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Press Release – Submitted by the Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union, January 4, 2010
GB&GWU President Charles Sampson

The GB&GWU has today after much deliberation and the public statements, responses and non-responses of the Minister of Labour, Mr. Manzoor Nadir; Chief Labour Officer, Mr. Yoganand Persaud and BCGI General Manager, Mr. Sergey Kostyuk, has formally dispatched the following correspondences :

1) A complaint to the Ethnic Relations Commission to commence a public inquiry into charges of discrimination against BCGI’s employees and the GB&GWU on the grounds of race and political geography;

2) The Trade Union Recognition & Certification Board on BCGI’s action in soliciting workers to sign a company prepared petition requesting the Board to call a Poll under Section 31 of the Trade Union Recognition Act, Chapter 98:07, the Minister’s comments in Stabroek News on January 2, 2010, and BCGI’s failure to meet with the Union to have the impasse resolved;

3) To the Russian Ambassador bringing to the Russian Government attention BCGI’s Russian management violations of workers’ rights and the Laws of Guyana, and seeking its involvement in reigning in Rusal to honour and respect International labour laws and ILO covenants as well as the Laws and people of Guyana.

The GB&GWU is committed to the upholding of rights, honouring of laws and justice on behalf of its membership and shall continue to pursue these principles vigorously.

Please see Letters and ERC complaint attached.

Charles Sampson

General President

GB&GWU.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Complaint to the Ethnic Relations Commission

Made by the

Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union

On January 4, 2010

The Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union (GB&GWU) brings with urgency to your attention for immediate redress the case of the predominantly African bauxite workers of Aroaima and Kwakwani employ at the Bauxite Company Guyana Inc. (BCGI) a company owned by United Company RUSAL and the Government of Guyana where race, ethnicity and political affiliations appear to be at the center of decision making affecting operations of the union, workers, their families and the communities of Linden, Aroaima and Kwakwani for which Bauxite is the main economic pillar of support.

The seriousness of this claim is recognized after careful thought and consideration, weighting the events surrounding the negotiation for wages and working conditions resulted in an unlawful act by BCGI and the tacit support given BCGI by the Ministry and officials of the Ministry of Labour responsible for conciliating the labour dispute.

The impasse between BCGI and GB&GWU resulted in a strike due to the company’s refusal to pay increase wages demanded by the Union and the subsequent suspension and dismissal of workers, inclusive of all the union’s branch leaders. Arriving from these acts the company has taken its own decision in contravention of the Laws of Guyana to publicly announce that it is has terminated the Collective Labour Agreement (CLA) and has stated it will take measures to terminate the Recognition Agreement between the two parties (BCGI and GB&GWU).

Since then workers/union members have complained that there are being coerced by representatives of the company to sign a company prepared petition to be used as an instrument to satisfy the company’s intent of denying the workers their rights to Freedom of Association, and Collective Bargaining.

The recent statement by Minister Manzoor Nadir has impacted significantly on our belief that racial and ethnic discrimination coupled with political and economic marginalization are the underpinning reasons for the inaction of the Ministry of Labour to vigorously arrest this dispute which threatens the livelihood of dozens of workers and their families who rely on them for support.

The union finds it totally unacceptable that the Minister of Labour Mr. Manzoor Nadir in his comments in Stabroek News, January 2, 2010 could state with quite an alacrity that

a) Sugar “‘accounts for over 15 percent of our foreign exchange earnings and it has critical importance to our economy.’ While acknowledging the importance of bauxite to the country, Nadir noted that RUSAL is just one of several companies operating in that sector.”

b) “And perhaps…we should let this festive season of goodwill take its course and hopefully both parties will exercise more generosity towards each other.”

c) “Asked if the ministry had conducted an investigation to determine whether the signatures were taken fairly and not under duress, Nadir replied in the negative. He, however, opined that since the company has over 400 workers and since most of the workers are back at work, if it was a situation of the letters being sent under duress, the Ministry would have seen more letters and signatures. ‘If you have 98 percent of the workers on the job and just about 25 percent of them asking for withdrawal I want to infer…I can’t say as gospel, that it may indicate that those signatures were gotten of free will,’ the Minister said.”

Prior to this GB&GWU as well as this nation was informed via  the media by Chief Labour Officer, Yoganand Persaud of a meeting scheduled between BCGI and GB&GWU. Said meeting never occurred even though the Union although receiving no official notice contacted the Ministry and turned up at the Ministry of Labour on December 15, 2009 for the publicly notified meeting between the Ministry, BCGI and the GB&GWU. When exposed in the media the Chief Labour Officer denied any such notice of meeting but did not refute Stabroek News’ Editor’s comments at the end of his letter to the editor which reiterated that this was indeed reported by the Chief Labour Officer.

The actions of the company and the Ministry of Labour speak to a collusion between the parties to discriminate against workers because of their race, trade union affiliation and political allegiance. The fact that it is almost two months and the Ministry has failed to take any positive initiative to engage the parties with a view of bringing about a resolution not only questions the seriousness of the Ministry in discharging its legal responsibility but highlights its partisan political interest in addressing issues pertaining to all the workers of Guyana.

The Minister of Labour from the outset took the position that the union was guilty of transgression and publicly chastised the union ignoring the rights of the workers and the BCGI breach of the laws for which it was custodian of and ought to be representing. One is left to conclude that the Minister is prepared to discriminate against African workers and the community of Linden, Aroaima and Kwakwani in favour of the employer who coincidentally happens to be part government and therefore with a responsibility to protect the laws and all the peoples of the land regardless of race, class, creed or political persuasion .

The Minister’s cavalier approach to the handling of the bauxite issue vis a vis the recent sugar impasse in which he states that his involvement to resolve the GuySuCo and Guyana Agriculture & General Workers Union (GAWU) dispute was influenced by economic circumstances which the bauxite issue does not share a corresponding consideration is seen as an abrogation of his responsibility as the Minister of all workers and all Guyanese.

To advance and protect the economic wellbeing of one group of workers yet as the same time taking a position to sacrifice the economic wellbeing of another highlights the blatant discrimination of which we believe race and politics are the driving forces since the Minister of Labour is an East Indian; the Chief Labour Officer, an East Indian; the majority of workers in the sugar industry are East Indian; and the government is East Indian dominated and classified in a general sense as “Indian.”

On the converse the BCGI senior management are white Russians. The bauxite workers are primarily Africans, the GB&GWU is led by Africans and the communities dependent on the bauxite company for their livelihood are primarily Africans. Further on the political spectrum, the governing “Indian” party has traditionally got the least votes in these communities even as recent as in the 2006 National and Regional Elections. The bauxite communities come under the Regional government (Reg. 10) which is led by the People’s National Congress a predominantly “African” based party which is the leading opposition party, and Kwakwani which was won by the Alliance For Change.

The politics of Guyana’s race relations are well known to all and leaves the Bauxite workers discrimination as a visible casualty of discrimination premised on race.

The statements and actions of the Minister of Labour, the Chief Labour Officer and the BCGI General Manager are seem in the context of being racist and we today lodge a complaint of discrimination against BCGI employees and the GB&GWU on the grounds of race. We demand an urgent attention and a public enquiry conducted by the Ethnic Relations Commission in keeping with its impartial mandate of ensuring a fair and just society.

Appendices with primary and media reports will be presented at the hearing but the case is already available in the public domain and can be accessed from the print media.

Carlton Sinclair

President

Aroaima/Kwakwani Branch

Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union

_________________________________________________________________

His Excellency Mr. Pavel A. Sergiev,

Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Russian Federation,

Embassy of the Russian Federation,

3 Public Road,

Kitty,

Georgetown,

Guyana,

South America.

January 4, 2010

Excellency,

I would wish to bring to your attention a matter of grave concern to the workers of Guyana, and I believe it would be to you as it implicates a corporate citizen of your beloved country, which , I have been informed, the Russia Federation is a majority shareholder. I speak of the United Company RUSAL

There exist serious transgressions of the Laws of Guyana and the rights of the workers and citizens of Guyana by RUSAL.

The Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union (GB&GWU) is appalled at the hostile posture taken and aggressive measures adopted by the Bauxite Company Guyana Inc’s (BCGI) Russian management, doing business in Guyana as a multinational company, against its local work force in contravention of the labour laws, which are statute laws, of Guyana. To be direct, RUSAL has violated several sections of the Laws of Guyana, Trade Union Recognition Act, Chapter 98:07, notably:

“Section 23 (1) Compulsory recognition and duty to treat,” which clearly states: “When a trade union obtains a certificate of recognition for workers comprised in a bargaining unit in accordance with this Part, the employer shall recognise the union, and the union and the employer shall bargain in good faith and enter into negotiations with each other for the purpose of collective bargaining.”

Equally troubling are the efforts made by RUSAL’s management to force workers to work under unsafe working conditions while at the same time imposing measures to deny workers the right to be represented by the trade union of their choice, an issue that is particularly disturbing to me, as General President of the GB&GWU, but more especially a right which the great state of Russia has championed in its glorious past and undoubtedly still holds in great esteem today.

The trade union contributes to the philosophy of one economic world where employer(s) and employee(s) operate free from fear in the creation of a just society guided by universal conventions, laws, principles and national practices. Specific attention is drawn to the International Labour Organisation core labour conventions, namely:

– Convention 87- Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise

– Convention 98- Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining

– Convention 107- Abolition of Forced Labour

The Union sees the action of BCGI’s management as a gross disrespect to Guyana’s sovereignty, Guyanese workers, laws and international conventions. These anti-trade union acts and violation of workers’ rights are in contravention of the rule of law and time-honoured principles. Against this backdrop the Union expresses to the Russian government its concerns and dissatisfaction with RUSAL’s activities in Guyana.

It is my hope that given the seriousness of this situation your illustrious government active intervention will find a just resolution to this problem consistent with the high principles it has always adumbrated on behalf of all the workers of the world, especially those of small underdeveloped countries as ours who have always been the victims of vicious capitalist exploitation.

The Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union appreciates your Excellency good graces in having this matter brought to the attention of the Government of Russia and with the urgency that it deserves.

The GB&GWU remains confident that with your Government understanding and intervention this vexatious aberration will be resolved with deserved justice to the workers we represent.

With high esteem

Charles Sampson

General President

Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union

__________________________________________________________________

Mr. Yoganand Persaud

Secretary

Trade Union Recognition & Certification Board

c/o Ministry of Labour

82 Upper Brickdam

Georgetown

January 4, 2010

Secretary,

The Guyana Bauxite and General Workers Union wishes to meet with the Trade Union Recognition and Certification Board to discuss the following issues:

1. The refusal of the Bauxite Company Guyana Inc. to meet with the Union to discuss matters pertaining to workers welfare in as much as there exit a legal certificate of Recognition between the parties;

2. The company’s action of coercing members of the Union to sign a company prepared petition to request a poll with a view of de-recognizing the Union under Section 31 of the Trade Union Recognition Act, Chapter 98:07, and;

3. In light of the public statements reported in Stabroek News, January 2, 2009 where the Minister of Labour said the Ministry has not conducted an investigation to determine whether the signatures were taken fairly and not under duress yet opined that it “may indicate that those signatures were gotten of free will.”

You would appreciate that the violations of our laws and the rights of workers are serious enough and deserving of immediate attention.

We look forward to meeting with you urgently.

Sincerely,

Leslie Gonsalves

General Secretary (ag.)

Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union

CC Justice Prem Persaud, Chairman


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72 responses to “Complaint To The Ethnic Relations Commission Made By The Guyana Bauxite & General Workers Union”


  1. Negroman and Bonny Peppa,

    Do you know if the DLP is still going to acquire Samlords castle for $75 million? This is important because it seems unwilling to pay Barrack his $60 million.

    Do you know how much the DLP’s Independence Bashment fete at the Garrison cost the same taxpayers who cannot get their Income Tax Returns?

    Is it true that the tents alone for the DLP’s New Year’s-Civic Day Fete in the Park – cost $42,000?

    Then how much is the entire bill for that DLP bashment fete.

  2. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    He is back!

    The Opposition leader office is now open for business.Royal rumble and fergusson are busy at their computers sending out BLP missives.


  3. @ mash up & buy back

    Where are the 30,000 Guyanese the DLP told the people of this country – were here illegally?

    At which Statutory Borad did the Chairman opt not to repair a single house for old people but used taxpayers’ money to fix his mother-in- law’s house – through a company in which he is a joint partner?

    At which Statutory Board was a decision taken to send business to an establishment where the Chairman is the king-maker and how much money was it?

    Which DLP MP benefitted when the BTA took-up the taxpayers money and over 100 staff and other officials to patronise his establishment through some community tourism gimmick?

    Why did the DLP spend $42,000 on tents for its bashment fete on Civic Day in the Park.


  4. Alex and his Shadow, de Rumble

    When wunna cud gih account fa all de tiefin dat went on wid wunna 14yr regime and all de cost ‘overrun’ dat runover ta people pocket, wunna cud address me. Till then doan speak ta me or call my name.

    Wah Mash Up saying like um true. De office now open so wunna got free access till bout 4:30, 5.

    Wunna buy a plantation too or wunna still po’rakey? Yardfowls.

    Alex, yes, you stillllll bore me.


  5. @Alex Fergusson

    Please desist from the crap you tried today.


  6. The severity of the DLP decision to increase the price of diesel by 77%; water rates by 60%, while causing over 4000 to lose their jobs – coming so soon after snatching over $180 million in new taxes from the pockets of the poor – suggests that the DLP is stepping up its efforts to intimidate Barbadians who are silently protesting because they now realise that the DLP does not know what it is doing.

    But inflicting so much social and economic pain and suffering on the people of this country so effortlessly could only mean that the DLP Ministers are servants of and are followers and Disciple of the path of Satan.

    But they are getting help from some quarters all in an attempt to keep the people in bondage.

  7. Mashneupgrobuyman Avatar
    Mashneupgrobuyman

    David I taut you for somebody, really. I aint Alex Fergusson. You tek off me post and play your telling Alex da he trying crap.

    Well let me tell you a couple tings now and you can decide if you gine carry dem or not. I does visit dis blog from time to time and I does see all kinds of nasty and disgusting tings said bout the Honourable Ms. Mottley by some han-to-mout snot rags like Negroman, Bonny Peppa and others.

    You politically bias cause you aint tek down de nasty comments but de Bees. Ya conscience din moved you to remove dem distasteful comments but a post da highlights a fact da gine soon be public knowledge you move dum. Why you feel da you is Thompson protector? Wunna does like to say wah wunna like bout people but nobody aint to say notting bout wunna.

    I read on dis blog bout somebody biting out somebody vagina and da is allowed to remain as fair and decent comment but to say da de PM got de big A is wrong. Wah is de big A? It is really wah in ya mine. Ya judgment is seriously warp and let me add da your moral compose is brek.


  8. @Alex

    If you can communicate the links we would appreciate it.


  9. mashneup……
    Tek a good look in ya mirra an ya would see de biggest, pissiest, han-ta-mout snot rag to ever walk dis earth. YOu and whoevva else lookin in de mirra wid ya. Ya salmon-tot retreiva.

    David is more than you would evva be ya klown.


  10. Wait what happen here? I wasreally enjoying the fist fight.Did everybody kiss and made up?

    @BonnyPeppa

    I tink mashneup broke the mirror when he tuk a lookand see who was looking back.


  11. ac
    well dah is 13 mo years a bad luck fa de salmon-tot retreiva fa brekkin de mirra. whichevva way he lose. Po’ sole.


  12. Mash Up & Buy Back
    The 4 Review Immigration Boards the Prime Minister talked about are not yet in place.There are no appointments as yet to any of those boards.As a consequence the thousands of applications the PM mentioned that are pending are still at that stage.I can tell you though,many new recent applications are being processed and some getting status while a good few I can honestly say are being deny status and many of those applicants are being ask to leave this island.

    Mash Up & Buy Back and the rest,we must continue to put pressure on our Prime Minister because he is being bombarded with many requests from some reactionary forces in this island especially the rat catcher/mango seller Indians.I know some Indo-Guyanese who the rat catcher.mango sellers are trying to get status for.

    We must continue to be vigilant and demand that our Prime Minister carry out the mandate we the Black people of Barbados gave him.That mandate includes a proper & efficient immigration policy that would rid the country of illegal immigrants especially the Indo-Guyanese scums.

  13. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    Negroman

    Thank you so much my brother for the work you are doing on our behalf in securing the future of our children.

    I know if Barbados Underground and others did not keep pushing this immigration issue and insisting that government tighten up,then we would have seen all ricky singh and faria cousins and mother in law and grandfather would have been rushing in to Barbados.

    David/BU

    Could you do a short reminder/article on the immigration town hall meetings and keep it at the top of the page until these meetings come to an end in February?

    There are supposed to be 4 meetings,the first one with the prime minister in attendance will be at solidarity house in st michael,not sure of the date however.

    I am encouraging all right thinking,patriotic barbadians to attend these meetings and make a strong,loud response to the green paper.

    Please insist that the waiting period be 10 years before citizenship for those non nationals who come here and get married to bajans


  14. @David
    I agree.


  15. @mash up

    Will do!


  16. @ mash up & buy back // January 11, 2010 at 12:56 PM
    “…Please insist that the waiting period be 10 years before citizenship for those non nationals who come here and get married to bajans.”

    Why so long, why 10 years?

  17. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    Sapidillo

    10 years is not too long.Other countries in the region who are strict on immigration also insist on 10 years.

    Barbados is a very small country and once you give someone citizenship then all the rights that go with it are theirs;including the right to live here and the right to bring someone from their country and marry them and live here,then to bring children you may have and on and on.

    The multiplier effect of one person getting citizenship is very frightening.

    If we were like Jamaica or bahamas or guyana with massive amounts of unoccupied land,then fair enough,but sadly that is not the case.

    Barbados citizenship must be something like US citizenship,where people from around the world who want to live here are made to wait and then treasure the moment when or if citizenship is granted.

    Right now there are marriages of convenience and children being born to illegals or people who stay illegally in a country for 5 years and then just so they can get citizenship.

    The time has long gone past to plug that hole.


  18. mash up & buy back wrotec”If we were like Jamaica or bahamas or guyana with massive amounts of unoccupied land,then fair enough,but sadly that is not the case.”

    That is the single most important factor in this debate.

    Simply put, Barbados is like a 3 bedroom house with a family of 9 living in it.

    You will soon be peeing in your drinking water.


  19. sorry, I wrote the above.

  20. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    Agreed Hants.

    This is why it is important for the people to go out there at the town hall meetings and speak out against the lax citizenship laws.


  21. Mash up
    That’s what I was saying all along, it is not that Barbados does not have the ability to handle an influx of legal migrants; it is that we don’t have the land mass. Therefore we have to screen carefully who and how many migrants are allowed in the country. The illegals are not welcomed at all. It is tantamount to overloading a mini bus, there is the recipe for disaster.

  22. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    My brother Scout

    If you are able to make it to the town hall meetings,please do so and represent us loud and clear.

    The future is in the balance right now.

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