[blind-democracy] Workers’ struggles repressed in the former USSR

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2017 10:52:42 -0400

https://socialistaction.org/2017/08/29/workers-struggles-repressed-in-the-former-ussr/


Workers’ struggles repressed in the former USSR

/ 16 hours ago


Sept.2017 Russia workers
Construction workers at work on St. Petersburg’s new stadium in 2016. Workers spoke of missing wages and abusive working conditions. Three workers died on the job. Those who complained were detained by police. Pawel Kopczynski / Reuters

By ANN MONTAGUE

On the 100th anniversary of the Russian Revolution, many people are rereading the history of the revolution that brought forth the very first worker’s state in history. Since 1991, however, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics no longer exists. The former USSR has splintered into 15 independent capitalist states. The Russian Federation is now the largest capitalist country in the world in area, occupying one-seventh of the earth’s surface, with a population in January 2017 of 146,428,420.

While Russia and President Vladimir Putin have been continually in the U.S. news media since Trump won the White House, there is very little information about working-class struggles throughout the Russian Federation today. The left should not be caught up in the Democrats’ excuses for their loss of the election or the Republicans’ fear of Trump’s relationship with Russian oligarchs. We must not ignore the struggles of the working classes of the Russian Federation and the former Soviet republics, which deserve our solidarity.

In the U.S. the top 10 percent of the population earns about 47% of the total income. In Russia, similarly, the top 10 percent income share is 45% of the total, while they control a staggering 86% of the country’s wealth. “Russia and the U.S. are probably the two most unequal countries in the world,” according to Gabriel Zucman, economist at the University of California at Berkeley and author of a recent study on the subject. “Those are the two leaders when it comes to extreme income and wealth inequality.”

Zucman points out that the Soviet government was able to drastically reduce income inequality. The top 1 percent’s share of income fell from 18 percent in 1905 to 4 percent after 1922.

Now, however, President Vladimir Putin has become one of the world’s richest men, as control over natural resources has been transferred from public lands to government loyalists, giving a small group of oligarchs control over gas, oil, and timber—the major sector’s of the Russian economy. Zucman’s study shows that offshore wealth is about 75 percent of the national income of Russia. The privatization has been called by some “controlled looting.”

Unions are attacked

The massive income inequality means that a great many Russian workers struggle to survive. Observers estimate that half their income is spent on food. But there have been few strikes, as workers in Russia experience increasing repression.

Mark Galeotti, with the Institute of International Relations in Prague, recalls that a member of Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) told a reporter, “My job is to make sure that no Lech Walesa emerges in my oblast (province).” This was a reference to the Polish worker (and later politician) who led protests and strikes against the government in 1970 at the Gdansk Shipyard in Poland.

Strikes in Russia are generally very short wildcat actions. Most trade unions are state controlled, and independent unions are the target of attacks.

A short but widespread series of wildcat strikes took place in April 2015, mainly to protest cutbacks and unpaid back wages. Teachers and construction workers in Siberia, metal workers in the Ural Mountains region, and autoworkers in St. Petersburg took part. In response to the pressure, Putin personally intervened to see that the workers got paid. Since then, strikes have been sporadic. Hundreds of construction workers, for example, have staged strikes in recent months to protest abusive working conditions at work sites for the 2018 World Cup.

Repression against the labor movement is also widespread in other countries that formerly were part of the USSR. In Belarus, in August, there was a major attack on the Independent Union of the Radio-Electronics industry (IURI) and the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions of the Republic (CTUB). Police broke into their offices and removed computers. They arrested Gennadii Fedynich, the president of IURI, and Alexander Yaroshyuk, head of CTUB.

These trade unions led large protests earlier in the year against the “Tax on Parasites” after the government had announced a new tax on the poor and the unemployed. Several thousand protesters marched on Minsk, and riot police and water cannons were deployed. Anyone with a sign was subject to being arrested, and when relatives showed up to demand their release, they were arrested as well.

In Kazakhstan, attacks on unions escalated this year against over 400 trade-union organizations. In August, Larisa Kharkova, head of the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions of Kazakhstan, was sentenced to a four-year suspended sentence, a five-year ban on trade union activities and 100 hours of public work. Her crime officially was “misuse of power,” but the trial was actually for her public support for a hunger strike of 700 oil workers in Mangystau in January. In May, the leader of the oil workers’ protest, Amina Yeleusinova, was sentenced to two years in prison. LabourStart has launched an international campaign demanding an end to anti-union repression in Belarus and Kazakhstan.

“Anti-Corruption Marches” throughout Russia

The Committee for a Workers’ International (CWI) reported from Russia that illegal mass protests, called Anti-Corruption Marches, took place in March in around 100 cities that started in the far east in Vladivostok and moved across Russia, including 6000 in cities in Siberia and 2000 in the Volga region. Protesters showed up in small cities where they were not expected in the north, and there were even protests in Simferopol and Sevastepol, Crimea’s two major cities.

The largest actions were in St. Petersburg, where 15,000 poured into the Winter Palace courtyard and then marched down the Nevskii Prospect. Police reports showed that 130 were arrested. In Moscow 15,000 filled Tverskoi Prospect and marched towards the Kremlin; over 1000 were arrested. This included reporters and photographers, including Alec Luhn, a British Guardian reporter. Luhn reported that 136 of the 800 detained were under 18 years old.

Five years ago, the Anti-Corruption Marches were first called by opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and centered only in Moscow. The issues of the march this year went beyond anti-corruption to demanding a national minimum wage and issues like education and health care. While Navalny is described as a pro-capitalist neoliberal, he has been attacked by other opposition neoliberal groups for including issues of workers’ rights. Now that the demonstrations have expanded outside Moscow, Navalny says that he will be making direct appeals to the working class with further economic demands.

The election will be next year. The leader of Crimea stated that the best thing for Russia would be a tsar. He quickly corrected himself and said that Putin would be the “best tsar.”

Recent reports are that the Kremlin will not allow Navalny to be a candidate in the election. He clearly is not a working-class leader, but the growing turnout for mass action throughout the whole country is an encouraging development within Russia, where the most common protest that is sometimes allowed is what is a called a single person picket.








Share this:

Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
12Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)12
Click to share on Google+ (Opens in new window)


August 29, 2017 in Russia.


Related posts



Why Capitalism Founders in Russia



Fourth International in Crisis



Prospects of Resistance by Workers to Capitalist Restoration in Russia


Post navigation

← Greece, a story without the distorting prism of SYRIZA
















Get Involved!
Donate to help support our work
Get email updates
Join Socialist Action


Newspaper Archives
Newspaper Archives Select Month August 2017  (15) July 2017  (17) June 2017  (16) May 2017  (17) April 2017  (14) March 2017  (13) February 2017  (19) January 2017  (13) December 2016  (12) November 2016  (19) October 2016  (12) September 2016  (10) August 2016  (10) July 2016  (14) June 2016  (14) May 2016  (9) April 2016  (12) March 2016  (14) February 2016  (8) January 2016  (11) December 2015  (11) November 2015  (9) October 2015  (8) September 2015  (10) August 2015  (7) July 2015  (13) June 2015  (9) May 2015  (10) April 2015  (12) March 2015  (9) February 2015  (11) January 2015  (10) December 2014  (12) November 2014  (11) October 2014  (9) September 2014  (6) August 2014  (10) July 2014  (11) June 2014  (10) May 2014  (11) April 2014  (10) March 2014  (9) February 2014  (11) January 2014  (11) December 2013  (10) November 2013  (11) October 2013  (17) September 2013  (13) August 2013  (10) July 2013  (11) June 2013  (15) May 2013  (14) April 2013  (14) March 2013  (12) February 2013  (10) January 2013  (17) December 2012  (7) November 2012  (8) October 2012  (19) September 2012  (2) August 2012  (27) July 2012  (18) June 2012  (3) May 2012  (19) April 2012  (14) March 2012  (17) February 2012  (19) January 2012  (17) December 2011  (3) November 2011  (33) October 2011  (14) September 2011  (13) August 2011  (34) July 2011  (24) June 2011  (19) May 2011  (19) April 2011  (15) March 2011  (15) February 2011  (15) January 2011  (15) December 2010  (17) November 2010  (1) October 2010  (6) September 2010  (3) August 2010  (8) July 2010  (7) June 2010  (2) May 2010  (9) April 2010 (3) March 2010  (8) February 2010  (3) January 2010  (9) December 2009  (6) November 2009  (5) October 2009  (16) September 2009 (3) August 2009  (2) July 2009  (5) June 2009  (2) May 2009  (7) April 2009  (6) March 2009  (16) February 2009  (9) January 2009 (10) December 2008  (11) November 2008  (8) October 2008  (16) September 2008  (14) August 2008  (18) July 2008  (12) June 2008 (3) May 2008  (2) April 2008  (3) March 2008  (14) February 2008 (11) January 2008  (11) December 2007  (8) November 2007  (1) July 2007  (1) June 2007  (1) April 2007  (1) March 2007  (1) February 2007  (3) December 2006  (11) November 2006  (11) October 2006 (13) September 2006  (15) August 2006  (11) July 2006  (18) June 2006  (7) May 2006  (14) April 2006  (6) March 2006  (14) February 2006  (5) January 2006  (2) December 2005  (9) November 2005  (8) October 2005  (13) September 2005  (12) August 2005  (9) July 2005  (16) June 2005  (16) May 2005  (16) April 2005  (12) March 2005  (14) February 2005  (19) January 2005  (15) December 2004 (14) November 2002  (17) October 2002  (19) September 2002  (22) August 2002  (21) July 2002  (15) May 2002  (21) April 2002  (21) February 2002  (15) January 2002  (15) December 2001  (17) October 2001  (24) September 2001  (18) July 2001  (19) June 2001  (18) October 2000  (17) September 2000  (21) August 2000  (19) July 2000  (16) June 2000  (26) May 2000  (21) April 2000  (22) March 2000  (28) February 2000  (18) January 2000  (20) December 1999 (20) November 1999  (26) October 1999  (25) September 1999  (18) August 1999  (40) July 1999  (38) June 1999  (24) May 1999  (27) April 1999  (25) March 1999  (26) February 1999  (29) January 1999  (24) July 1998  (12)

Search

View socialistactionusa’s profile on Facebook
View SocialistActUS’s profile on Twitter
View SocialistActionCT’s profile on YouTube


Subscribe to Our Newspaper


Upcoming Events
New York: Fascism — What it is and how to fight it
September 13, 2017 at 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Word Up Community Bookshop/Libreria Comunitaria, 2113 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY, United States



Category Cloud

Actions & Protest Africa Anti-War Arts & Culture Black Liberation Canada Caribbean Civil Liberties Cuba East Asia Economy Education & Schools Elections En Español Environment Europe Immigration Indigenous Rights International Labor Latin America Latino Civil Liberties Marxist Theory & History Middle East Police & FBI Prisons South Asia Trump / U.S. Government Uncategorized Women's Liberation


View Calendar


Blog at WordPress.com.









Follow





































Other related posts:

  • » [blind-democracy] Workers’ struggles repressed in the former USSR - Roger Loran Bailey