Solidarity with Striking Mineworkers in Cananea, Mexico
March 03, 2010
Orlando, Fla.
AFL-CIO Executive Council statementSince July 30, 2007, 1,200 members of the National Union of Mine and Metal Workers of the Mexican Republic (SNTMMSRM) have been on strike in Cananea, Mexico. The Mexican government and the employer, Grupo Mexico, have tried unsuccessfully to break the strike and destroy the union. Three times the Federal Labor Board declared the strike illegal, and each time the courts overturned this declaration.
The company then asked the Labor Board for permission to fire the striking workers, arguing that the strike had rendered the mine's machinery inoperable. Refusing to consider evidence presented by the union, the board granted Grupo Mexico's request. On February 11, 2010, a panel of the Mexican Supreme Court upheld this decision, effectively exterminating the right to strike in Mexico. The government is now threatening to send troops to remove the strikers, who continue to occupy the mine.
This decision is only the latest in a series of actions intended to destroy the SNTMMSRM. In the past three years the Mexican government has:
• Refused to certify the election of the union's General Secretary Napoleón Gómez and other Executive Committee members;
• Filed bogus criminal charges against Gómez and other union leaders;
• Imprisoned union leader Juan Linares since December 2008 despite multiple court rulings that the charges against him are baseless;
• Frozen the union's bank accounts, arguing that if the funds are released they will be used for drug trafficking;
• Sanctioned violence by government security forces and company thugs that has resulted in the deaths of four SNTMMSRM members.
These attacks are just part of a broader pattern of attacks on democratic union organizing in Mexico. In October 2009, the federal government fired 44,000 members of the Mexican Electrical Workers' Union (SME). The murder of FLOC organizer Santiago Rafael Cruz in April 2007 has not been investigated. The government's proposed labor law reform would reduce worker benefits and facilitate subcontracting at a time when the global economic crisis has caused Mexico's GDP to shrink 6.5 percent in the past year. As U.S. companies continue to move jobs to Mexico, the Mexican government has made it clear that it will not hesitate to use repression and violence to keep wages low.
http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/thisistheaflcio/ecouncil/ec03032010m.cfm