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Le Socialiste
23rd December 2013, 19:55
South Korea: Railway Labor Struggle goes Nation-Wide amidst Growing Tensions over Park Geun-hye’s Presidency

Yesterday evening, South Korea’s 2nd largest national trade union center, the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), announced a general strike, which is due to commence on December 28, 2013. This most drastic move by KCTU, a leftist organization that unites roughly 700.000 South Korean workers under its umbrella, came at the end of long day full of dramatic escalations. Thousands of riot police stormed the headquarters of KCTU in Seoul on December 22 – an unprecedented event in South Korea’s post-dictatorship history, through which the country’s current president Park Guen-hye proved to the public how far she is willing to go in her attempt to crush labor and its democratic organizations.

Park Geun-hye, 61, is the country’s first female president – and she is also the daughter of Park Chung-hee, a military strongman who couped himself into power in 1961. He ruled the country with an iron fist until 1979, when he was assassinated by the Head of his own Secret Service (the KCIA). In the South Korea of today, the presidency of his daughter, Park Geun-hye, has been shrouded in controversy since she has been elected into the highest office in late 2012. The Korean National Intelligence Service (NIS), a follow-up organization of the KCIA, was caught red-handed in an attempt to interfere in the election in favor of Mrs. Park. Millions of supportive twitter messages, it came to light, had been posted by members of the NIS during the days before the votes were cast – a massive illegal online-campaign that seems particularly unsavory given that it was undertaken by the same secretive organization that had guaranteed her father’s rule through the kidnapping and torturing of political opponents of his regime.

His daughter Park Geun-hye, from all we can tell, would like to place herself on South Korea’s map as a stern conservative leader of the neoliberal kind – not only following in the footsteps of her father, it seems, but also in those of her immediate neoliberal predecessor and Saenuri-Party colleague, former president Lee Myung Bak (2008-2012). Lee, who has called himself “the CEO of Korea, Inc”, inaugurated the stripping of the state of its most valuable assets; and Park is now preparing the grounds for another round of pilfering that will harm the previously strong public sectors of South Korea. Massive health sector privatizations are currently under way, with app. 20.000 doctors protesting against the planned de-regularization and privatization of their domain last week in Seoul. The public transportation sector, too, is under heavy assault these days: amidst the continuous restructuration of the state-run Korea Railroad Corporation (KORAIL), the recently announced introduction of a new subsidiary has been viewed by many as a first step towards the eventual privatization of KORAIL (Lee Myung-bak had announced this much during his presidency already).

To counter this move, the Korean Railway Workers´ Union (KRWU) – an organization that consists of app. 20.000 railway workers and that is also part of the aforementioned KCTU – started a strike on December 9. This labor struggle, which has been going strong for almost two weeks now, has already become the longest-ever strike in the 65-year-history of South Korea’s railway union, with the number of workers involved in it rising quickly. Roughly 40% of all unionized KORAIL workers haven taken part in the actions so far, which brought substantial parts of Korea’s transportation system to a standstill. In an attempt to end this vital labor struggle, the strike has been countered with unparalleled measures by the state-run corporation and the government standing behind it. With the struggle swiftly declared illegal, nearly 7.000 workers – that is, practically all of the union members who have been taking part in the strike – have been dismissed from their jobs at KORAIL. Furthermore, an arrest warrant has been made for the leadership of KRWU, who were suspected of having gone into hiding at the headquarters of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) that they are part of.

Consequently, yesterday morning some 4.000 riot police were deployed in front of KCTU’s offices in the Seodaemun district of Seoul, where a standoff between labor activists, their supporters and the police began that would last for ten hours. After the glass front door of the building had been smashed into pieces, police teams slowly and violently pushed their way through 17 floors to the roof of the building, pepper-spraying and arresting those standing in their way. Some 130 people were taken in by the police, even though no search warrant for KCTU’s headquarters had been issued in the first place, adding a layer of illegality to this police raid of the union center. Furthermore, during these police procedures that put numerous labor activists at risk, the actual leaders of the strike at KORAIL could not be located in the building. With the leadership of the strike still at large, the labor struggle at the Korea Railroad Corporation will continue, and president Park will now also have to deal with a general strike that has just been called out by KCTU in response to the raiding of their headquarters. With these new developments, and through Park’s iron-fisted response to the first public sector strike under her leadership, South Korea’s 11th president has clearly proven to those watching whose child she really is. With the railway strike now going nation-wide, the stakes will certainly be raised on all sides of the table – and one can only hope that the Korean democratic labor movement will be able to muster enough (wo)manpower, strength and resilience to stand their ground in the coming days and weeks.

http://www.criticatac.ro/lefteast/south-korea-railway-labor-struggle-growing-tensions/

ckaihatsu
24th December 2013, 17:26
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8etZ_9R1wZ4

Delenda Carthago
9th January 2014, 21:34
Solidarity with the striking rail workers of Railroad Corp. (KORAIL) South Korea

on 08 January 2014. Posted in Press Releases (http://pamehellas.gr/index.php/en/press-releases)
Today, Wednesday January 8th, 2014, a delegation of PAME held a protest in front of the embassy of South Korea in Athens, expressing their opposition to the brutal and undemocratic policy of the government of South Korea.
The delegation delivered to the embassy of South Korea the Solidarity Message of PAME with the striking rail workers of Railroad Corp. (KORAIL) South Korea who are conducting a fair struggle against privatization, dismissals and intimidation.

…................................................. ..........................

Solidarity with the striking rail workers in South Korea
On behalf of PAME (All Workers Militant Front)that represents the class oriented trade union movement of Greece, expresses our solidarity with the striking rail workers in Korea Railroad Corp., South Korea.
We stand on the side of the striking Rail workers who are conducting a fair struggle against privatization, dismissals and intimidation.
We join our voices with the working class and the people of South Korea to demand the end of the privatization plans for the Korea Railroad Corp. and the further improvement of its functioning in order to cover the needs of safe, efficient and cheap transport for the people of South Korea.





The Executive Secretariat


http://pamehellas.gr/index.php/en/press-releases/3224-solidarity-with-the-striking-rail-workers-of-railroad-corp-korail-south-korea

ckaihatsu
15th January 2014, 21:45
Korean KCTU Seoul Rally On Second Strike Thursday, January 9, 2014 at 4:00 pm, Park Geun-hye resign from Seoul City Hall Plaza! Privatized pension deformation jersey! Labor oppression crushing! KCTU-themed rally was the second strike.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBBYWtOdFLQ

[팩트TV] 민주노총 2차 총파업 결의대회
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Published on Jan 9, 2014
2014년 1월 9일 목요일 오후 4시, 서울시청광장에서 박근혜 퇴진!민영화-연금개악 저지!노동탄압분쇄!를 주제로한 민주노총 2차 총파업 결의대회가 있었다.
2014년 1월 9일 목요일 오후 4시, 서울시청광장에서 박근혜 퇴진!민영화-연금개악 저지!노동탄압분쇄!를 주제로한 민주노총 2차 총파업 결의대회가 있었다.
Thursday, January 9, 2014 at 4:00 pm, Park Geun-hye resign from Seoul City Hall Plaza! Privatized pension deformation jersey! Labor oppression crushing! KCTU-themed rally was the second strike.

ckaihatsu
20th January 2014, 15:44
Korean Workers Rally On January 18 Against Privatization, Union Busting And In Solidarity With Cambodian Workers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKlM5DAcWMs&feature=youtu.be

[팩트TV] 철도노동자 4차 상경 총력결의대회

Published on Jan 18, 2014

2014년 1월 18일 토요일 오후 2시 서울역광장에서 철도노동자 4차 상경 총력결의대회가 열렸다.

ckaihatsu
30th January 2014, 19:14
[LaborTech] Solidarity With Korean Railway Workers And The Action At The San Francisco Korean Consulate


Solidarity With Korean Railway Workers And The Action At The San Francisco Korean Consulate

http://www.transportworkers.org/node/1064

AFT 2121 Executive Board Member On Solidarity With Korean Railway Workers Union Action On Feb 17, 2014

by Roger Scott
AFT 2121 Past President, Instructor CCSF

I attended the solidarity rally at the Korean Consulate in San Francisco on January 17, 2014 to show my individual and my union's support for the Korean Railway Workers Union (KRWU). The Executive Board of the American Federation of Teachers, Local 2121, which represents the faculty at City College of San Francisco, voted to endorse the struggle by the Korean Confederation of Trade Union (KCTU) against union busting and plans to privatize the KORAIL public rail system. My faculty union wanted to show support for our Korean sister and brother unionists. We oppose not only the attacks on Korean workers but also the attempt to privatize the Korean Railway System and the education system. We are struggling in the United States against efforts to privatize public education, especially higher education, and we've seen our share of union busting.

When we arrived at the Consulate, I was pleased that the rally was much better attended than on past occasions; then I realized that many of the people chanting were elderly Korean men and women who, it turned out, were part of a counter-protest organized by the Consular staff. Some of the elderly men were wearing military-style navy-blue berets, medals and campaign ribbons. They were hostile toward us because they had been told that we were supporters of North Korea. Some of them tried to attack a Korean man as they shouted: "Communists, go back to North Korea!"

A young woman approached me, identified herself as a journalist then asked if I was a teacher at City College of San Francisco. I told her that I had taught there since 1972 and that I was a veteran of the U.S. Army and had served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Colombia, also that I had been a teacher in Japan and China. She found it odd that American unionists were supporting the Korean Railway workers: "Most Koreans don't care much about Korean labor struggles," she said then asked if the demonstrators from City College were being paid to attend the rally.

"Of course not," I responded. "That's an odd question."

"The older people are being paid to be here," she said. "Why are you here if you're not being paid?"

"To show my solidarity for the Korean workers--for unionists throughout the world, an injury to one is an injury to all; that's a fundamental union principle." I also mentioned that the Korean union activists I had met at a labor technology conference at the University of San Francisco had impressed me as being intelligent and courageous--and very effective in using technology in their struggle against corporate bullying and government repression.

She asked three times if I had been to North Korea, and some of the older men and women kept calling us "communists and supporters of North Korea." I mentioned that when I had taught at the Foreign Language University in Chongqing, China in 1986, I had six students from North Korea. "Do you support the government of North Korea?" she asked. "No, but I support reunification of the North and South, and I don't think North Korea should be isolated from the rest of the world."

"Do you keep in touch with the North Korean students?" she asked.

"No, but one of them asked me to send him a book after I returned to San Francisco--not about the social and economic history of the U.S. but about "puns." If she saw any humor or irony in my former student's request, she didn't show it.

The shoving and hostility on both sides continued, then suddenly several of the older Korean men--especially the men wearing the navy-blue berets, medals and campaign ribbons--approached me, shook my hand and said: "Thank you, thank you." One of them seemed pleased when I mentioned that I was a veteran of the U.S. Army.

Rodger Scott, Ph.D.
Instructor, City College of San Francisco
AFT 2121 Executive Board Member, Labor Council Delegate, Past President, AFT Local 2121
xgtel(at)prodigy.net

There will be another solidarity action with the Korean Railway Workers Union and the Korean working people on Feb 28 at 4:00 PM at 3500 Clay St/Laurel St in San Francisco and trade unionists are urged to attend and bring their union banners.

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