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Communist
28th July 2009, 05:26
story found here (http://www.workers.org/2009/world/korea_0730/)

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Korean workers show the way
Auto plant occupation enters third month

By Martha Grevatt


Published Jul 24, 2009 7:19 PM


SsangYong Motor is not exactly a household name, even among autoworkers here.

Smaller than Hyundai, Kia and GM-Daewoo, this Korean auto firm only produces vehicles for the domestic market.

Members of the United Auto Workers, however, need to pay close attention to a fierce battle taking place at a SsangYong plant in Pyeongtaek, South Korea.

In February SsangYong—in which the privately owned Shanghai Automobile Industry Corporation holds a 51 percent stake—declared bankruptcy.

The courts approved a restructuring plan that put up the Pyeongtaek plant as collateral so SsangYong could obtain new financing and come out of bankruptcy quickly.

The backing of the court was contingent, however, on SsangYong imposing layoffs and involuntary retirements on 1,700 out of 7,000 employees and immediately discharging 300 “casual” workers.

This is on top of the 1,700 jobs cut since the SAIC takeover three years ago.

http://www.workers.org/2009/world/korea2_0730.jpg

Thousands of workers, members of the
Korean Federation of Trade Unions, rally in
Seoul July 4 in support of SsangYong workers.



At first the situation bore a remarkable similarity to GM and Chrysler’s restructuring-by-bankruptcy, but on May 27 the Korean Metal Workers Union took the struggle in a very different direction.

The KMWU members did not choose the path of concessions and retreat.

After a series of sporadic strikes beginning in April, the 1,700 workers who were going to be laid off occupied the plant, bringing vehicle production to a standstill.

The workers raised three main demands: no layoffs, job security for all and no outsourcing.

For the first few weeks they faced little in the way of a counterattack. The rightist government of Lee Myong Bak was distracted by his own political crisis and mass anti-government demonstrations of up to a million people.

http://www.workers.org/2009/world/korea1_0730.jpg

Striking workers occupy
auto plant.



On June 16 the company held an anti-strike demonstration of about 1,500 scabs, all but a few hundred of whom were supervisors.

Despite the workers’ occupation, the scabs had been inside maintaining machinery but had been unable to restart production. Around 750 workers from nearby plants, including the Kia works, came out for a pro-strike counterdemonstration called by mass text messaging by KMWU.

Knowing that eventually the company and the state would try to evict them, the occupiers began stockpiling pipes, crow bars and Molotov cocktails.

On June 26 the anticipated attack came as riot police, scabs and hired thugs entered the plant. In accordance with a prearranged plan, workers retreated to the paint shop. They knew the company would not risk the property damage that would ensue if the highly flammable chemicals were ignited in that area.

The next day the invaders retreated, the official reason being that enough violence had occurred.

In an effort to gain public sympathy, SsangYong management sent aerial photos to the news media taken July 1 as leaflets were distributed urging the strikers to evacuate. Photos showed no workers leaving, but did show piles of tires on the roof, apparently intended to be hurled to the ground and set ablaze if police stormed the plant. Alongside the tires were boxes of bolts allegedly to be fired by slingshot.

On July 11 the police surrounded the plant, with 100 cops at each of four gates. Police took control of much of the plant as workers again regrouped in the paint shop.

On July 16 the KMWU held a solidarity rally of 3,000 outside the Pyeongtaek City Hall. When the protesters attempted to march on the plant, they were blocked by police. The cops arrested 82 marchers.

As of July 19 there were still 1,000 courageous workers inside the plant.

Their families continue to keep them well fed. There is a high level of organization, with about 60 different squads that each elected a delegate to the coordinating body of the strike.

This occupation takes place in the context of a general upsurge in the class struggle in U.S-occupied South Korea, but it is the first action of this kind in Korea in quite some time. It follows recent sit-downs in Chicago, Canada and Ireland.

The Korean autoworkers are fighting a hard fight and need the support of workers all over the world. Messages of solidarity can be emailed to the KMWU at inter(AT)metal.nodong.org.






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Articles copyright 1995-2009 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.

PRC-UTE
28th July 2009, 06:23
I'm impressed :)

I'm wondering why I haven't heard more on this, though.

MilitantWorker
30th July 2009, 06:26
^^ visit www.libcom.org (http://www.libcom.org). they have continuing coverage. its good, photos and reports from the workers themselves..


The strike focused on three main demands: 1) no layoffs 2) job security for all [meant in the context of "all" the workers at the plant- I88] and 3) no outsourcing

This is very unfortunate. This strike has so much potential to spread to other factories, sectors, countries..The demands of the strikers are defensive at best. It would be great to see these workers demand things that capitalism can't give them like...permanent employment for all workers world wide.

cyu
4th August 2009, 19:52
I think it's time those who ordered the attack on the striking employees be arrested. Since the police obviously won't do it, it will have to be done by other employees, their families, and their supporters.

Excerpts from http://libcom.org/news/ssangyong-occupation-update-august-4-korea-time-2009-04082009

Right now a special division of 2,500 police are engaged in an assault on the occupied factory.

Hand-to-hand battles are presently occurring and the strikers are fighting back with molotov cocktails. Due to the intensity of the fighting, there will probably be many casualties -- and possibly fatalities.


http://libcom.org/files/imagecache/article/images/news/Aug%204%20pic%201.jpg (http://libcom.org/files/images/news/Aug%204%20pic%201.jpg)



http://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/050/156/9MIL_0166.jpg

http://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/050/156/14MIL_9692.jpg

Around 9:00 a.m. 2,000... company loyalists wearing uniforms with armbands, were brought in to "clean up the factory" and in the process destroyed the strike supporters' encampment. Around 10:00 a.m. [they] marched to factory from company parking lot, then attacked the strike supporters, destroying their water and medical supplies

http://archivega.vop.co.kr/images/e34ec64ee1c605a0eac977f7e2c2caa5/2009-08/04025358_20090804_ssangyong113.gif

And dumped out water intended for the workers occupying the factory:

http://www.newscham.net/data/news/photo/6/47046/1.jpg

Communist
5th August 2009, 01:46
Thank you very much for posting this extremely important news.
Very sad turn of events...

Mephisto
5th August 2009, 15:32
This is indeed a black hour for the labour movement worldwide. I can't imagine what is going on in the heads of those idiots, betraying their fellow workers only because the bosses click their fingers.

Does anyone have information which is up to today?

Pogue
5th August 2009, 15:58
Its what you'd expect. This is a very militant struggle and the bourgeoisie is showing its true violent tendencies. We've seen scabs frequently throughout history of course and violence during workers struggles is nothing new.

Mephisto
5th August 2009, 16:18
No it is nothing new, but it is a sad reflection on the workers struggle at Ssangyong that there are 2000 militant company loyalists against 1000 strikers even in regard of the fact, that a fair number of those 2.000 might be paid street mercenaries not affiliated to the company.

Communist
5th August 2009, 17:09
Ssangyong occupation update: August 5, 2009 (http://libcom.org/news/ssangyong-occupation-update-august-5-2009-05082009)

Submitted by Hieronymous (http://libcom.org/user/hieronymous) on Aug 5 2009


[/URL]


[URL="http://libcom.org/files/images/news/Aug%205%20Korean%20Rodney%20King.jpg"]http://libcom.org/files/imagecache/article/images/news/Aug%205%20Korean%20Rodney%20King.jpg (http://libcom.org/tags/ssangyong-occupation)


The final battle will come shortly. Serious injuries occurred today. The only remaining occupied factory building is the paint department, with about 500 strikers defending it. The cops have taken control of all the rest of the surrounding buildings. The crackdown on the strikers has been extremely brutal.



***Update August 5, 2009 4:30 p.m. (Korea time)***
Condition of workers mentioned in previous thread: one fell going from roof to roof and broke his vertebrae, as well as head injuries. Serious, but not life-threatening. 2 others fell from roof, but injuries were not as serious. But 30 others, on both sides, were injured and needed medical attention.
The paint building is the only one still occupied by strikers. It is in the middle of all the red circles, with the "2" in it.
http://www.newscham.net/data/news/photo/15/47055/ss.jpghttp://img.hani.co.kr/imgdb/resize/2009/0805/124937849889_20090805.JPG
http://img.hani.co.kr/imgdb/resize/2009/0806/6000287421_20090806.JPG
Injured combatant: http://www.newscham.net/data/news/photo/15/47055/h03.jpghttp://www.newscham.net/data/news/photo/15/47055/h04.jpghttp://www.newscham.net/data/news/photo/15/47055/8.jpghttp://www.newscham.net/data/news/photo/15/47055/6.jpghttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/420/156/12MIL_9871.jpgFucking bullseye!http://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/420/156/1MIL_9786.jpghttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/420/156/2MIL_9767.jpghttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/461/156/8050852-fire.JPGhttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/461/156/8050843-fire.JPGhttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/461/156/8050853-fire.JPGhttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/461/156/8051120-fire.JPGSome kind of stun or dart guns: http://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/420/156/119mil_9828.jpghttp://nodong.org/files/attach/images/119793/420/156/20MIL_9915.jpg
The news we've gotten seems to indicate that the fighting has calmed for now. A few more strikers left the occupation today. The chief of police has promised more lenient sentences for those turning themselves in before August 6. More reports, with hopefully more details of the condition of the approximately 500 remaining strikers barricaded in the last occupied building of the paint department, coming soon...

Communist
6th August 2009, 02:00
Solidarity with Korean workers (http://www.workers.org/2009/world/korea_0813/)

Published Aug 5, 2009 4:03 PM


http://www.workers.org/2009/world/korea_0813.jpg


A meeting of the San Francisco Labor Council on July 27 unanimously adopted a resolution to support striking workers in South Korea. It endorsed a call by the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions for solidarity actions in support of striking auto and media workers and public school teachers. The next afternoon, July 28, members of the SFLC and community activists demonstrated outside the South Korean Consulate in a solidarity picket initiated by the Transport Workers Solidarity Committee.

—Report and photo by Joan Marquardt





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Articles copyright 1995-2009 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.

Pogue
6th August 2009, 23:15
http://img15.imageshack.us/img15/541/classstruggles.jpg (http://img15.imageshack.us/i/classstruggles.jpg/)

scarletghoul
6th August 2009, 23:58
The occupation mostly is ended, as the union agreed to end it, but 20 - 30 workers have still refused (skip to the end)
Ssangyong occupation has ended: August 6, 2009

Submitted by Hieronymous (http://libcom.org/user/hieronymous) on Aug 6 2009
http://libcom.org/files/imagecache/article/images/news/Aug%205%20molotov_0.jpg (http://libcom.org/files/images/news/Aug%205%20molotov_0.jpg)


Once the fierce fighting ended yesterday (August 5, 2009), 100 strikers left the occupation throughout the night (many out of disgust at the ruthlessness of the state and company's violence). At the end of the negotiations last week, management's last offer was 60% of the workers would accept voluntary retirement (or termination) with 40% taking an unpaid furlough until they're called back. Negotiations began today at 11:00 a.m., with the union now agreeing to retirement for 52%, with 48% for the furlough. The strike is over and the occupiers will leave the factory any minute.



***Update August 6, 2009: the strike & occupation has come to an end on its 77th day***
It ended at 2:50 p.m. Korea time (30 minutes ago).
In April 2009 a court-approved restructuring plan was for 2,646 workers to leave the company by either voluntary early retirement or termination. Not long after over 1,670 workers, including casuals and subcontracted workers, had already left. The pre-strike workforce had been 7,179.
By the start of the strike and occupation, strikers were fighting for job security for 976 workers. Today's settlement will only save 48% of those jobs (approx. 468), with 52% being terminated.
Local president of the Ssangyong branch (Han Sang Kyun, who also worked in the factory; he was not a piecard) of the Korean Metal Workers Union talking with strikers inside the occupied factory: http://archivetb.vop.co.kr/images/4869584989ba805ed7e364eefc3a4664/2009-08/05061836_P1030911.jpgUnion official greeting management representatives for negotiations: http://archivesb.vop.co.kr/images/fb2d89ffa781364784d5b428112642a8/2009-08/06124836_meeting_1.jpghttp://archivesb.vop.co.kr/images/fb2d89ffa781364784d5b428112642a8/2009-08/06125035_meeting_2.jpgContainer where negotiations took place: http://archivesb.vop.co.kr/images/fb2d89ffa781364784d5b428112642a8/2009-08/06125149_meeting_3.jpgAwaiting negotiation results: http://archivetb.vop.co.kr/images/fb2d89ffa781364784d5b428112642a8/2009-08/06125311_P103092.jpg
Hospitalized worker who fell off roof and broke 2 vertebrae: http://archivesb.vop.co.kr/images/e34ec64ee1c605a0eac977f7e2c2caa5/2009-08/05044016_SDC10152.jpg
After fighting the class war so valiantly in defense of all workers for 77 days, this settlement seems extremely compromised. But due to the large number of casualties, it must be expected. The bravery of these comrades should be saluted; their holding out so militantly for so long should be an inspiration for all working class people everywhere.
***BreakingNews Update 4:00 p.m. (Korea time)***
The strikers are leaving the occupied factory, but 20 to 30 have rejected the union and company's negotiated settlement and remain in the factory.
We can only wish them luck and offer our solidarity as they refuse to compromise and continue the fight!
The Ssangyong Occupation is Dead,
Long Live the Ssangyong Occupation!

Pogue
7th August 2009, 00:00
in england there is a thing, when a monarch dies they announce 'the king is dead, long live the king', i.e. old king is dead, new king is here though. i guess its like, one occupation ended, but then it continues in another form

scarletghoul
7th August 2009, 00:03
oh. Thats kinda weird and I never heard of it before

cyu
7th August 2009, 01:38
More pictures from http://libcom.org/news/ssangyong-occupation-has-ended-august-6-2009-06082009

http://archivesb.vop.co.kr/images/33471878eeb1fa99050130125a1d5b3e/2009-08/06091616_P1040026.jpg

http://archivesb.vop.co.kr/images/33471878eeb1fa99050130125a1d5b3e/2009-08/06091507_P1040161.jpg

http://ojsfile.ohmynews.com/STD_IMG_FILE/2009/0806/IE001090407_STD.jpg

http://ojsfile.ohmynews.com/STD_IMG_FILE/2009/0807/IE001090416_STD.jpg

http://ojsfile.ohmynews.com/STD_IMG_FILE/2009/0806/IE001090405_STD.jpg

http://ojsfile.ohmynews.com/STD_IMG_FILE/2009/0806/IE001090402_STD.jpg

http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2009/8/4/1249380955909/Protesters-holding-bamboo-012.jpg

http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2009/8/4/1249380956681/striking-ssanyong-workers-013.jpg