Tehran Bus Workers challenge the authorities in Iran
Javad
Aslani
For a brief
period, before the Islamic counter revolutionaries consolidated their
power, workers in Iran enjoyed a period of relative freedom. Workers’
councils, unions and syndicates sprung up in work places. These
independent workers organisation exercised a great deal of power
within their industries and work places. In certain places they went
as far as taking over the control and management of their units. This
situation lasted until summer of 1981 when the Islamic counter
revolution seized the initiative and began a systematic offensive
against the workers. In a bloody and ruthless onslaught, by arresting,
torturing and murdering thousands of labour activists and leading
figures within the labour movement they managed to destroy all the
workers’ organisations and install their own puppet Islamic councils.
These agent organisations were instrumental in purging the workplaces
of real and radical workers’ leaders. It took the regime many years
and the pretext of a bloody war with Iraq to establish its authorities
in workplaces.
For almost three
years, from 1979 to 1981, workers at Tehran and Suburbs Vahed Bus
Company were organised in an independent Syndicate. The syndicate was
actively engaged in promoting workers trade rights and defending their
wage and working conditions. Unfortunately the Islamic government
disbanded the Syndicate and arrested its leaders and officials in
1981.
Twenty two years
later, in 2003, a movement to resurrect the Syndicate was launched.
After much painstaking and sacrifices finally in June 2005, in the
face of a consorted campaign of intimidation, harassment and
destruction of property and resources of the workers at the hands of
the Iranian authorities, the first General Assembly of the Bus
company’s workers was held and the activities of “Syndicate of Workers
of Tehran and Suburbs Vahed Bus Company” launched. At the time of its
first General assembly 8000 workers had signed up. Its membership has
now exceeded 10,000 workers. The entire workforce of the Vahed Bus
company, in Tehran and Suburbs, are in the region of 17,000. At its
constituent General assembly, a Management Committee of 19 people -and
9 substitute members- as well as an inspection team comprising of
three members with two substitute members were elected to manage the
syndicate. This syndicate remained unrecognised by the government.
The stand off
between the workers and the authorities came to a head on December 22,
2005. In an early morning raid on the homes of seven members of the
Management Committee including the secretary of the committee, Mr
Mansour Osanlou, were arrested. Later that evening a further six
people were arrested. The offices and properties of the Syndicate and
the personal computers of some those arrested were also confiscated
and taken away. Later that evening six more workers were arrested and
imprisoned.
The initial
charges filed against these workers were stated as “setting up an
illegal organisation and attempts to organise a strike”.
The following
day the Bus Company workers staged a protest sit-in and announced that
they will go on strike if their colleagues are not freed immediately.
The sit-in continued on Saturday December 24. By that time the news of
the arrest of the Syndicate leaders had spread and a widespread
support from different sections of the workers as well as members of
the public and students had been generated. The protesting workers
issued warnings of declaring a strike should their colleagues not be
released immediately. The bus workers strike on Sunday December 25,
seemed inevitable.
The Bus workers’
strike began earlier in the morning of December 25. The strike ground
the capital to a halt. It struck a panic in the heart of the
authorities. All possible measures were taken to lessen the impact of
the strike. They mobilised all the state’s vehicles and their militia
forces. Unable to deal with the strike the regime resorted to their
usual ploy and adopted a policy of partial retreat and compromise.
Later that day,
at 11pm, the mayor of Tehran intervened and in a meeting attended by
4000 strong striking workers. The mayor announced that the director of
the bus company has been sacked and he himself taken over the
operation of the bus Company. The mayor undertook to meet all the
demands of the workers by Thursday. On Wednesday 6 out of the 13
detainees were released. Further sit-in and gatherings in front of the
notorious Even prison forced the authorities to release all but
Mansour Osanlou, the Secretary of the Syndicate.
As of today,
January 6, 2006, Mansour Osanlou is still behind bars. The office of
the syndicate is locked up and its properties confiscated.
This struggle is
still continuing. The workers did not achieve their goals. Regardless
of the ultimate outcome of this round of confrontation, the working
class in Iran has registered an important victory. This was only a
battle the war is yet to start.