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게시물에서 찾기2006/09/04

3개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.

  1. 2006/09/04
    발전노조 총"파업"
    no chr.!
  2. 2006/09/04
    com. che guevara..
    no chr.!
  3. 2006/09/04
    北: missiles & nuces
    no chr.!

발전노조 총"파업"

 

 

 

Government's threats led to the end/collapse of the strike of

power plant workers

 

 

Power company workers end strike, returning to work (Yonhap)

 

Unionized workers at South Korea's state-run power companies ended their strike Monday, just 15 hours after they walked off the job to press for improved working conditions and other demands.

 

The strike of the Korean Power Plant Industry Union began at 1:30 a.m. Monday as the workers failed to reach an agreement with management on demands for better working conditions and the reinstatement of fired colleagues.

 

The 6,500-member-union representing different regions of the nation -- Korea Midland Power Co., Korea Namdong Electrics, Korea Western Power Co., Korea Southern Power Co. and Korea East-West Power Co. -- had also demanded the government merge them into a single power company, remove a wage cap for workers and introduce a three-shift work system.

 

The government and management both rebuffed the demands.

 

"We've decided to withdraw our strike for strategic purposes," said union leader Lee Joon-sang. "We will resume negotiations with management in a bid to eventually achieve our demands."


Lee expressed concern over mounting discontent from the public over the walkout. "We understand people's worries about power plant operations," said Lee. "We were afraid that we could be misunderstood as taking the electricity supplies hostage," until our demands were met, he said, stressing that this was not the case.

 

The strike came despite the National Labor Relations Commission's decision on Sunday to have the government arbitrate the labor dispute, which defines any strike during the arbitration period illegal.

 

The move by the labor commission automatically makes it mandatory for workers to suspend any strike for 15 days pending further negotiations. If no breakthrough is made at the talks, both labor and management must accept an arbitration ruling by the commission.

Around 2,200 unionists staged a rally in downtown Seoul on Sunday, and moved to the Korea University campus where they stayed overnight.

 

As of 1:00 p.m. Monday, nearly 40 percent of the companies' workers participated in the strike, but power plants around the country operated without problems with management filling vacant posts with temporary workers, the government said.

 

The government and management warned of disciplinary action for those who did not end the illegal strike by 1 p.m.

 

Police have sought the arrest of 20 union leaders who organized the walkout.

This is the second strike by local power company employees, after the five regional power companies were created by the splitting up of state-owned Korea Electric Power Corp. in 2001. The previous 32-day walkout in 2002 also did not cause any disruptions in electricity generation.
http://english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20060904/620000000020060904174834E2.html

 

Power Union Ends Strike (K. Times)

 

Unionists of the nation’s power companies ended their half-day walkout voluntarily Monday afternoon and all of the members will return to work from Tuesday.

The decision came out as the government takes a hard-line stance against their demands and management agreed to talk further with the union on the remaining issues.

The union, with about 65,000 members at five companies under the state-run Korea Electric Power Corp. (KEPCO), announced the decision three hours after they started a full-scale strike.

 

The decision came hours before the government threatened to invoke its emergency arbitration power to ban them from striking for 15 days and police moved to arrest 20 union leaders.

 

``We’ve decided to end the strike and resume a negotiation with the management,’’ Lee Jun-sang, head of the union, said at a park near the Korea University in northern Seoul, where about 2,200 workers from regional companies nationwide were gathered for a sit-in.

Early in the morning yesterday, presidents of the five companies warned the striking workers to return to work by 1 p.m. According to the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Energy, more than 60 percent of unionists returned to work by that time. The remaining striking workers also began to return to workplaces after the announcement of scrapping the walkout.

 

Earlier, the power companies filed complaints against some 20 union leaders for the illegal strike, and said they would file compensation suits against the unionists. The police also planned to request arrest warrants for the leaders.

 

The union said they had sought the planned strike, as the management did not actively negotiate with the workers but waited for the government’s arbitration decision.

The unionized workers are demanding the KEPCO to consolidate the five regional companies into one, increase the number of workers, allow senior workers to participate in union activity, and abolish a cap on the rates of annual wage increases.

 

The company, however, confirmed their position not to accept the demands.

 

``Their call for the consolidation of firms is against the government’s policy to enhance power industry’s competitiveness, and it is beyond the subject of labor-management negotiation,’’ CEOs of the five companies said during a press briefing at the KEPCO headquarters in southern Seoul.

 

They also said they cannot allow senior workers’ union participation, as walkout by the seniors, in charge of core control at power plants, would bring about a total disruption of power supply.

 

Following the unionists’ walkout, 3,500 alternative workers have run the power plants. The power supply has not been disrupted.

In 2002, the power union staged a strike for 38 days.

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/200609/kt2006090417423010440.htm

 

 

Minjung-ui Sori(Voice of People) wrote following(there you can see also a video about the declaration of the end of the strike):

발전노조, 사측의 교섭제의에 파업중단

 

 

 

Following documentary was recorded in the night between yesterday and today in Goryeo/Korea Univ(to watch it, please click on "play").

 

 

Documentary by 숲속홍길동同志

 

 

 

 

 

PS: In my opinion this result - the end of the strike - isn't just caused by the threats of the gov't.. It might be also a result of a kind of weakness of the S.K. labour movement/KCTU.

And I think also that such "tactics"(by KCTU) are very dangerous for the next actions by the S.K. labour movement.. (That's just MY opinion!!)

 

 

 

 

 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

com. che guevara..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

for the german stuff please check out:

http://blog.jinbo.net/imho/?pid=595#more_anchor595


 

 

 

 

 

PS: The(German) text - it's the same like the last song on "imho's" contribution(W. Biermann) - of the song is more a kind of simple[pretty stupid(??)] "revolution romance"..^^

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

北: missiles & nuces

 

 

 

 

 

After the S.K. gov't and media were downplaying a possible nuclear test by the DPRK for a while, like usual, at least since last week it seems that they're alarmed by some strange developments in the North.

 

Here just some of the latest S.K. reports about the issue, published in the last week:

 

Seoul alert after Pyongyang warns of 'countermeasures'

(Yonhap, 8.27)

South Korea's government and military was kept on alert Sunday following the North's warning one day earlier that it would respond to U.S.-imposed financial sanctions with "countermeasures."


North Korea said in a Foreign Ministry statement released Saturday that it would take all necessary countermeasures against what it calls intensifying U.S. financial restrictions on the communist country. The warning came amid reports of the North's alleged steps to conduct its first nuclear test.

 

Government and military sources said the North's spoken-of countermeasures would include nuclear tests or additional long-range missile launches, adding that Seoul is preparing itself for such "worst-case scenarios." The North test-fired the latest missiles despite international appeals not to do so in early July.

       

Officials were also put on alert by the report of a pro-Pyongyang newspaper published in Japan earlier on Saturday. "We are not able to conclude that North Korea will not conduct a nuclear test to bolster its deterrent effect against the U.S. if the Bush administration decides to take a tougher stance (against the North)," the Chosun Sinbo said in a commentary, which often represents the North's official position.

 

The sources agreed that the North, which already declared it possesses a nuclear deterrent on Feb. 10 last year, is capable of carrying out the nuclear test.

"The North might have received the know-how of how to conduct a nuclear test from Pakistan, and constructing the underground tunnel for the nuclear test is not so difficult," said Kim Tae-woo, a senior researcher of the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses, a state-run research organization.

 

The government is closely monitoring developments around the clock to see whether the North will carry out a nuclear test. Earlier this month, it dispatched six soldiers to a local earthquake detection center to check for any signal of such a test...

http://english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20060827/610000000020060827162202E9.html

 

 

Nuclear Test Could Backfire: Experts (K. Times, 9.01)
 
South Korea’s preparation for an action plan to cope with a possible North Korean nuclear test does not indicate any imminence of the worst-case scenario, but is rather meant to send a strong warning signal to Pyongyang, according to experts.

Should the North go ahead with the test, however, it would spoil almost everything for the already isolated country _ producing additional sanctions by the United States and Japan and soured ties with China and Russia, they added...
 
http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200609/kt2006090118383711990.htm

 

 

And today's(9.03) K. Times wrote this(even German, UK, Israel.. media were reporting about the same issue):

 

Missile Activity Detected in North
 
An interceptor missile, launched from the Ronald W. Reagan Missile Defense Site at Vandenberg Air Force Base, moves to its target in California on Sept. 1. / AP-Yonhap 
South Korean and U.S. intelligence authorities have detected suspicious movements of large trucks at a North Korean missile launch site, a sign for a possible missile test, a government source said on Sunday.


The move came after the U.S. military announced over the weekend it had successfully intercepted a dummy long-range warhead that in some respects, according to defense experts, resembled a warhead from a North Korean rocket.

 

``I was told that intelligence authorities of South Korea and the United States have recently spotted several large vehicles moving around at the launch site located in Kitaeryong, Kangwon Province, the source was quoted as saying by the Yonhap News Agency in Seoul. ``Now, we do not exclude the possibility of the North conducting additional missile-firing.''

...

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/200609/kt2006090316594310440.htm

 

 

But actually there are more important and serious issues/"problems" between S.K. and the DPRK:

 

North Seeks New Partner for Golf Courses ^^

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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