CA, San Jose: Voices of Iraqi Workers 2007 Solidarity Tour
EVENTS
VENUE:
Laborers Hall
(south of Hedding)
San Jose, CA 90510
starts: 06/10/2007 - 2:00pm
ends: 06/10/2007 - 4:00pm
Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein, president,
Iraqi Electrical Utility Workers Union
(first woman to lead a national union in Iraq)
Faleh Abood Umara, general secretary,
Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions
Find out...
• What are conditions for working people in Iraq
• How the occupation has affected families and children
• Why unions oppose the proposed oil investment law
• What will happen if the occupation continues
• What will happen if it ends rapidly
• What Iraqi working people want to happen
• Whether a peaceful, stable, non-sectarian Iraq is possible
Admission: $5-15 sliding scale (no one turned away for lack of funds)
Local information: joan@wilpfsanjose.org
Sponsors: South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council, Building & Construction Trades Council, Communications Workers of America Local 9423, Plumbers & Fitters Local 393, Laborers Local 270, California Nurses Association, South Bay Mobilization for Peace and Justice, San Jose Peace Center, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Friends of South Asia, Veterans for Peace, Labor Party, Green Party, Arab-American Community Center, our developing world, Students for Justice-SJSU Endorsed by Peninsula Peace and Justice Center
National sponsors: U.S. Labor Against the War, American Friends Service Committee, United for Peace and Justice.
Regional: KPFA
For Bay Area schedule and oil law information visit www.uslaboragainstwar.org
Background:
A new oil law in Iraq is set to take control of Iraq’s oil out of the hands of its government and give it to international corporations. Since 1972, the Iraqi government has had exclusive control of Iraq’s oil wealth, allowing for a sizeable increase in the standard of living despite the corruption of Saddam Hussein’s regime. Now, under a new law drafted and promoted by the US, the Iraq National Oil Company will have exclusive control of just 17 of Iraq’s 80 known oil fields, leaving two-thirds of known—and all of its as yet undiscovered—reserves open to foreign control.
Foreign companies would have no requirements to invest their earnings in the Iraqi economy, partner with Iraqi companies, hire Iraqi workers or share new technologies. Most of Iraqi’s oil would be under foreign control for 20 to 30 years. Foreign companies would not even be subject to Iraqi courts if there were a dispute over their role or operations.
BearingPoint, a Virginia-based contractor, has been paid $240 million by the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to draft the law and lobby for it in the Iraqi parliament (in violation of US and Iraqi law). [Do we know if all that was just for drafting the law, or did it cover other services?] The law was first shown to major oil companies and the US government in July of 2006, then to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in September of last year, and only then to the Iraqi Parliament in February of this year.
Five of Iraq’s trade union federations, including the oil workers’ union, representing hundreds of thousands of workers, released a statement opposing the law and rejecting “the handing of control over oil to foreign companies which would undermine the sovereignty of the state and the dignity of the Iraqi people. “ They ask for more time, less pressure and a chance at the democracy they have been promised. They want an opportunity for Iraq’s alone (without outside pressure or interference) to develop the law that will govern development of Iraq’s oil resources and industry.
Join two of Iraq’s most important union leaders in a protest against BearingPoint and the US government’s efforts to take control of their natural resources away from the Iraqi people to enrich already grotesquely wealthy Western oil interests.
The US and other foreign countries should be looking to help the Iraqi people cope with the disaster wrought by the Bush Administration. They should not be exploiting them further. Iraqi oil for the Iraqi people, not for ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco, BP and the other oil barons.
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