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ckaihatsu
6th March 2009, 06:37
ILC <[email protected]> Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 5:20 PM

INTERNATIONAL LIAISON COMMITTEE
P.O. Box 40009, San Francisco, CA 94140.
Tel. (415) 641-8616; fax: (415) 626-1217.
email: [email protected]
Web site: www.owcinfo.org
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IN THIS MESSAGE

1) Update: First Victory!: Agreement Signed, General Strike Ends after 44 Days! -- by ILC U.S. Coordinators Eduardo Rosario and Alan Benjamin (based on Communiqué from ATPC)

2) Final Week of Negotiations: An Account of the Last Week of the Struggle -- by Alan Benjamin (based on reports from Robert Fabert, editor of Travayé è Peyzan

3) Background Articles on the General Strike from Issue No. 325 (February 25, 2009) of the ILC International Newsletter

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1) Update: First Victory!: Agreement Signed, General Strike Ends after 44 Days!

Dear Sisters and Brothers:

We received this morning a communiqué from the Guadeloupe-based Caribbean Workers and Peoples Alliance (ATPC) informing us that an agreement was signed Wednesday, March 4 at 8 p.m. between the LKP Strike Collective of 49 trade unions and organizations, the local governments, the employers' groups, and the French State. The agreement grants the strikers their top 20 immediate demands and allows for continued negotiations, with a tentative agreement reached on many points, on the remaining 126 mid-term and long-term demands.

The general strike was formally ended by vote of the LKP Strike Collective, with the unions and community organizations declaring this a "First Victory." The communiqué of the ATPC ends with the following words: "This was a FIRST VICTORY -- a victory obtained the workers and an entire mobilized people, and by the international solidarity with this courageous struggle."

The Jacques Bino Agreement -- named after the trade union leader who was killed on the barricades the night of February 16 -- that was signed on March 4 covers the following categories: wages/purchasing power, housing, transportation, education, employment, public services, trade union rights, environmental protections and culture.

Twenty of the articles, the List of Immediate Demands of the LKP Strike Collective, were fully met by the French authorities and employers' associations and were signed and codified into the agreement. Here are some of the provisions of the March 4 agreement:

On Wages: The agreement grants a 200 euro monthly increase to workers making the minimum wage, or SMIC, and up to 1.4 times the minimum wage (that is, between 1321 euros and 1849 euros). All workers making between 1.5 and 1.6 times the minimum wage (between 1849 euros and 2113 euros) get a 6% pay increase. Workers making 1.7 times the minimum wage or more (more than 2113 euros) get a 3% wage increase.

On Price Cuts: Lowering by 5% to 10% of costs for 100 basic staples and commodities, and for utilities (water, oil, gas, electricity, etc.) The cost of meals in the student cafeterias is cut by 20%, with a commitment to increase by 50% the produce of local farmers in all the meals provided by the student cafeterias. Family canteens will receive subsidies for their meal plans. Lowering of public transportation costs by 20%. Agreement by the State to fund 40,000 round-trip Paris-Point-a-Pitre airline tickets at 340 euros for low-income families, for the purpose of family reunification. Cuts in banking fees. Compensation of 40,000 euros for all small transportation owners in the aftermath of the reorganization of the urban and inter-city transportation plan.

On Housing: Moratorium on all foreclosures, evictions of renters and utility cutoffs. A Special Fund of 3 million euros is created to provide subsidized housing for 17,000 senior citizens and 7,000 handicapped persons. Freeze on all rents, accompanied by a tax cut of 9% for all renters. End of speculation in land for hotels and resorts, particularly non Guadeloupan chains and banking interests, with financial assistance to local businesses involved in tourist industry.

On Employment: Emergency Recovery Plan to provide jobs for 8,000 youth between the ages of 16 and 26, with the creation of a "Bill of Rights for Employment for all Working People in Guadeloupe." Creation of an agency to provide employment for job seekers, with the creation of jobs to meet the employment needs. All students on waiting lists for education at all levels will be admitted into a school.

On Agriculture and Fishing: Protections and subsidies for the agricultural producers, and protection of 64,000 hectares of agricultural lands. Stabilization of prices for fishing industry. State aid for fishing hatcheries and for modernization of fishing fleet and processing.

On Trade Union Rights: Improvement in State recognition of union prerogatives and rights, with fuller respect for, and enforcement of, collective-bargaining agreements and labor legislation. Designation of mediators to resolve specific conflicts that have arisen at RFO, Air France, International Airport, etc.

On the Environment: Creation of 50,000 hectare nature preserve.

On Culture: Commitment by the State to establish Creolle as a language for all public buildings and services, on the par with French.

The workers and people of Guadeloupe were ecstatic over this victory. People took to the streets spontaneously to celebrate.

Reactions in the mainstream French press, understandably, were less than sympathetic to the strikers. Writing in Les Echos on March 5, journalist Jean-Francis Pécresse laments that the French government gave in to the "mob pressure of the LKP Strike Collective, signing an agreement whose preamble proposes nothing less than the creation of a 'New Order in opposition to the Model of the Plantation Economy.' What value should we place on agreement signed under pressure from the LKP militia, an agreement imposed by intimidation?"

The scorn and racism of the colonialist power and of the white ruling class elite on the island, the Beké, comes through loud and clear in this article. How dare Pécresse use the term "mob" to describe a valiant, organized, peaceful (despite all the provocations by a 5,000 contingent of French Riot Police, the CRS) and disciplined people -- the overwhelming majority of whom are Black -- who were able to withstand the hardships of 44 days of a general strike, with the creation of soup kitchens, agricultural procurement committees, self-defense committees, picket lines, cultural committees, and barricades.

The impact of this victory will be felt around the world. There can be no doubt about this. We will continue to inform our readers and supporters of the repercussions of this powerful movement.

As the declaration of the ATPC notes, one of the keys to victory was the international solidarity expressed day after day with the general strike in Guadeloupe. All who signed our Open Letters, organized delegations to the French Embassy and Consulates, organized forums, broadcast news on their shows, publicized this movement in their press and postings, and/or sent statements to the strikers in Guadeloupe contributed to this victory.

Thanks to all for your support.

In solidarity,

Eduardo Rosario and Alan Benjamin
For the ILC

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2) The Final Week of Negotiations

A tentative agreement was reached In the wee hours of Friday morning, February 27. After the tentative agreement was announced, there was great joy and celebration in the streets of Guadeloupe. But over the weekend, the French authorities, through the French-appointed Prefect and the main employers' association, the MEDEF, went to the media to announce that an agreement had been reached and that everyone should go back to work on Monday.

This outraged the LKP Strike Collective and the workers and people of Guadeloupe. No agreement had been signed. And it was up to the Black majority on the island, organized in their own LKP Strike Collective, the only recognized leadership of the mass movement, to announce whether the strike was to end or whether it was to continue. It was not up to the Beké, the white ruling elite on the island, and its colonial paymasters in France to speak on behalf of the strikers -- especially when they had not signed an agreement.

The people felt that the government and the employers were trying to pull a fast one; that is, end the strike without signing a binding agreement. And there was additional reason for resentment and distrust: Two weeks earlier, the French Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories, Yves Jégo, had announced during his trip to Guadeloupe, where he had joined the negotiating team, that he supported the LKP Strike Collective's demand for a 200 euro increase in the monthly minimum wage. But no sooner had Jégo made this declaration than he was disavowed by French Prime Minster Francois Fillon and ordered back to Paris. This dashed the people's hope that the strike would come to an end, with a victory for the workers.

On Monday, March 2, the LKP Strike Collective disclosed the tentative agreement: All the main demands of the strikers had been won. Negotiations were to resume late Monday morning with the Prefect, the MEDEF, and the Small Business Employers' Association to finalize and sign the agreement.

But there was now a hitch: The MEDEF employers' association now reneged on the part of the agreement involving the 200 euro increase in the minimum wage. According to the agreement, the French government would pay 100 euros per worker (out of the 200 euro increase) for a period of three years by releasing the employers from paying into pension and healthcare funds for the workforce -- but after three years, that extra charge would have to be paid once again by the employers organized in the MEDEF. Now the MEDEF was demanding that the French government assume that 100 euro charge indefinitely.

This sent things back to Paris. From the morning of Monday, March 2 to the evening of Wednesday, March 5, heated and angry debates, negotiations and mass mobilizations organized by the LKP Strike Collective were the order the day in Guadeloupe.

Ultimately the workers and people of Guadeloupe prevailed. At 8 p.m. on March 4, an agreement was signed: A First Victory -- a huge victory -- had been won!

-- Alan Benjamin

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3) GUADELOUPE: BACKGROUND FROM THE ILC INTERNATIONAL NEWSLETTER
(reprinted from Issue No. 325, February 25, 2009)

The ILC distributes the LKP's call for international solidarity

Emergency Call
LIYANNAJ KONTE PWOFITASYON
A Collective Fighting Against Exploitation

Workers, young people, pensioners, fighters for a more just Guadeloupe.

For the past five weeks tens of thousands of Guadeloupeans have been on the streets to denounce the exploitation they suffer as a result of the colonial system that still exists in Guadeloupe, the powers granted to the status quo, and submission of political representation.
It was necessary to say No!
- No, to unemployment afflicting more than 30% of the population, or 50,000 men and women.
- No to job insecurity, poverty that affects over 60,000 homes.
- Not to the exclusion, discrimination in hiring that prohibits young people, the main component of the population (over 40% of the population is under 25 years) any life plans.
- No to the destruction of public education, which casts nearly 1,000 young people each year into the streets with no qualifications.
- No to economic blackmail organized by importers and distributors by dealers with the political support and financial assistance from the French State, which pushes up the price of utilities (electricity, fuel, transportation, gas, rent) and of goods so that that they are now inaccessible to families.
- No to the poisoning of agricultural land, land speculation and real estate, to the disappearance of local production, which allows the importation of over 80% of what is consumed locally.
- Not to taxation, the taxation of community and state, and the exorbitant profits of merchants and financial institutions.
- No to the hoarding of the wealth ...
- Not to blackmail, layoffs, and anti-union repression which would require more than 60,000 employees to accept 1000 euros in net monthly salary under the pretext of the crisis, of realism, and love for Guadeloupe.
- No to the destruction of our ecological heritage, no to environmental crimes.

Since December 16, LIYANNNAJ KONTE PWOFITASYON, a true federation of 49 organizations of various unions, associations, political, cultural, and consumers organizations, decided to manifest the discontent and demands of the people and raise them to those in power.

LIYANNNAJ KONTE PWOFITASYON (LKP) has given voice to the voiceless and given expression to all voices of the people.
Today, despite tens of thousands of proud, dignified protestors in the streets, despite hours and hours of negotiations, after the assassination of the militant trade unionist and CGTG activist of Akiyo, Jacques BINO, the French government and the Guadeloupe bosses are still refusing to meet the just demands and aspirations of the people. President Nicholas SARKOZY prefers to drown our demands in a magic formula "United assembly; status evolution." This is not the demand of the LKP.

To put an end to the conflict, they do suggest general measures (RSA, a bonus of 1500 euros per year exempt from taxes, ...), but they reject reforming their system. Clearly, the income of active solidarity (RSA) is a family allowance paid by the FCA, intended for families with low incomes, the RSA is the little brother of the RMI and the single parent allowance (API).

The RSA is not a salary but a benefit based on family status and not on the remuneration of work. For example for a single qualification and the same work, two employees with different family situations receive a different salary.

The famous bonus of 1500 Euros is a premium set by the law of December 3, 2008, intended to give employees the illusion of participation in the companies. This is not a wage increase.
Large employers and békés proposed at the last negotiating session, on February 20, 2009, a premium of between 50 and 70 euros. They expect that the State will fully fund the demand for a 200 euro wage raise, as has always been the case, through granting subsidies and tax exemptions of all kinds.

This is unacceptable, unacceptable!

Yet they all claim to have lost since the beginning of the strike hundreds of millions of euros. They have not changed since 1967, and they continue to say that the Negro ké ké yo fen woupran travay.
LKP and workers continue to demand in Guadeloupe a 200 euro net wage increase in the monthly minimum wage for private sector employees, the application of the guarantee of individual purchasing power and the compensation scheme for employees of the three public functions.

Contrary to the allegations suggesting that certain points have been granted, the LKP and the people of Guadeloupe demand more than ever, the continuation of negotiations and the satisfaction of all other items of immediate demands (lower prices - Implementation a moratorium of 4 years for the reform of teacher recruitment - Emergency Plan for Training and Youth Employment - Regulations of the carriers, fishermen and farmers, small Credit Associations - Taking account in the media and public building the language and culture of our country - Final resolution of ongoing conflicts - Abandonment of prosecutions related to the ongoing conflict ...).

The LKP and the people of Guadeloupe continue to demand the transformation of social relations, respect for fundamental freedoms, the right to live and work in dignity in the country, the end of exploitation.

The LKP makes this international call to workers' organizations, progressive organizations, anticapitalist and anti-colonial organizations in France and the last colonies of France to continue and strengthen their support and mobilizations.

The general strike CONTINUES!
Workers and people of Guadeloupe, in memory and respect for Jacques BINO, let us reinforce and amplify the mobilization and solidarity in all enterprises in all sectors in the streets, neighborhoods, and families!

Workers and people of Guadeloupe: Continue the fight to expose and oppose all repression: both that conducted by the police and the courts against our youth and that conducted by the employers who refuse to pay wages for strikers and supporters!

NOU Peke Lage!
All Out to Support our Negotiations!
Monday 23 February 2009 at 11 h00 at the Port Authority.
Meet at 08H00 Douvan the bik, Lapwent.
L.K.P Lapwent on 21.02.09

-----
Strike Journal

The situation in Guadeloupe
In issue 323 of the ILC International Newsletter we reproduced an article from the newsletter Travaye e Peyizan, edited by Mouvmant Travaye é Peyizan, a Guadeloupean organization linked to the ILC. The following correspondence was send to us since this last publication.

* Tuesday February 10, 2009

Now the strike has been renewed after a press conference of the LKP Collective reaffirmed its platform and the 200 euro demand in particular.
More than 5,000 people traveled for more than 4 hours from the industrial area of Jarry ("the economic lung of Guadeloupe") in the late morning in response to the call of the Strike Collective.

* Wednesday February 11 , 2009
The contacts were renewed with the Secretary of State, who arrived the day before, at his request. After meeting with elected officials (Presidents of the General and Regional Councils) and the employer separately in the early morning, it was the turn of the Collective at 11:15. After apologizing for her hasty and discourteous departure and the arrest of members of the Collective, a delegation composed of 6 general secretaries of trade unions began discussions with the 2 mediators of the General Directorate of Labor to prepare the conditions for discussing the raise of the minimum wage by 200 euros.

These discussions should be continued tomorrow morning. A meeting is also scheduled during the day between the Collective and elected politicians at the request of the latter.

The negotiation could resume in the afternoon or on Friday February 13 under the mediation of the work directors.
Yves Jégo [French Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories] visited Martinique on Thursday morning; he left for France to attend a council of ministers on Friday.

At 6 pm a thousand small businesses met the Collective at its request. Some have said that they could pay the ¤ 200 immediately, others demanded a deal to be worked out. They affirmed their commitment to prohibit Medef [the large employers' association] in Guadeloupe from speaking on their behalf and now they will participate in the negotiations.

A meeting is scheduled Thursday night at 19 h30 at the Palais de la Mutualité.
* Thursday February 12, 2009
The Strike Collective ceased to meet with the so-called mediators who spend their time putting pressure on the delegation and calling on them to scale back their demands, and the Collective reiterated its willingness to resume negotiations on the basis of the pre-agreement of Sunday, February 8.

A meeting between the Collective and the presidents of the General Councils was held in the afternoon at the request of the latter. This did nothing. The evening rally took place with more than 5,000 people.

* Friday February 13, 2009

Strike Collective caravans with hundreds of Guadeloupeans traveled Guadeloupe distributing a leaflet with the recent speeches in all municipalities. It was a real success. An electronic message "of a certain silent majority" called for a demonstration in the Jarry industrial area "to give voice to the overwhelming majority" on February 14 at 9 am. At the last moment it was canceled or postponed. Was it a provocation mounted to suppress the movement?
* Saturday February 14 , 2009

Events in the Mouse Commune were organized by the Committee Fevry LKP 52 and to pay tribute to 5 people of the commune (workers and strikers) who were murdered on February 14, 1952 by mobile guards sent by the colonial power after a strike by industrial workers and the agricultural plant of Gardel. About 80,000 people participated.

The cultural groups of the Collective organized for the public, following the demonstration, choreography to the sound of KA, at a high volume commensurate with the movement.

Christiane Taubira, arrived yesterday evening in Guadeloupe for 3 days to support the Collective and took the floor and was highly acclaimed.

A trade union official, in his speech, emphasized the healthy side of the movement "for a month no accidents, no aggression," he said ...

A delegation of the Socialist Party (PS) is now in Guadeloupe. Is there a connection with the declarations of the presidents of CG and CR? They offer on the negotiation on wages: 100 ¤ (50 for each community); monthly premium for 3 months (remember they had already proposed a premium of 300 ¤ including 150 for each) while the "social partners" reach an agreement on wages. They called on the collective to ease the strike by allowing the opening of schools in particular. They also said that there should be "the foundation of the people of Guadeloupe" in order to move towards a statutory evolution of Guadeloupe.

The UGTG informed the group of the their Appeal in May to hold a conference of the last colonies of France.

* Sunday February 15, 2009
There was a meeting a delegation of the Collective with the delegation of the French Socialist Party including former Secretary of State for the Colonies, Christian Paul.

Meeting of all the Collective with Christiane Taubira.

We learned yesterday about the arrival of 300 additional mobile guards.

These forces of repression are increasingly provocative, for example: in the airports they follow around all the striking workers. They control all vehicles coming to the airport, including those with the red ribbon symbol of sympathy with the movement.

At any time repression may fall on the movement since the French government shows no sign of willingness to resume negotiations.

Despite the tireless struggle of the collective Liyannaj Kont Pwofitasyon (LKP), the employers and the French state are letting the situation deteriorate.

Instead of actually facilitating the negotiations, the representatives of the French state shirked their responsibilities (first it was the departure of the Prefect from the bargaining table on January 28; then there was the flight of the Secretary of State for Overseas Departments on February 8; followed by the denial of commitments by the French State) while they brought to Guadeloupe an additional 2,000 mobile gendarmes. What happened was predictable.

Workers and young people do not accept violence against trade unionists and the population by the forces of repression. On the night of February 17 a CGTG trade unionist was killed by bullets; we do not yet know the exact circumstances behind the killing, but the crocodile tears are raining down.
The Caribbean Workers and Peoples Alliance, ATPC, denounced the role of employers and the State that aim to weaken the movement and then create the situation we see today. The ATPC has appealed to organizations in the Caribbean to condemn this repression and to demand the immediate reopening of negotiations and the satisfaction of all the demands.

SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS AND THE PEOPLE OF GUADELOUPE!

------
[The following announcement of the Association of Workers and Peoples of Guadeloupe, ATPC, summarizes what happened from February 16 to 18, 2009.]

* Pointe à Pitre on February 18, 2009
Arrival of a delegation from the International Liaison Committee on February 18 in the afternoon.

* February 18-19 , 2009.

It took a Guadelupean to be killed for the Prime Minister and President of France to speak.
* February 23 , 2009

Appeal from the UGTG to the OS of France

"At the call of 49 organizations, including all trade unions in Guadeloupe, including the UGTG, a general strike began on January 20, 2009 to demand from employers and the state: (....)

On February 8, after 18 hours of negotiations, a pre-agreement on wages was established between the parties under the mediation of the Secretary of State for Overseas and services of the Directorate of Labor. This pre-agreement was to provide 108 million euros from the State to the companies. The Secretary of State then fell back on his old position, undermining the agreement, and obliging the general strike movement to continue.

After the death of a trade unionist on the night of February 17-18, the French Prime Minister and President say they want to calm "the crisis -- a social crisis", but do they offer to increase wages? Instead they offer a premium exempt from social security contributions based on the RSA active solidarity revenue, including for employees with a 1.4 minimum wage.

This is nothing but a handout "to help the poor" offered to workers in the guise of wage increases.

Furthermore, this provision, like those before (RMI, API) because of the conditions of its application and because of the adverse effects it will generate, could dismantle even more the Guadeloupean family.

The bosses are not better: This so-called proposal allows them to make proposals to increase minimum wages by 70 ¤ or 50 ¤. It is contempt for workers in Guadeloupe, who are not asking for charity, but who demand a more exact payment for their work. We cannot accept this.

We will resume talks with the bosses in the presence of the State representative with a desire to negotiate for the ¤ 200 as it is possible if the other parties are motivated by the same desire.

We turn to you so that you can tell the workers and the public the reality of our demands, as opposed to government propaganda and media outlets who say those involved in the general strike and especially trade unions are political extremists, promoting racial anger and violence.

Workers of Guadeloupe and their organizations for 5 weeks have exercised the utmost responsibility.
* February 23-24, 2009

Negotiations resumed at 11.30 am yesterday in the presence of organizations, unions and the state representative, the Prefect of Mediators with the Ministry of Labor and the Labor Department of Guadeloupe.
Worker representatives made a proposal requesting from the State the abolition of the CSG and CRDS, which are between 100 to 120 ¤. Faced with the refusal of employers, Medef, and the Prefect, Guadeloupean bosses (UCEG, UPA, a group of carriers, ...) who are now the majority have made the following proposal to grant ¤ 200 immediately:

- 50 ¤ from their bodies;
- 50 ¤ to be paid as a result of bank loans guaranteed by the Communities (the Presidents of the CR and CG, have stalled after a time, said OK, this corresponds to 40 million ¤).
- ¤ 100 recovered by suspending the CSG and the CRDS for 3 years, the time to return to normal operation based on the award of contracts, .... (This is part of the platform of demands LKP).
Note that this proposal was endorsed by trade unions and GCPME.

Medef offers 50 ¤, 70 ¤, 90 ¤ (excluding 90 ¤ for the following sectors: hospitality, construction, cleaning, security, agriculture sectors covered by collective agreements or agreements branches) . We were able to isolate Medef who is alone with fewer than 500 companies employing 3 to 4,000 workers, out of the 49,000 employees involved.

We await the response of the Prefect at the resumption of negotiations that must take place at 11am this morning.

The Movement continues!

Faced with this situation we call for the strengthening of solidarity.

Guadeloupe, February 24, 2009, 19:30.


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Greenman
6th March 2009, 09:17
Good news for once.
Of course, the struggle continues!

ckaihatsu
8th March 2009, 12:17
Guadeloupe: It Ain't Over Yet; French Gov't Backlash Targets Strike Leader Elie Domota

ILC <[email protected]> Sat, Mar 7, 2009 at 8:25 PM

INTERNATIONAL LIAISON COMMITTEE
P.O. Box 40009, San Francisco, CA 94140.
Tel. (415) 641-8616; fax: (415) 626-1217.
email: [email protected]>
Web site: www.owcinfo.org

------------------------------------------------



Dear Sisters and Brothers,


No sooner had the ink on the agreement that ended the 44-day general strike in Guadeloupe dried, than the Attorney General for French Overseas Department and Territories announced that he was filing legal charges against LKP Strike Collective spokesperson Elie Domota for "provoking discrimination, hate and violence against a category of persons based on their ethnic origin." More ominous still, the Attorney General accused Domota of "fomenting provocations and promoting the use of force to extort the signing of the so-called Jacques Bino agreement."


This announcement of possible legal action by the French authorities came in response to a statement made by Domota, who is also general secretary of the UGTG trade union federation, to a celebration rally on Thursday, March 5 -- the day after the Jacques Bino agreement was signed. (Bino was the trade unionist killed the night of Feb. 16 by bullets now widely believed to have been fired by masked government provocateurs who infiltrated one of the barricades on the outskirts of Pointe-à-Pítre.)


In response to a question from the crowd as to whether the French government and the white ruling elite in Guadeloupe, the Béké, could be trusted to live up to the signed agreement and to pay the 200 euro monthly increase in the minimum wage, Domota stated: "Either they respect and implement the agreement, or they will leave Guadeloupe. ... We have to be very firm about this. We will not allow a band of Béké to re-establish slavery on our soil."


The attack by the Attorney General against Domota echoes the racist diatribes in the French media against the people of Guadeloupe and the LKP Strike Collective, in particular. The media portrayed the French government as the victim of "mob violence" that had compelled the government to sign an unjust agreement under duress and in violation of all conventional labor relations. This reference to a "mob" -- a reference to the overwhelming Black majority on the island -- is not only racist to the core, it shows the total contempt by the colonial authorities for the democratic aspirations of an entire people.


The question that arises is this: Does the announcement by the Attorney General against Domota foreshadow an attempt by the French government to invalidate, through the courts, the agreement signed officially by all the concerned parties on March 4th at 8 p.m.? Given the wording of the charges, it appears that this may be the intent.


The "first victory" that was won by the people of Guadeloupe through a heroic 44-day struggle is fragile. The colonial backlash has begun with its targeting of the spokesperson and most recognized leader of the general strike movement.


We urge you to join us in demanding of the French government: "Hands Off Elie Domota! Implement the Jacques Bino Agreement!"


We will bring you more information, including proposals for solidarity statements and actions, in the coming days. Please remain vigilant.


In solidarity,


Eduardo Rosario and Alan Benjamin

For the ILC

ckaihatsu
9th March 2009, 12:04
http://wsws.org/articles/2009/mar2009/guad-m09.shtml

World Socialist Web Site
wsws.org
Published by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI)


LKP calls off Guadeloupe general strike as walkouts spread to La Réunion


By Antoine Lerougetel
9 March 2009

Mass protests and strikes against high prices and low wages in the French Caribbean possessions of Guadeloupe and Martinique continue, despite the calling off of the Guadeloupe general strike by the LKP (Liyannaj Kont Pwofitasyon—United Against the Profiteers) leadership on its 45th day.

The Guadeloupe masses should reject the rotten deal the LKP has signed with the government and the employers, and should work to extend their movement to all French territories, including the mainland.

This is the only way they can consolidate and extend the temporary concessions wrung from French imperialism by their determined struggle. Above all, French workers must unite with their class brothers and sisters in the Caribbean and on the Indian Ocean island of La Réunion in a joint struggle against imperialism and in defiance of the French trade union leaders, who have done everything possible to prevent such a development.

The calling off of the Guadeloupe strike occurred even as unrest was spreading to La Réunion, located off the coast of Madagascar. An indefinite general strike is due to begin there Tuesday. French President Nicolas Sarkozy, weakened by rising opposition to his government's austerity policies, fears nothing more than the spread of similar resistance to mainland France.

The LKP is an alliance of trade unions, cultural and welfare organisations and small employers' groups. Its spokesman is Elie Domota, also the leader of the island's majority trade union, the CGTG (General Confederation of Labour of Guadeloupe).

Despite partial wage concessions granted last week in Martinique, the leadership of the movement there, the February 5 Collective, had earlier refused to call off strikes, pickets and road blocks because of a lack of agreement on price reductions.

On Friday, the police clashed with youth and workers attempting to block a bosses' back-to-work demonstration involving a go-slow motorcade, which drove provocatively into the capital Fort de France. Shots were fired, and the police report four officers slightly injured by gunfire and Molotov cocktails. They arrested 10 people. There are no figures for those injured by the police. Negotiations have now resumed, and a sell-out could take place similar to that in Guadeloupe.

All four French overseas departments, or DOMs, (the fourth is French Guiana, on the South American mainland, which had a fuel price protest last November), are characterised by unemployment rates of up to 30 percent, with youth rates nearly double that, as well as poverty wages and prices for basic necessities that are 30 percent higher than their equivalents in France.

Sarkozy's government has attempted to damp down the movement with a temporary €200 state-subsidised wage boost for private sector workers and negotiations with retailers, energy suppliers and public transport companies for price reductions.

The LKP called off the strike on the basis of a deal in which the state agreed to provide €100 of the rise for a three-year period, and local government €50 for a year. However, the large employers on the island, grouped in the Guadeloupe section of the main French big business association the MEDEF (Movement of Enterprises of France), have refused to sign.

Many of their workers staff hotels and hypermarkets. A central plank of the Guadeloupe movement is the demand for the monthly €200 pay rise to cover the 45,000 lowest-paid workers on the island. As few as 15,000 and no more than 30,000 workers are covered by the present deal.

Workers at the two vast Carrefour supermarkets, Destréland and Milenis, came out on strike on Tuesday morning, March 3. These two shopping centres belong to the group of Bernard Hayot, one of the richest békés (descendents of the old slave-owning families) in the West Indies and a leading member of MEDEF. The initiative for the Carrefour strike came from the workers independently of the unions. They expressed their determination to stay out until they got their €200, especially since the Martinique MEDEF had already agreed to a similar deal.

The conflict between the capitalist successors of slave owners and the lowest-paid and most exploited workers of Guadeloupe has a historic resonance. Many of the workers are descendents of the slaves emancipated in 1848 by the French liberal bourgeoisie, led by Victor Schoelcher, and then immediately obliged to work for their former owners. The transitional arrangements devised by Schoelcher and his supporters in the parliamentary Broglie Commission in France guaranteed compensation and subsidies, not to the slaves, but to the sugar cane plantation owners, so that they could continue to exploit their workforce without interruption of the sugar trade.

The preamble to the agreement signed February 26 by the trade unions, the LKP, the government and some employers' organisations evokes this history, stating that "the present situation in Guadeloupe derives from the persistence of the plantation economic model." This has been used, by both the LKP and the unions on the mainland, to present Guadeloupe as a special case with no direct link with the workers' struggles in metropolitan France.

At mass demonstrations and strikes in France on January 29 against the government's austerity policies, occurring on the ninth day of the Guadeloupe general strike, the unions made no link between the two events. The decision of the trade unions, after the January 29 day of action, to set the next mobilisation as late as March 19 was partly dictated by the desire to prevent any possible alliance with the movement in the Caribbean or ongoing protests at France's universities.

The trade unions and the "left" in France are only too pleased to embrace the special case analysis, while supporting the LKP sellout. The Communist Party declared, "In Guadeloupe, the LKP and the population are savouring a victory which will go down in history." Lutte Ouvrière declared, "Lutte Ouvrière rejoices in the victory of the Guadeloupe workers, who have won most of the demands they put forward at the start of their movement, notably the 200-euro increase for the low-paid."

Similar statements have been made by the Left Party (PG) of Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Olivier Besancenot of the New Anti-capitalist Party (NPA).

It is certainly the case that the mass movement in the Caribbean, because of its determined and at times near-insurrectionary character, exposed the token character of the opposition to Sarkozy mounted by France's own unions. But for this reason, Maryse Dumas of the main French trade union, the Communist Party-linked CGT (General Confederation of Labour), has insisted that the Guadeloupe struggle is not transposable to metropolitan France, stating, "The salary scales are not at all the same in metropolitan France, where the wages issue is not posed in the same way."

In a similar vein, Force Ouvrière General Secretary Claude Mailly claimed that there were "differences of context," since in Guadeloupe there were "whiffs of colonialism" and "the need to reconstitute the economic circuits." He added that "you can't just do a cut-and-paste."

The fate of the masses and workers of the DOM is in no way separate from that of their class brothers and sisters in France and the whole of Europe, who face the same struggles against the effects of the world capitalist crisis. Nothing won in Guadeloupe or Martinique can last outside of a combined struggle with workers in France on the basis of a socialist programme. Already, at least 10,000 jobs are due to be lost in the immediate aftermath of the strike, and record business closures are being recorded.

Workers in the West Indies and throughout the world can answer the catastrophic rise in unemployment only with the socialist reorganisation of the economy under the democratic control of the working class, through a unified struggle of workers of the colonies and ex-colonies with those of the imperialist countries.

The French ruling class fears that social instability will spread to the mainland. Hence, the government's readiness to make temporary concessions in Guadeloupe and Martinique.

But this is only to better prepare a counter-offensive, both in the DOMs and in mainland France. Billions of euros have been borrowed and taken from public funds to bolster the economy and bail out the banks, sending state indebtedness far beyond the limits established by the European Union to keep the euro stable.

The budget deficit is expected to reach nearly double the Maastricht limit at 5.5 percent of GDP and the public debt to exceed its limit by some 25 percent, at up to 75 percent of GDP. A secret OECD analysis of the French economy, obtained by Médiapart, recommends cuts in government expenditure, tax breaks for the employers and the "loosening of legislation on sacking." It calls on the government "to act more directly" to gut the minimum wage.

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ckaihatsu
9th March 2009, 15:47
Guadeloupe: It Ain't Over Yet; French Gov't Backlash Targets Strike Leader Elie Domota

ILC <[email protected]> Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:24 AM

INTERNATIONAL LIAISON COMMITTEE
P.O. Box 40009, San Francisco, CA 94140.
Tel. (415) 641-8616; fax: (415) 626-1217.
email: [email protected]>
Web site: www.owcinfo.org
------------------------------------------------

"Hands Off Elie Domota! Implement the Jacques Bino Agreement!"

Dear Sisters and Brothers,

This morning, we received a communiqué from the Caribbean Workers and Peoples Alliance (ATPC, in its French acronym) with the following information:

No sooner had the ink dried on the agreement that ended the 44-day general strike in Guadeloupe than the Attorney General for French Overseas Department and Territories announced that he was filing legal charges against Elie Domota, general secretary of the UGTG trade union federation and spokesperson of the LKP Strike Collective, for "provoking discrimination, hate and violence against a category of persons based on their ethnic origin." More ominous still, the Attorney General accused Domota of "fomenting provocations and promoting the use of force to extort the signing of the so-called Jacques Bino agreement."

This announcement of possible legal action by the French authorities came in response to a statement made by Domota to a celebration rally on Thursday, March 5 -- the day after the Jacques Bino agreement was signed. (Bino was the trade unionist killed the night of Feb. 16 by bullets now widely believed to have been fired by masked government provocateurs who infiltrated one of the barricades on the outskirts of Pointe-à-Pítre.)

In response to a question from the crowd as to whether the French government and the white ruling elite in Guadeloupe, the Béké, could be trusted to live up to the signed agreement and to pay the 200 euro monthly increase in the minimum wage, Domota stated: "Either they respect and implement the agreement, or they will leave Guadeloupe. ... We have to be very firm about this. We will not allow a band of Béké to re-establish slavery on our soil."
The attack by the Attorney General against Domota is an attack against the UGTG, which was the backbone of the general strike movement. It echoes the racist diatribes in the French media against the people of Guadeloupe and the LKP Strike Collective, in particular. The media portrayed the French government as the victim of "mob violence" that had compelled the government to sign an unjust agreement under duress and in violation of all conventional labor relations.

This reference to a "mob" -- a reference to the overwhelming Black majority on the island -- is not only racist to the core, it shows the total contempt by the colonial authorities for the democratic aspirations of an entire people. It reveals the deep fear of the Béké, as the ATPC communiqué puts it, that their stronghold over political power and their privileges have been greatly undermined by the powerful general strike movement that swept the entire country.

The question that arises is this: Does the announcement by the Attorney General against Domota foreshadow an attempt by the French government to invalidate, through the courts, the agreement signed officially by all the concerned parties on March 4th at 8 p.m.? Given the wording of the charges, it appears that this may be the intent.

The "first victory" that was won by the people of Guadeloupe through a heroic 44-day struggle is fragile. The colonial backlash has begun with its targeting of the spokesperson and most recognized leader of the general strike movement.
We urge you to join us in demanding of the French government: "Hands Off Elie Domota! Implement the Jacques Bino Agreement!"

We will bring you more information, including proposals for solidarity statements and actions, in the coming days. Please remain vigilant.

In solidarity,
Eduardo Rosario and Alan Benjamin
For the ILC

ckaihatsu
11th March 2009, 15:46
The General Strike in Guadeloupe's been going for over five weeks now,

there are some interesting parallels with Solidarity -- broadcasting the negotiations live on television, for example.

It has received little coverage here in the U.S., though I did hear one story on NPR.

Guadeloupe: Just before the Victory

On March 2, some workers started to go back to work in a number of businesses, especially little businesses in the Jarry industrial zone near Pointe-à-Pitre. Teachers went back to work in some schools.

The LKP (the struggle coalition) didn’t oppose this. But during the meeting of March 1, Jean-Marie Nomertin, secretary general of the CGTG (General Confederation of Labor-Guadeloupe), called for a vote on the continuation of the movement, 4,000 hands went up in front of the Mutalité Building in Pointe-à-Pitre, the headquarters of the movement. The number of participants and the combativeness at this meeting was impressive.

Many important groups of workers remain on strike: the workers at big retail stores, school support staff, port workers, phone company workers, city workers, public transit workers, Social Security and unemployment compensation workers and sugar mill workers.
Carrefour super store workers go on strike

The employees of the two Carrefour super stores (similar to Wal-Mart), in Baie-Mahault and Abymes, didn’t go on strike until March 3. These two immense commercial centers became the symbolic target of strike demonstrators, for they belong to the Bernard Hayot’s group, owned by one of the richest békés of the French Caribbean and one of the most influential bosses in the MEDEF.

Strikers from other sectors came for several days to march with other strikers and held daily meetings, facing off against the police. The stores closed their doors. On March 2, thirty women strikers from other sectors of the CGTG blocked delivery trucks. There were some clashes with the police. The workers inside the stores came out and supported the women. The next day, the store workers went on strike.

In Baie-Mahault, on March 3, a thousand strikers held a meeting in front of Carrefour. The employees went out on strike. A delegation went to see the manager, De Reynal, to ask him his intentions concerning the 200 euros. He strongly and scornfully refused. He suffered for it. The next day all the employees went on strike with the support of the LKP. They maintained their picket all day long, getting the afternoon shift to join the strike.

The strikers of other stores came to support them throughout the day. There were light skirmishes with the police who threatened to charge at them.

The Carrefour workers declared they would remain on strike until they obtained the 200 euros, all the more as “the workers of Martinique who went on strike after us got an agreement with the Martinique MEDEF on it.”

This strike began without a call for the strike by the union. The rank and file decided in the morning not to go in. When the union delegates arrived, they were faced with an accomplished fact. The inter-union committee of FO, UGTG, CGTG and members of the LKP, followed and then encouraged the workers to maintain their strike “until the end.”

The strike of the Carrefour employees helped continue the movement. And even in the case of an official suspension of the general strike, these workers and many others will remain on strike.
Demonstration of strikers around Pointe-à-Pitre

Since the last week of February the “walking strike” is on the agenda. Every day a good thousand strikers go up and down the streets and have meetings in front of the MEDEF businesses. At their approach the businesses close. Some workers of these businesses join the strike. Others don’t.

On March 2 these workers, after passing by Carrefour and Jardiland, a store belonging to Barbotteau, another big béké, went up and down the entire Jarry zone and blocked traffic. They dispersed at 3 PM and then went in front of a government office in Pointe-à-Pitre to support the delegation of LKP in negotiations about lowering prices at big stores.
Demonstrations at Basse-Terre

In another part of the island, there have been constant demonstrations to support the LKP delegation in negotiations over the price of water and public transit as well as over the situation of truck owner-operators.

In fact, since January 20, dozens of transit workers have lined up in front of the General Council with truck owner-operators who are practically camping at the front door.

On March 3 in the evening, a demonstration was held to the sound of the “gro ka” carnival drums in front of the prefecture, where the LKP delegation, the State representatives and the bosses meet to complete the written agreement to end the conflict. The LKP has still not signed the agreement.

ckaihatsu
12th March 2009, 02:29
ILC <[email protected]> Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 7:33 PM

INTERNATIONAL LIAISON COMMITTEE
P.O. Box 40009, San Francisco, CA 94140.
Tel. (415) 641-8616; fax: (415) 626-1217.
email: [email protected]
Web site: www.owcinfo.org
Please Excuse Duplicate Postings
------------------------------------------------

PLEASE DISTRIBUTE WIDELY!

"Drop the Bogus Charges Against Elie Domota!

Dear Sisters and Brothers,

We just received a new appeal from the Caribbean Workers and Peoples Alliance (ATPC, in its French acronym) with all the details of the recent attacks by the French authorities against Elie Domota, general secretary of the UGTG trade union federation and spokesperson of the LKP Strike Collective. These attacks -- including the formal legal charge by the Attorney General of Guadeloupe of "inciting discrimination, hatred and violence against a category of persons based on their ethnic origin" -- have rained down on Brother Domota in the aftermath of the March 4 agreement between the LKP Strike Collective and the French government that ended ended the 44-day general strike in Guadeloupe.

The ATPC communiqué urges unionists and labor rights activists the world over to demand that the French government withdraw all the bogus charges against Elie Domota. In response to this urgent request, we have crafted a Sign-On Letter to the French Ambassador in the United States, which we urge everyone to endorse. Please fill out the coupon below and return it to us as soon as possible.

Our initial Sign-on Letter two weeks ago urging the French government to stop the repression against the strikers and to heed their legitimate demands obtained hundreds of signatories in the United States and thousands internationally. Together with the massive delegations to the embassies and consulates on all continents, and the mass demonstrations in the streets across France and other countries, our effort contributed to the wonderful first victory obtained on March 4, when the French government finally gave in and signed an agreement granting the general strike movement all its main demands.

This legal action by the French authorities came in response to a statement made by Domota on Thursday, March 5 -- the very day after the Jacques Bino agreement was signed. (Bino was the trade unionist killed the night of Feb. 16 by bullets now widely believed to have been fired by masked government provocateurs who infiltrated one of the barricades on the outskirts of Pointe-à-Pítre.)

In response to a question regarding the continued refusal by the MEDEF employers' association of Guadeloupe [representing the island's large business interests] to join the trade unions, the French government, and the Small Business Association in signing the Jacques Bino agreement, Domota stated: "Either they sign the agreement, or they will leave Guadeloupe. ... We have to be very firm about this. We will not allow a band of Béké [a reference to the white minority that owns and controls the overwhelming majority of the wealth in Guadeloupe] to re-establish slavery on our soil."

The MEDEF spokespersons insist that they could not sign the agreement because of a clause in the preamble that states that the economy of Guadeloupe is a "plantation economy." The real reason is not this: In the final days leading up to the signing of the agreement, the MEDEF spokespersons told the French government that they could not accept paying 100 euros of the monthly minimum wage increase after the expiration of the French government's three-year commitment to pay the full 200 euro increase.

For the past six days, the UGTG trade union federation and the LKP Strike Collective supporters have been demonstrating in front of the factories, hotels and businesses owned and run by MEDEF employers to demand that they sign the March 4 agreement. Every day new MEDEF employers are heeding the pressure from the workers and agreeing to sign the agreement.

This continued mobilization of the workers and people of Guadeloupe to ensure that all employers in Guadeloupe abide by the Jacques Bino agreement, following on the heels of the powerful show of force displayed during the 44-day general strike, have shaken the ruling Béké and their paymasters in metropolitan France to the core.

Laurence Parisot, president of MEDEF in France -- the equivalent of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce -- said that Domota's March 5 statement "includes threats and pressures that sow a veritable climate of terror in Guadeloupe." No small accusation this one!

Parisot's comments were echoed by Yves Jégo, French Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories, who said that that Domota's declaration was "inadmissible."

It was following these declarations by Parisot and Jégo that the French judicial authorities filed formal charges against Domota for "inciting racial hatred."

On Monday, March 9, Domota replied to these attacks. "This charge of 'inciting racial hatred' is nothing but a maneuver to try to intimidate the workers and people of Guadeloupe."

Domota added:

"If they pursue this legal action and summon me to appear in Court, we will use this forum to expose the true face -- the true social, historical and cultural reality -- of Guadeloupe's society in this year 2009. ... If I am put on trial, it will be the entire people of Guadeloupe who are put on trial. For 400 years, we have endured racism, repression and discrimination. ... It would appear that the Justice Department, the State, and Big Business interests don't want to move beyond this system of domination. Our position is clear: We will endure it no longer."

The attack against Elie Domota by the Attorney General of Guadeloupe -- acting on behalf of the Attorney General of France -- is an attack against the UGTG, which was the backbone of the general strike movement. It shows the total contempt by the colonial authorities for the democratic aspirations of an entire people. It shows the deep fear by the Béké, as the ATPC communiqué puts it, that their stronghold over political power and their privileges have been greatly undermined by the powerful general strike movement that swept the entire country.

By their declarations and actions, the French authorities are clearly aiming to undermine, and if possible torpedo, the agreement signed officially on March 4. The "first victory" that was won by the people of Guadeloupe through their heroic struggle is fragile. The colonial backlash has begun with its targeting of the spokesperson and most recognized leader of the general strike movement.

We urge you to join us in demanding of the French government: "Hands Off Elie Domota! Withdraw the Bogus Charges!"

Again, we thank you for your continued interest and support -- and we urge you to endorse the Sign-On Letter below directed to the French Embassy in Washington, D.C., which will be copied to concerned entities in France and Guadeloupe.

In solidarity,
Eduardo Rosario and Alan Benjamin
For the ILC

********************

PLEASE ADD YOUR NAME TO THE LETTER BELOW!

Monday, February 23, 2008

Attention:
Pierre Vimont
French Embassador to the United States
Washington, DC
Telephone: (202) 944-6000
Fax: (202) 944-6072
E-mail: [email protected]

Dear Sir:

We, the undersigned, have been following with great concern the unfolding situation in Guadeloupe in the aftermath of the March 4 signature of the Jacques Bino agreement that put an end to the 44- day general strike. We welcomed the agreement granting the workers and people of Guadeloupe their main demands.

But we've been alarmed to learn that no sooner had the ink dried on this agreement than a backlash against this powerful mass movement was launched by the employers in the MEDEF and by your government -- a backlash that has targeted Elie Domota, general secretary of the UGTG trade union federation and spokesperson of the LKP Strike Collective.

We cannot accept the legal charges leveled by the French judicial authorities against Brother Domota. These are not just unwarranted; they are clearly aimed at undermining the agreement and rolling back the gains won by the workers and people of Guadeloupe through their courageous and peaceful 44-day general strike.

We urge your government to withdraw all these bogus charges against Elie Domota and to put an immediate halt to the legal action against him. We will not rest until justice is served.

Sincerely,

[follows list of signatories, with names, titles (for id. only), city, state and country.]

cc. Mr. Nicolas Desforges
Prefect of Guadeloupe
Rue Lardenoy
97100 Basse-Terre
Guadeloupe
Fax: -11-335-90-81-58-32

Mr. Yves Jégo
27, rue Oudinot
75007, Paris
France
Fax: 011-331-53-69-28-04

LKP Strike Collective
c/o UGTG
Rue Paul-Lacavé
97110, Point a Pitre
Guadeloupe
Email: [email protected] and [email protected]

---------

ENDORSEMENT COUPON

[ ] Please add my name to the list of endorsers of this Sign-On Letter to the French Embassy in Washington, DC


NAME:

UNION/ORG (stipulate if for id. only)

CITY

STATE

COUNTRY

EMAIL

(please fill out today and return to [email protected])