Dear Comrades!

A Few Words from the Translator.

 Samara (Kuibyshev in the USSR) has a population of 1 million people and a
long revolutionary tradition. It has a large concentration of heavy industry
which, as elsewhere in Russia, has been devastated by capitalist
restoration. ZIM (Zavod imeni Maslennikova) presently has 5,000 workers who
have not been paid their wages for a year. ZIM is a military-industrial
plant which still belongs to the state. As most of such enterprises, ZIM has
been left without state orders and subject to plunder by its administration
and the authorities of all levels whose usual tactics comes to the
following. First, an enterprise is stripped of all its assets. Its real
estate and all kind of facilities are
rented out for a nominal price to the relatives or friends of the
administration. If the workers of an enterprise have some shares they are
compelled to sell them to the front people of the administration or/and
outside gangsters, since they are not paid their wages and starve. Then
administration drives
the enterprise to bankruptcy, the state puts it to auction, and the local
gang buys it for small change. With workers now out, they are free to do
with the enterprise, often unique and having priceless equipment, whatever
they want. Often they would just sell it to a private bank and settle on a
nice piece of real estate in Switzerland or Florida., leaving behind
hundreds of thousands of Russian workers to starvation, lumpenization, and
death.

Why it was ZIM, among so many enterprises in similar predicament, to have
risen in organized action? I believe it was because of the long
revolutionary tradition of the Samara proletariat and because of the small
group of the revolutionary workers led by Isayev and Kotel'nikov who can
be called some of the few professional revolutionaries in contemporary
Russia. I know that Isayev was arrested in 1981 for organizing a strike and
was given a 6-year prison term for that. Together with Kotel'nikov, he leads
the Party of the Proletarian Dictatorship based on some sort of vernacular
Marxist tradition, transmitted by A. Razlatsky, the now deceased founder of
the PDP. According to the Party statues, its members from the intelligentsia
have only the right of consultative vote.

The protests began on Feb 3 when the ZiM workers blocked the central avenue
of the city. They sent then a delegation to the nearby meeting of the
so-called Trilateral Commission--the bosses, the city administration, and
the "yellow" official unions--which was discussing the terms of a new
"production" agreement. The workers found cold reception there. During the
following two months they continued to block the avenue every day. They also
threw from the factory their director and its coterie who are now under
criminal investigation for the embezzlement of the plant's assets. To
obstruct the investigation, the "gang" inside the plant burnt down the
bookkeeping office. The police twice arrested the leaders of the strike but
every time they were released under the workers' pressure. Among other
actions, the workers took the vice-directors and the plant's union boss
hostages. Isayev writes that now they are working on organizing a city-wide
meeting to "overthrow the regional governor."


Road we bridged in a 1998. Since then factory receives the salary in time.

Warm Regards
Grigory Isaev. Victor Kotel`nicov.
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443086, Russia, Samara, ul. Novo-Sadovaya 179, bunker
Tel/fax: (846-2) 352691, 353262.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]    ICQ# 42743890
http://stachkom.org/     http://proletarism.org/
The Party of Proletarian Dictatorship.
The Strike Commitee of Samara (Stachkom).
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