on the STUC to sever links with the Histadrut. 15-4-2011

Uit http://www.bdsmovement.net/2011/tu-movement-stuc-6535

Occupied Palestine, April 15th, 2011 – The Palestinian trade union movement, as a key component of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC), salutes the Scottish Congress of Trade Unions for their principled and historic decision in April 2009 to heed the Palestinian civil society call for BDS. We also deeply appreciate the STUC decision of 2010 to review relations with Israel’s racist and colonial trade union entity, Histadrut, and hope that this year’s congress will decide to sever links with the Histadrut as a logical implementation of your principled adoption of BDS.

The Histadrut, as the definitive record shows, is a Zionist organization that has always played a key role in perpetuating Israel’s occupation, colonization and system of racial discrimination. Since its initiation, the Histadrut has been an active supporter of the dispossession of Palestinians and denial of their basic rights. On January 13th 2009, during Israel’s 22-day war of aggression on Gaza, the Histadrut issued a statement[1] justifying the Israeli attack on Gaza. Israel was later found to have committed war crimes and possible crimes against humanity. A later statement by the Histadrut justified Israel’s massacre of humanitarian relief workers and activists aboard the Freedom Flotilla on 31 May 2010.[2]

Furthermore, the Histadrut owes over NIS 8.3 billion (approximately £1.47bn) to Palestinian workers from the Occupied Palestinian Territory.[3] This money was deducted from Palestinian workers’ salaries for social and other trade union benefits that they never received. Palestinian workers from the occupied Palestinian territory pay for but do not receive the vast majority of social rights for which they are legally mandated to pay. This can only be seen as part of the ongoing theft of Palestinian workers’ rights by the Histadrut.

Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza cannot be members of the Histadrut. Inside Israel, the union refuses to assist Palestinian citizens of Israel fight racial discrimination in the workplace. In one notorious example, the Histadrut did nothing when, in 2004, the helmets of Palestinian workers at a building site in the Knesset grounds were marked with a red X, to facilitate assassination in case of emergency.[4]

The Histadrut played a key role during the Nakba (catastrophe) of 1948, when at least 750,000 indigenous Palestinians were forcibly displaced from their homes and homeland. It was a key player in the construction of settlements[5] and continues to support the colonisation of Palestinian land. The Histadrut maintains active commercial interests in Israel’s illegal settlement enterprise. For example, the Histadrut owns 25% of Yashav Bank, which has a branch in Occupied East Jerusalem,[6] and allows Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank to join the organization.[7] In these ways and other ways, the Histadrut is directly involved in Israel’s violations of the IV Geneva Convention, which prohibits the transfer of its own civilian population into the occupied territory. Recent news reports reveal the Histadrut’s pivotal role in propping up the Netanyahu government, a government responsible for the continuation of settlement expansion and the construction of Israel’s apartheid wall, intense violence against Palestinians and the attack on the Freedom Flotilla and numerous other attacks on human rights and international law.[8]

Given the Histadrut’s blatant support for Israeli war crimes, theft of Palestinian workers’ dues, racial discrimination and its direct involvement in maintaining the Israel’s occupation and colonial settlement enterprise, there is no reason for trade unions to make an exception for the Histadrut when implementing their BDS policies.

It is evident that a policy of “constructive engagement,” as some international trade unionists have advocated, will provide further legitimacy and impunity for the Histadrut’s complicity in Israel’s violations of international law and Palestinian rights. Engagement of any kind with an organisation that is ideologically committed to Israel’s racist and colonial oppression of the Palestinian people amounts to normalization and the emboldening of Israel’s colonial project. The Histadrut cannot be ‘constructively engaged’ any more effectively than other key Zionist institutions. Furthermore, its active support for racial discrimination and failure to respect human rights and international law are inconsistent with the minimum requirements for trade unions to promote equality, international justice, and workers solidarity.

The global trade union movement has always been a key player and an inspiration in its courage and commitment to human rights by adopting concrete, ground-breaking labor-led sanctions against oppressive regimes in a show of effective solidarity with oppressed peoples around the world. Inspired by the courage of international trade unions that boycotted South Africa during the anti-apartheid struggle, STUC, TUC, COSATU, ICTU, CUT (Brazil) and other major union federations and dozens of individual unions are once again adopting the time-honored tactic of boycott and divestment as the most effective form of solidarity with a people under colonial and racist oppression. Trade unions today are taking the lead in defending the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination, freedom, the respect of the right of return of our refugees, and an end to Israeli occupation and apartheid. We cannot forget STUC’s pioneering role in advocating for BDS in the UK.

It is with this in mind that in addition to the STUC, the ICTU and COSATU have also taken steps to sever ties with the Histadrut. The University and College Union (UCU) has implemented a full boycott[9] and UNISON voted, in the wake of the attack on the Freedom Flotilla, to suspend ties.[10]

As the struggle against apartheid in South Africa has shown, effective and consistent international solidarity with an oppressed people is best expressed in forms that the oppressed themselves call for. Since 2005, Palestinian civil society, including its trade union federations and all the trade union political blocs, has been united in calling on people of conscience and institutions around the world, particularly trade unions, to endorse BDS against Israel and to implement the boycott in diverse ways.

In light of all of the above, we, the Palestinian trade union movement, including almost the entirety of the blocks that make up the PGFTU, reiterate the BNC’s call of 2009[11] for severing links with the Histadrut, as our best hope to end Israel’s grave violations against our workers and people, until we attain our inalienable, UN-sanctioned rights, especially our right to self-determination.

Signed by the following PGFTU members, who make up almost the entirety of the PGFTU executive:

Central Office for the Workers Movement (Fatah)
Workers Unity block
Progressive Labor Union Front
Workers Struggle Block
Workers Liberation Front
Progressive Workers Block
Workers Solidarity Organization

And the following additional unions and organisations:

General Union of Palestinian Workers
Federation of Independent Trade Unions (IFU)
Palestinian Federation of Unions of University Professors and Employees (PFUUPE)
General Union of Palestinian Peasants and Co-op Groups
Union of Palestinian Farmers
The Union of Public Employees in Palestine- Civil Sector
The Union of UNRWA Employees in Palestine
General Union of Palestinian Writers
General Union of Palestinian Teachers
Palestinian Professionals Association**

**Includes the national syndicates of engineers, agricultural engineers, doctors, dentists, pharmacists, lawyers and veterinarians.

zaterdag 9 april 2011

West Bank/Gaza: Stop Harassing Journalists

Human Rights Watch rapporteert op 6 april over een groeiend aantal aanvallen op en gevangennemingen van journalisten in de West Bank (door de PA) en de Strook van Gaza (door Hamas). Vind hier betreffend HRW-rapport getiteld 'West Bank/Gaza: Stop Harassing Journalists'.

Het rapport bevat de nodige adviezen.

maandag 4 april 2011

ABVAKABO-BONDSRAAD EN FNV-KADERDAG OVER PALESTINA OP 29/30 MAART


De coördinator van de olijfboomcampagne, Kristel Letschert
, vertelde op 29 maart de ABVAKABO-BondsRaad kort over de situatie in de bezette gebieden en over de 70 net geplante ABVAKABO-bomen en nodigde een delegatie uit om Palestina - en de eigen bomen - te komen bezoeken. Zij kan voor zo'n delegatie en voor bezoekers een veelzijdige kennismaking regelen.


Aansluitend werd vanuit de Palestinawerkgroep gepleit voor het door ABVAKABO opkomen voor de mensen die al vele jaren vreedzaam demonstreren tegen 'de muur' en de nederzettingenbouw. Nu voor het publiekelijk opkomen voor de gevangen genomen Bassem Tamimi, voor het daartoe contact opnemen met onze Palestijnse vakbondsgenoten zoals Anan Qadri (zie haar hartekreten in het Amman-verslag, in lijn met haar inbreng op de solidariteitsdag 30 oktober!), Laila Sha'ar en anderen bij de PGFTU. Alsmede voor actie vanuit PSI en ITUC, onze internationale vakbondsfederaties. Ook om het alsnog vakbondsaandacht geven aan de pas vrijgelaten Abdallah Abu Rahmah.
Het bondsbestuur deed bij monde van voorzitter 
Edith Snoey meteen de toezegging hiermee aan de slag te gaan.

Ook gaat het bondsbestuur in internationaal vakbondsverband opkomen voor de onafhankelijke Egyptische vakbonden (ook hier), die protesteerden tegen een anti-stakingswet.

Voorts komt er snel (in mei) een Bondsraad over Internationale Solidariteit. Daarbij is het verslag van onze solidariteitsdag van 30 oktober j.l. van belang, met reactie van het bondsbestuur.

Op 30 maart was een uitstekende en goed bezochte kaderdag over Internationale Solidariteit, vanuit een initiatief van FNV Bondgenoten deden verder de Nederlandse PolitieBond, FNV-Bouw, de Algemene OnderwijsBond, ABVAKABO-FNV en FNV-Mondiaal mee. Er komt verslag; rechtsboven één der ter plekke gemaakte smaakmakende cartoons. Uit een werkgroep kwam dat IS in elke bondsraad en -vergadering serieus aandacht verdient, ook op de sites en in de bondsbladen. 
 
Het werkwoord 'doen' stond vaak centraal alsmede dat de vakbeweging vaker en beter één front moet vormen met NGO's zoals Milieudefensie, Amnesty en dergelijke organisaties. Voor alle deelnemers was er een pamflet van de Palestinawerkgroep en mondeling werd geattendeerd op het opkomen voor de antimuur-demonstranten (Bassem Tamimi en anderen), extra logisch op de Palestijnse Dag van het Land de 30e maart.

Inspirerend voorbeeld voorts: Vakbondscampagne voor een Duurzame Cacaoketen.
En we leerden dat er meer kan op MVO-gebied (beleid in ontwikkeling) door de OESO-meldpunten te gebruiken; schendingen van OESO-richtlijnen kunnen er worden gemeld.....
Het verslag van de kaderdag komt snel.

Tot slot iets anders, over het MoviesThatMatter Festival. Met enkelen zagen we daar de documentaire Budrus over verzet tegen 'de Muur' o.l.v. Ayed Morrar. En we spraken hem aansluitend op 27 maart.
Goed dit bericht over bekroning van Ayed Morrar te lezen: Budrus gaan zien. En dergelijke acties steunen!