• Press Release

Amnesty International Demands that Iran Lift Ban on Trade Unions and End Persecution of Labor Activists; Launches Campaign to Support Iranian Labo

June 10, 2011

New Report Shows Vicious Repression of Union Activists, Including Beatings and Imprisonment
 
Contact: Suzanne Trimel, 212-633-4150, [email protected]

(New York) – Amnesty International said in a new report today that Iran is viciously persecuting trade union activists, who are courageously resisting repeated arrests, beatings, unfair trials and imprisonment.  Unions are being targeted by a government intolerant of dissent and desperate to block social unrest, the human rights organization said.
 
Iran's teachers' association was formally banned in 2007 after it conducted strikes against low pay, but its work has continued in the face of hundreds of detentions, beatings and other abuse of its members in detention, including the execution of one member in 2010.

The Amnesty International report, Determined to Live in Dignity: Iranian Trade Unionists Struggle for Rights, exposes the Tehran government's harsh and unjust treatment of independent trade union activists who campaign peacefully for workers' rights in Iran's pervasive climate of repression.

“Independent trade unionists have been made to pay a heavy price by a government that has shown itself increasingly intolerant of dissent,” said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's director for the Middle East and North Africa program. “The harassment and persecution they face smacks of a desperate government attempt to stave off social unrest that could arise from new hikes in the costs of fuel and power to which Iranians are now being exposed.”

“The government seems determined to break existing unions while continuing to ban new, independent workers' bodies that have begun to emerge, in gross contempt for its international obligations as an ILO member and for the labor rights of its own people,” said Shane Enright, Amnesty's global trade union adviser.

Amnesty International, in partnership with the global unions and the International Trade Union Confederation, is launching a campaign to support Iranian trade unions in their struggle for basic human and labor rights following the second anniversary of the 2009 Iran presidential elections.

A crackdown following the 2009 presidential election led to the arrests of leading activists in the banned Tehran bus drivers' union. In 2006, 1,000 union members and their families were brutally attacked by security forces during a strike.

Mansour Ossanlu, president of the banned bus drivers' union, has been repeatedly arrested, and by the time of his conditional release last week had been in prison for almost four years.  Since organizing strikes in support of pay rises for bus drivers, he has been subjected to enforced disappearance, unfair trials and beatings, and been frequently denied medical treatment. On the few occasions when he was allowed medical treatment, he was kept shackled to his bed.

 “We greatly welcome Mansour Ossanlu's release, but he should never have been jailed in the first place,” said Enright. “His release must be made unconditional, and other trade unionists who are prisoners of conscience must be freed immediately. The Iranian authorities must end, once and for all, their persecution, harassment and imprisonment of trade unionists simply because of their efforts to uphold workers' rights enshrined in International Labour Organization conventions.”

Ossanlu's union is affiliated with the International Transport Workers' Federation (ITF), one of the global unions campaigning with Amnesty International for the rights of Iranian workers.

“The incredible mistreatment meted out to Mansour Ossanlu and his fellow members of the Tehran bus drivers union is a sign of how much some elements in the Iranian authorities fear them as a force for genuine change and reform,” said David Cockroft, the ITF's general secretary. "His release is a positive sign, but he and his colleagues must now be allowed to freely represent the interests of their members without fear of arrest or persecution.”

Since the mass protests that followed Iran's 2009 presidential election, independent unions, alongside other independent organizations and activists, have come under increasingly fierce attack.

The state-owned Haft Tapeh sugar cane processing company in Iran's southwestern Khuzestan province was forced to address working conditions after a mass strike led its workers to set up an independent union in 2008. Nevertheless, the new union's president Reza Rakshshan has been detained twice in the last two years, and five other leaders were tried and sentenced in 2009.  

“The IUF draws continued inspiration from the bravery of Iranian union activists who are risking their lives and their freedom for the rights of all,” said Peter Rossman of the International Union of Foodworkers, with which the Haft Tapeh union is affiliated.

“The Iran Teachers' Trade Associations' members have told us that they will not be defeated by this extreme government intimidation, but that they need solidarity from ordinary teachers like them across the world in their struggle for rights,” said Dominique Marlet from Educational International, the global education union federation.

Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning grassroots activist organization with 3 million supporters, activists and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for human rights worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses, educates and mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever justice, freedom, truth and dignity are denied.

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