https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/f/solidarity-all-levels-workers-iran

Oil strike spreads in Iran
Jane Green speaks to Union of Metalworkers and Mechanics of Iran (UMMI) 
national secretary MAYIZAR GILANI-NEJAD about the ongoing dispute and the 
current situation for Iranian workers



BAD NEWS: Newly elected Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi is a vocal supporter of 
the rights of the private sector as well as a conservative hardliner
THE STRIKE by workers in the oil and petrochemical industries in Iran, which 
began on the June 19, has spread to numerous sites across the vast oil and gas 
exploration fields, as well as the oil industry in general.

According to a statement released by UMMI, 28,000 workers have downed tools and 
remain determined to stay out until their demands are met.

In response to being asked to outline the main goals and demands of the oil 
industry and contract workers in the recent strikes, national secretary Maziyar 
Gilani-Nejad was quite clear that the demands were within the strictures laid 
down in Iranian employment law, which in any case gives employers huge 
advantages.

“For example, the employment law states that the employer must pay a worker’s 
wage on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis,” says Gilani-Nejad. “Nowhere does it 
state that the employer can delay the worker’s wages for three months plus or 
suddenly disappear having made no payment.

“In such cases, workers and their representatives have tried everything from 
direct correspondence to requests to meet with their respective parliamentary 
representatives, but to no avail.”

One of the key demands of UMMI is that wages must be paid monthly and without 
delay.

The current action has been initiated mainly by the project and contract 
workers. However, Gilani-Nejad was clear about the need for support from 
permanent employees of the oil, gas and petrochemical companies.

Gilani-Nejad indicated that full-time permanently employed workers in the oil 
company are also on low wages and have protested several times since the 
beginning of the year, supporting co-ordination between them and the project 
workers. Full-time workers announced their intention to take strike action on 
June 30.

“The conditions and leave arrangements of the workforce are key demands in the 
current struggle,” said Gilani-Nejad,“with strikers demanding that employers 
should be obliged to implement the rightful demand for a standard rotation of 
20 working days onsite followed by 10 days of commensurate paid leave.”

In addition, the strikers are demanding that insurance contributions must be 
based on the actual job titles and not capped at the level of an unskilled 
worker, as at present.

Gilani-Nejad also made the point that workers are also demanding the payment of 
bonuses and benefits, transport costs and child benefits; proper 
air-conditioning; an end to low-quality and repetitive meals; and an 
improvement of hygiene and sanitation in the dormitories.

“Contractors charge the employer for providing first-class air-conditioned 
minibuses, yet transport the workers in World War II-type minibuses. The 
conditions are inhumane with temperatures clocking 55°C in the province of 
Khuzestan.”

When UMMI announced that employers should raise salaries by 40 per cent, in 
line with Ministry of Employment guidance, workers faced sacking and insults 
directed at the campaign and union. The current action is the outcome of that 
failure to adhere to previously reached agreements by the employers.

The UMMI are pressing that peaceful protest against the violation of workers’ 
rights,as recognised by all international laws, is also included in the 
constitution and employment laws of Iran. UMMI hope that such civil protests 
will persuade the government to find a reasonable and effective way to respond 
to the demands of the workers. Gilani-Nejad stressed that they must respond 
positively and in accordance with the respective ILO conventions on trade union 
structures and workers’ rights.

The situation for workers in Iran is exacerbated by the fact that the 
government do not recognise independent trade unions,making it more difficult 
for unions to organise.

In addition, employers regularly contract out project work, through so called 
labour brokers, who take work from the oil company and delegate it to smaller 
firms. This subcontracting essentially breaks or obfuscates the direct line of 
accountability between employer and employee.

As Gilani-Nejad makes clear: “It is a regular practice for the oil companies 
and the Ministry of Employment to give a portion of the wages owed workers to 
labour brokers, who do nothing for the project, skim some of the payment and 
then delegate the work on, thus depriving the workers of that which is 
rightfully due to them.”

In order to reduce the parasitic role of labour brokers UMMI are demanding that 
a copy of the employment contract on official headed paper, signed and sealed, 
must be handed to the respective employee. This would make the relationship 
clearer and the rights and duties of the employer under the law more 
transparent.

In relation to the recent elections in Iran, which saw hard-line cleric Ebrahim 
Raisi elected President, Gilani-Nejad is not optimistic that this will be of 
any benefit to Iran’s workers.

“While administrations come and go, workers have learned to pay more attention 
to the actions of the officials rather than election campaign promises.”

Gilani-Nejad drew attention to the statement of Raisi that, “The economy should 
be left to the private sector. Anything that slows down the private sector must 
be eliminated.”

“These words may serve to encourage people in the private sector,” said 
Gilani-Nejad. “However, the country’s workers are demanding that the 
government, in its first steps, address the catastrophic living and working 
conditions of the working people.

“They are demanding basic steps without delay to address the consequences of 
privatisation and endemic corruption, as well as the need to fill the country’s 
industrial production capacity.”

It is clear that in the current dispute and in relation to the situation for 
workers in Iran in general, the UMMI general secretary sees a significant role 
for international support.

“By uniting with us and giving coverage to our legitimate demands, the trade 
unions can send a clear and unequivocal message that solidarity at regional, 
national and international levels can force the authorities to realise that 
they must pay the workers their rightful dues.

“It is a fact that such solidarity is only natural and has a great effect on 
motivating workers to insist upon the realisation of their legal rights.”

That action, that solidarity and the campaign to highlight the struggles of the 
people of Iran for peace, democracy and social justice, is one which will 
continue beyond the current dispute, until those goals are achieved.


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