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Most believe that the majority of these killings are being carried out by
management hired murderers.

>From what I was told, the unionists are members of PSUV, and many have to
carry handguns to protect themselves. In the last incident the attacker was
shot and wounded, and is in police custody.

Sadly, this is no different than what has been going down in Colombia for
many many years. Ironically (or not) even the most "liberal" of news
agencies won't carry that news. This is probably, in part, because the
United States is providing Colombia with tons of money and arms leading up
to the Venezuelan elections.

As tensions between US-backed Colombia and Venezuela heat up, I'd suspect
much of our media in the US to run these kind of stories to manufacture
additional disgust toward Venezuela and the coup it is clearly planning.

What better way to sway working people's opinion than pitting us against one
another?

-Richard


Two More Trade Unionists Murdered in Venezuela; National Union of Workers
Demands Justice

<http://venezuelanalysis.com/printmail/5493><http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/5493/#comments>

By James Suggett - Venezuelanalysis.com

 Mérida, July 14th 2010 (Venezuelanalysis.com) – Following the murder of two
Venezuelan trade unionists this week, the National Union of Workers (UNETE)
demanded that state security forces carry out efficient investigations and
adopt preventative measures to protect union leaders.

On Monday night, UNETE member Alexis Díaz died after being shot twice
outside of his home in Aragua state. Díaz, a father of five, was a union
organizer at Plumrose, a Danish meat processing company, and a member of the
United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV).

Local news reports identified Diaz’s attacker as Cristian Vargas, who had
recently been released from jail and had charges pending against him for
robbery and homicide. Díaz allegedly fired back using the handgun he
carried, wounding Vargas, who was taken to the hospital and remains in
police custody.

On Sunday, Densy Sánchez, the general secretary of the workers union at the
multi-national courier company MRW, died after being shot in the head in his
home in Valencia, Carabobo state.

Sanchez’s murder appears to be the result of a conflict over the
management’s alleged violation of the workers’ collective contract and the
cancellation of severance pay and other benefits. Sanchez’s killers
allegedly entered his home seeking documents related to the conflict,
according to local news reports. MRW management officials were due to appear
before the state legislature for interrogation last Thursday, but did not
show up.

On Tuesday, State Legislator Sixto Rodriguez publicly expressed condolences
to Sanchez’s family and summoned the MRW management for questioning before
the legislature next Wednesday.

What are suspected to be politically-motivated, hired killings of trade
unionists are the most common form of trade unionist assassinations, and
have been a growing problem. Over the past three years, eight members of the
UNETE in Aragua state alone have been murdered, including the union’s
state-level coordinator.

Hired killings, inter-union violence, and abuse of power by state security
forces have taken the lives of scores of labor leaders, with some human
rights groups' estimates at more than one hundred dead since 2007, according
to a report by the Inter-American Human Rights Commission of the OAS.

Those who carry out the shootings are rarely brought to trial and convicted,
and so far no “intellectual authors,” meaning those who planned, paid for,
and ordered the killings, have been brought to justice.

On Tuesday, UNETE released a statement denouncing the murders and demanding
justice. “It is necessary that the competent institutions pay special
attention to thoroughly investigating the material authors and masterminds
of the cases of murders, persecution, terrorism, and management-led hired
killings against classist union leaders who, in the context of the
confrontation between capital and labor, are the ones who struggle daily,
and the Venezuelan state should bring an end to the impunity that exists,”
said the statement.

The union confederation is planning conferences and public demonstrations in
different parts of the country in the coming weeks, the statement said.

The confederation delivered a similar demand to Venezuela’s vice president,
labor minister, justice minister, attorney general, and public defender in
February of this year.

In April, UNETE leaders and state officials met twice in the Ministry of
Justice and Internal Affairs to spell out preventative measures to deal with
the management-led attacks against union leaders.

UNETE is the nation’s largest national union confederation. It is composed
of unions from many different economic sectors and ideological currents, but
is, on the whole, supportive of the government led by President Hugo Chavez.



On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 8:31 PM, James Holstun <[email protected]>wrote:

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> Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
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>
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>
> ALL THIS CONSIDERED ran a particularly partisan piece tonight, all but
> accusing Hugo Chavez of assassinating tens of labor union organizers--more
> than in Colombia. Could someone please provide some context?
>
> http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128930031
>
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