Dutch passengers demonstrate against railway privatization

In Utrecht, The Netherlands, was a big demonstration against railways
privatization. The directors were given a symbolic one way ticket to
Poland, and 'pie-ed'. Actions by both workers and passengers will
continue next week

On Saturday, 9 June, many demonstrators gathered in the big central
hall of Utrecht Central Station, the biggest railway hub of The
Netherlands. They had come to protest the privatization process of 
the
Dutch railways; which means less workers' rights, and higher fares 
and
worse safety for passengers. A blond female conductor next to an
African immigrant passenger; from toddlers in their parents'
perambulators to students to pensioners. Papers were present, like
Dusnieuws (Anarchist), Manifest (Communist), De Socialist; also
cameras of national SBS6 TV.

Led by a samba band including Brazilians living in The Netherlands,
they marched through the station to  the inner city of Utrecht,
wearing banners proclaiming worker-passenger solidarity, and 
shouting:
The railways are not for sale! When they arrived at the directors'
building of the railways, hundreds of demonstrators went inside
through the revolving door. A spokesman demanded to see Mr Huisinga,
the CEO. The commissionaire said he was not in. The passengers'
spokesman was surprised; as the new regulations of the railways, due
on 10 June, are widely predicted to cause chaos. Apparently, the
railway bosses were not meeting to prevent that chaos. The
demonstrators then glued a giant railway one way ticket to Warsaw
[Poland] for the railways management to the commissionaire's room.
This was because the management uses money to gamble, buying assets 
in
Poland, while neglecting public transport in The Netherlands. I can
only hope for the Polish people this management does not become as
powerful in Poland as in The Netherlands. One of the first fruits of
the privatization process was that management voted themselves
salaries, three times as high as a government minister. As the
demonstrators left to continue the march, some pies were thrown
against the directors' building: like in slapstick movies, pie-ing
exposes foolishness among the high and mighty.

After continuing to march through the city center, the demonstrators
went to De Kargadoor hall. There, a spokesman for the Passengers'
Collective and trade union paper editor spoke; then, a historian on
the over one hundred years' struggle tradition of Dutch railway
workers, including during Hitler's occupation; finally, a Socialist
Party MP. Then, a declaration of solidarity from Zambian labour
activist Ms Malele Dodia was read to loud applause (in Zambia, also
major struggles against IMF imposed privatisation and other hardships
are going on right now). Then, debaters from the floor emphasized the
need to strengthen local actions everywhere.

 From next Monday on, the railway workers will do "work to rule"
 actions to 
protest the anti-worker, anti-passenger "reforms" by the management.
The Passengers' Collective will support the workers' actions, forming
locally active groups everywhere. Met vriendelijke groet/Best wishes,

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Herman de Tollenaere
---------------------------------------------------------------------
My Internet site on Asian history and "new" religions:

http://www.asianhistory.myweb.nl/

See also SIMPOS, information on occult tendencies' impact on society:

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