Fiji: Public sector strikes grow amid death threats and intimidation

in

A week long strike by 1400 nurses in Fiji expanded on Thursday as 1000 teachers and 300 public works, water and sewerage workers also began strike action, demanding the reversal of a 5% pay cut and the changing of the retirement age from 60 to 55, and an additional 10% pay rise.

The pay cut and change in retirement age were announced shortly after the military government took power in a coup last December. Earlier this week the military and police detained union leader Taniela Tabu, during which time they made deaths threats against him and demanded he pass on death threats to two other union leaders upon his release on Wednesday night.

The teacher's strike began with a 1000 person sit-in at the teachers union headquarters, with songs, speeches and kava. Meanwhile, Fijian police went to schools and hospitals in an attempt to intimidate strikers.

The Fijian government is still considering declaring the nurses strike illegal, in which case it would be able to fire all 1400 nurses for not attending work for 7 days.

The strikes are continuing indefinitely.

Comments

Re: Fiji: Public sector strikes grow amid death threats and inti

Proof of what can happen if a wife drags her husband along to go shopping.

Dear Mrs. Murry,

Our store is considering banning your family from ever shopping with us,unless your husband stops his antics. Below is a list of offences over the past few months all verified by our surveillance cameras.

MEMO
Re: Complaints
15 Things Mr. Wayne Murry has done while his spouse is shopping:

1. June 15: Took 24 boxes of condoms and randomly put them in people's carts when they weren't looking.

2. July 2: Set all the alarm clocks in Housewares to go off at 5-minute intervals.

3. July 7: Made a trail of tomato juice on the floor leading to tampons section.

4. July 19: Walked up to an employee and told her in an official tone,"Code 3" in housewares... and watched what happened.

5. August 4: Went to the Service Desk and asked to put a bag of M&M's on lay-by.

6. September 14: Moved a 'CAUTION - WET FLOOR' sign to a carpeted area.

7. September 15: Set up a tent in the camping department and told the shoppers he'd invite them in if they'll bring pillows from the bedding department.

8. September 23: When a clerk asks if they can help him, he begins to cry and asks, "Why can't you people just leave me alone?"

9. October 4: Looked right into the security camera; used it as a mirror, picked his nose, and ate it.

10. November 10: While handling guns in the hunting department asked the clerk if he knows where the antidepressants are.

11. December 3: Darted around the store suspiciously, loudly humming the "Mission Impossible" theme.

12. December 6: In the auto department, practised his "Madonna look" using different size funnels.

13. December 18: Hid in a clothing rack and when people browse through, yelled "PICK ME!" "PICK ME!"

14. December 21: When an announcement came over the loud speaker he assumes the foetal position and screams "NO! NO! It's those voices again!!!

And; last, but not least!

15. December 23: Went into a fitting room, shut the door, waited a while; then yelled, very loudly, "There is no toilet paper in here!

Re: Fiji: Public sector strikes grow amid death threats and inti

This is plain boring! www.caff.org.nz is much more interesting!

Re: Fiji: Public sector strikes grow amid death threats and inti

The report above is pretty much the standard, mainstream view of the strike. What about some in depth reporting? Why is it that the public sector unions on strike are ethnic Fijian unions, supporters of the Qarese government and opponents of the Interim Government? Why don't the Indo-Fijian unions support the strikes?
The reason is that Fiji is race divided including the unions. This has got worse since the coups of 1987 which were against the Labour coalitions plans to try to develop Fiji in the interests of the masses and not only the traditional elites. Both Rabuka and Speight covered up their plans to privatise Fiji in the interests of the rich elites by scaremongering that Labour was going to take indigenous land. Some irony!
Qarese's government continued the policies of both earlier coups, Rabukas and Speights, in favour of the ethnic Fijians against the Indo-Fijians. Its plans to privatise the foreshore and seabed were similar to Speights ripping off of the state-owned hardwood corporation. It installed some of the coupmakers in government and even planned to release Speight. It bought the votes of the public sector unions with a wage increase and then paid for it by cutting other social services.
Bainimarama's 'clean up'campaign is designed to break this monopoly over Fiji's resources, especially the huge profits made by the chiefly elite while the masses of both races suffer increasing poverty. That's why Chaudhry and others have joined his government.
But the ethnic Fijian dominated unions can see only the few crumbs that trickled down to them from the ethnic Fijian elite's corrupt program. The Teacher's Assoc is a good example being the first to recognise Speight's coup, even though he derecognised the unions!
Its time the ordinary workers and poor farmers of Fiji, both ethnic Fijian and Indo Fijian, realised that it is not in their interests to be divided and ruled by the corrupt elites and bureaucracy, and united against the elites and the new middle class of both races who control the economy.
Bainimarama cannot overcome the huge racial divisions that exist in Fiji, that can only be overcome by the ordinary people, once the scales drop off their eyes.
A start would be for the most advanced workers to call a congress of all unions to start the unity process and to demand a return to democracy based on a Constituent Assembly representing every Fijian over 16, and not the existing corrupt structures of the traditional elite or state bureaucracy.

Dave Brown CWG

Re: Re: Fiji: Public sector strikes grow amid death threats and

Hi Dave,

The reason it looks like the "standard, mainstream" view is because all my sources in writing it were from the corporate media, both here and in Fiji.

I'd certainly be interested in reading any alternative sources to find out more information, if there are any you can suggest.

Solidarity,
Asher
Aotearoa Indymedia Editorial Collective

Re: Fiji: Public sector strikes grow amid death threats and inti

Behind the scenes of this strike action is the reality of race based unions in Fiji which reflects the racial divisions in Fiji society.
see http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=67746

The unions must overcome these racial divisions if there is going to be any real democracy in Fiji.

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