Ahwazi Protests
over Months of Unpaid Wages
Employees of the Ahwaz Sugar
Refinery protested against the absence of any protection for worker’s rights,
although Tehran keeps on blaming the international sanctions for the situation
these people find themselves in
Workers from the Ahwaz Sugar
Refinery this week staged protests over months of unpaid wages as an unemployment crisis grips the region.
Employees and their families clashed
with police outside the offices of the provincial governor as they demanded
salaries, compensation for lost earnings and payment of their national
insurance, health and pension contributions that the management has refused to
pay to the Social Security Department.
While the Iranian government is keen
to blame the country's woes on international sanctions, the company's long
legacy of poor management and years of unpaid loans led to bankruptcy and mass
redundancies. Meetings between workers and management, brokered by the
provincial governor, have achieved no resolution to the dispute.
Led by Iraj Emani, the sugar
refinery's trade union has been in dispute with the management for over two
years, previously staging a protest against unpaid wages and lay-offs in March
[2012]. Many of the employees have been working for the company for over 20
years and on top of poverty have found they have no healthcare cover.
Director of the Ahwazi Arab
Solidarity Network Daniel Brett said: "The indifference of the management
and the government towards Ahwazi workers enduring job insecurity demonstrates
the callous disregard the regime has for the inhabitants of this region. In
many companies, workers are expected to put up with hardship caused by
irregular payment of wages by managers whose corruption is tolerated by their
political benefactors. Workers have little recourse for action as trade union
activity is heavily restricted in Iran and union leaders are subjected to
harassment, intimidation and imprisonment."
Source: http://www.unpo.org/article/15082
Source: http://www.unpo.org/article/15082
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