[Dialogue] {Spam?} Iraqi Oil Workers' Union Founder: U.S.-Backed Oil Law Is "Robbery"
Harry Wainwright
h-wainwright at charter.net
Mon Jul 9 21:48:39 EDT 2007
AlterNet
Iraqi Oil Workers' Union Founder: U.S.-Backed Oil Law Is "Robbery"
By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Posted on July 9, 2007, Printed on July 9, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/56301/
As the Iraqi cabinet approves part of a controversial oil law, we speak with
Faleh Abood Umara, the general secretary of the Federation of Oil Unions and
a founding member of the oil workers union in Iraq. He calls on Iraqi
lawmakers to reject the legislation. We also speak with Hashmeya Muhsin
Hussein, president of the Electrical Utility Workers Union and the first
woman to head a national union in Iraq.
Amy Goodman: In Iraq, opposition is growing among some Sunni, Shia and
Kurdish factions to a controversial oil law backed by Washington. Draft
legislation on the distribution of oil wealth in Iraq was approved by the
Iraqi cabinet last Tuesday and could go to parliament for review as early as
this week. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called the bill "the most
important law in Iraq."
US lawmakers have demanded Iraq advance the measure before Congress approves
additional war funding, but critics say the law would leave Iraq's oil open
to foreign takeover. A parliamentary boycott by Sunni and Shia factions is
expected to slow the bill's passage.
In addition, six Nobel Peace Prize laureates have released a statement in
opposition to the legislation. The laureates include Betty Williams, Mairead
Maguire, Rigoberta Menchu, Jody Williams, Shirin Ebadi and Wangari Maathai.
The statement read, in part, "The Iraqi oil law could benefit foreign oil
companies at the expense of the Iraqi people, deny the Iraqi people economic
security, create greater instability and move the country further away from
peace."
Last month, the Iraqi oil workers union went on a strike to protest the law.
Two leading union members recently traveled to the United States to meet
with members of Congress and attend last week's US Social Forum in Atlanta.
Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein is president of the Electrical Utility Workers
Union, the first woman to head a national union in Iraq. Faleh Abood Umara
is the general secretary of the Federation of Oil Unions and a founding
member of the oil workers union in Iraq. In 1998 he was detained by Saddam
Hussein's regime for his activities on behalf of his coworkers. Well, they
recently came to New York and joined us in our firehouse studio. I began by
asking Faleh Abood Umara to describe the current situation for oil workers
in Iraq and why he's protesting this proposed oil law.
Faleh Abood Umara: [translated] With regards to the situation of the Iraqi
oil workers, they're persevering in their work and preserving the Iraqi oil
wells. The reason we went on strike was to make twenty-seven demands, which
we submitted to the Iraqi prime minister. He agreed to them, but the
minister of oil did not implement the demands that led to the strike.
The most important point or one of the most important points is our demand
not to rush through the new Iraqi oil law, because we believe that this oil
law does not serve the interests of the Iraqi people. So we ask our friends
in the United States, as well, to stand in solidarity with us and publicize
the ill effects of this law, so that it never is agreed upon in the
parliament.
Goodman: Explain the law.
Umara: [translated] According to Article 111 of the Iraqi Constitution,
which states that the oil and gas of Iraq are owned by the Iraqi people and
they have the right to control it. But when you look into the details of the
law, many of the articles of the law actually conflict with this preamble of
the law, the most important point of which is the issue of the
production-sharing agreements, which allows the international oil companies,
especially the American ones, to exploit the oil fields without our
knowledge of what they are actually doing with it. And they take about 50%
of the production as their share, which we think it's an obvious robbery of
the Iraqi oil.
We also object to the procedure by which these companies are given the
contracts for exploiting the oil, because it allows the granting of the
contracts with the aid of foreign advisers. We demanded that it's actually
the Iraqi experts that need to be consulted with regards to the granting of
the contracts.
In brief, there is hardly an article in the law that actually benefits the
Iraqi people. But they all serve American interests in Iraq. And we know
well that the law was actually written here in the United States, with the
help of James Baker and Ms. Rice and the experts from the IMF. And it serves
the interests of the American government and not the Iraqi people.
We're still negotiating with the Iraqi parliament and the Iraqi government,
and we succeeded in halting the discussion of the law in the parliament
until next October. And we hope that we will manage to modify some of the
articles of the law. As regards to the strike, we actually declared victory
last week.
Goodman: We're also joined by Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein, who is the first
woman to head a large union in Iraq. It's the electrical workers union. Can
you talk about why you're here and why you protested at [BearingPoint]
Cross, at this military contractor?
Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein: [translated] She thanks you for this opportunity to
talk. We were invited by the US Labor Against the War to talk directly to
the American people about the problems that we're suffering under the
occupation and ask for the support to pressure the American administration
to pull out the armed forces out of Iraq.
As regards to the demonstration, it's an account of our certainty that this
company was consulted in the formulation of the Iraqi oil law. There was a
technocratic committee that was convened in Iraq, headed by Mr. Barham
Salih, the vice president, and this committee consulted many foreign firms,
and BearingPoint is one of those companies. That's why we demonstrated
against this company and to ask this company and others to stop interfering
with Iraqi affairs, because it's companies like these, plus the IMF, who are
the ones who are pressuring the Iraqi government to pass this law.
Goodman: Can you talk about how you came to be head of the electrical
workers union as a woman?
Hussein: [translated] After the fall of the regime in 2003, union committees
were formed in September of 2003. I was elected as head of one of these
committees, and I was elected as president of the union in 2004, during the
founding conference. My term was two years. So after the interim two years,
I was elected -- my term was renewed again after that.
Goodman: Does it make you a target to be a union leader in Iraq now?
Hussein: [translated] In the beginning, because our work actually interfered
with the interests of some groups in Iraq, we were threatened. But now work
is easier.
Goodman: Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein, president of the Electrical Utility
Workers Union, the first woman to head a national union in Iraq, and Faleh
Abood Umara, general secretary of the Federation of Oil Unions, speaking --
he's from Iraq, speaking to us recently in our firehouse studio. This is
Democracy Now!, democracynow.org. We'll return to the rest of that
conversation. Stay with us.
[break]
Goodman: Amer Tawfiq, from the soundtrack of the film About Baghdad,
co-directed by Sinan Antoon, an Iraqi poet, novelist and filmmaker who will
be joining us in our firehouse studio in a few minutes, after we finish the
conversation with the two leading Iraqi union members. They were in the
United States recently to meet with members of Congress. Faleh Abood Umara
is the general secretary of the Federation of Oil Unions, founding member of
the Oil Workers Union in Iraq. And Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein is the president
of the Electrical Utility Workers Union. She's the first woman to head a
national union in Iraq.
I asked her to talk about what the US occupation means in Iraq and to
describe the situation in the southern Iraqi city of Basra.
Hussein: [translated] It's more stable than other places in -- like in
Baghdad, because they handed the security over to Iraqi forces security and
the British forces were redeployed to the outskirts of the city. But the
situation in Iraq, in general, and Basra, just like any other part of Iraq,
suffers from the situation. It's not very good, especially economically. We
have about 65% unemployment rate, and nine million Iraqis live in poverty.
The services are really bad, especially electricity. So for every hour of
electrical current, we have six hours of black out, and sometimes they skip
the actual hour of electrical current. And this is really an adverse
situation, because it's really hot and humid in the south.
Goodman: And how did that compare under Saddam Hussein?
Hussein: [translated] The electrical situation was better under Saddam. At
least during the night you would have a constant electrical current. And
this situation is such, because of the sabotage and exploding the power
stations in the center of Iraq.
Goodman: How has life changed for women in Iraq, in Basra, where you are?
Hussein: [translated] As a part of the Iraqi society, they suffer like
everybody else, but also there were laws that were issued under the
occupation that specifically targeted women, especially Law No. 137, which
canceled the old civil law and delegated all issues that have to do with
civil law to the local communities and religious communities, religious
authorities. We took this very seriously and went out in demonstrations
until the new law was canceled, but it was reintroduced through the new
constitution, and we now demand the cancellation of this article.
As far as women's rights are concerned, women are not completely suppressed.
As you can see, I am right here in front of you. And we have 25% of the
parliament members who are women, and we seek, we hope that it will soon
become 40%. And this is a result of our struggle and determination that
women in Iraq will have their rightful place.
Goodman: Faleh Abood Umara, your thoughts on the occupation? Do you think US
troops would leave immediately? And what would that mean for Iraq?
Umara: [translated] We consider that the occupation is vile to us. The main
problem of Iraq is the occupation. I don't think there would be
extraordinary troubles when or if the occupation forces leave. And even
assuming such an occurrence, we can eventually solve our problems ourselves.
Our main problem is the occupation.
Goodman: Finally, Faleh Abood Umara, why did you have trouble coming into
this country? And are you afraid of returning back to Iraq?
Umara: [translated] I cannot be afraid of my own country. I love my country,
and I'm prepared to lay my life for it.
I think that the technical problem I had had to do with a conversation I had
with an American ambassador, because he accused me of not being diplomatic
because I used the term "occupation forces," instead of the "multinational
forces" or "friendly forces." So I discovered just before leaving that there
was a problem with the termination date on the visa, so I was returned from
the airplane, basically, in Amman, and I had to stay three more days in
Amman before joining Hashmeya. And thanks to interference and pressure from
friendly members of the Congress, who interfered and talked to the embassy
over there in Amman, they expedited the correction of the date on the visa
so that I could arrive here and give my message to the American people.
Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program,
Democracy Now!
C 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/56301/
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