DOWN WITH POLICE PROVOCATIONS AGAINST LABOR ACTIVISTS!

In the last several days Russian secret police (FSB) and the authorities 
of Kemerovo Region launched a campaign of 
harassment and intimidation against Comrade Vladimir Vorobiev, a 
well-known labor leader from Kuzbass, and orchestrated 
the publication of slanderous publications against him in a number 
of media outlets.

Vladimir Vorobiev became internationally known in 1998, when he organized 
the blockade of the Trans-Siberian railroad by 
miners and other workers.  (Read his speech in Florence at http://www.
left.ru/inter/november/vorobiev.html). Since then he 
became a recognized leader of the Kuzbass proletariat because of 
his courageous and persistent struggle for the rights of 
workers and against the closures and plunder of industrial enterprises 
in the Kuzbass Basin.  Comrade Vorobiev is a 
Co-Chairman of the  Inter-Regional Alliance of Workers’ Unions “Defense 
of Labor.”

His dedication to the cause of the working class was also recognized 
by the state authorities and the secret police.  They gave 
ComradeVorobiev high marks by repeatedly intimidating, slandering,
and persecuting him.  Their new attacks--more vicious 
than ever—came soon after Vorobiev’s return from the European Social 
Forum in Florence, where he addressed mass 
audiences with reports on Russian labor movement and the strategy 
of international solidarity (read his speech in Florence at 
http://www.left.ru/inter/november/ vorobiev.html).  He also appeared 
on Italian TV where he talked about the struggles of 
Russian workers.

Vladimir Vorobiev’s international visibility immediately triggered 
the campaign of slanders and denunciations from the bourgeois 
press. It was orchestrated  by the Governor of Kemerovo Region Aman 
Tuleev and some Duma deputies.

First, the local newspaper “Kuzbass,” controlled by the Governor 
Tuleev, published a slanderous article, whose author likened 
Vorobiev and his comrades to “mosquitoes” who sabotage… the  construction 
of the new hydroelectric plant in Kuzbass.

Then, on November 25, two major “democratic” newspapers--the tabloid 
“Versiya” and the “liberal” “Novaya gazeta”-- 
published articles with slanderous innuendoes, accusations, and reports 
to authorities against Vladimir Vorobiev and the 
members of workers’ trade-union alliance “Defense of Labor” and the 
Siberian Confederation of labor.

The textual analysis of these articles leavee little doubt that they 
originated from one source. One of the authors,  the tabloid 
journalist Ekaterina Kostikova is  known to have ties to the secret 
police (the other author published under the assumed name).  
The provocative nature of this attack is captured by the title of 
Kostikova’s piece – “The Common Criminal from the 
Trans-Urals Decides to Overthrow Putin and to Make a Coup d’Etat.
”  The members of CCL are called “radically-minded 
pensioners and officially registered mental patients.”  In its slavish 
eagerness tabloid “Versiya” slandered even Alexander 
Maksakov, the murdered leader of Astrakhan workers, who it calls 
a “former criminal… killed in some gangster’s dispute.”   
These vicious articles--full of lies, absurdities and fear before 
the prospect of international cooperation between workers of 
Russia and other countries--end by calling the authorities to “investigate” 
and “take decisive measures”  against Vladimir 
Vorobiev and his comrades.  Their call did not pass unnoticed.

When Vladimir Vorobiev returned to his native city of Anzhero-Sudzhensk 
he met with unlawful attempts of the city 
administration and the local office of secret police to hinder his 
trade-union and political work.  The acting city mayor 
Alexander Gotfrid refused to provide free office space for the City 
Confederation of Labor (CCL) (Vorobiev is the head of this 
trade union formation), even though earlier, faced with worker’s 
pickets, he had promised to comply with the Law “On Trade 
Unions,” which requires this.  Vorobiev’s attempts to rent a hall 
for the general meeting of CCL have also failed.  The managers 
of community centers refused on all kinds of pretexts.

Simultaneously, Comrade Vorobiev began to receive threats and warnings.
Last week his “good-wishers” advised him to stop 
his activities so that nothing bad happened to him and his family.

On November 27, Vladimir Vorobiev was taken to the city office of 
the secret police (FSB) for “a conversation.”  The FSB 
agents, who did not introduce themselves,  were primarily interested 
in Vorobiev’s trip to Florence.  They asked him who else 
went with him, where he stayed about the themes of the panels and 
seminars at the Forum, who made presentations and about 
what, what Vorobiev said in his speeches.  Comrade Vorobiev briefly 
answered that he told the Forum about the violation of 
workers’ rights in Kuzbass, his trade-union and political work, none 
of which constitute state secrets.

The FSB agents then moved to more detailed questions: who financed 
the trip, who Vorobiev met with in Florence, addresses, 
contacts.  When Comrade Vorobiev refused to answer such questions 
the “conversation” became more intimidating.  The 
agents warned Vorobiev that if he refuses to cooperate they would 
take any measures to discredit him.

These actions of the Anzhero-Sudzhensk secret police clearly and 
blatantly violate the Article 5 of the Law on “Trade Unions, 
Their Rights and Guarantees of Their Activities” that prohibits the 
interference of the special state agencies into trade-union 
affairs.

The next day Comrade Vorobiev was “invited” for a “conversation” 
with the anonymous general, recently appointed the Chief 
of FSB in Anzhero-Sudzhensk.  As before, this “invitation” was not 
officially documented or sanctioned by the court.  
Vorobiev was warned not to tell anyone about these “invitations,” 
because alegedly “these are the questions pertaining to 
counter-intelligence and we must know everything.”

This time however Comrade Vorobiev used his constitutional rights 
and declined to “converse” with the local boss of FSB.  He 
called him and told that he would no longer honor unofficial invitations 
from FSB.

The meaning of this episode is clear.  By using slander, provocations 
and intimidation against Comrade Vorobiev  Russian 
authorities hope to intimidate other activists and labor leaders 
and to make them stop their struggle against the capitalist 
offensive and for workers' right to a life of dignity.  In particular,
the ruling regime fears the possibility of Russian workers 
forging strong international ties with the workers and the oppressed 
masses of other countries.

It is also important to understand the local social-political context 
of this affair.  Anzhero-Sudzhensk, formerly a flourishing 
industrial city, now is a place doomed to destruction and extinction 
by powerful gangster-bourgeois groupings.  Out of dozens 
large industrial enterprises there remain only two that are still 
in operation: the machine-building plant “Anzheromash” and the 
coal mine “Fizkulturnik.”    The more plants and mines get shut down,
the  more money flows from the federal treasury to 
Anzhero-Sudzhensk to “create new jobs”, the more money settles in 
the pockets of the regional and city bureaucrats and their 
cronies from "business community" and  organized crime.  The crafty 
Governor Tuleev invents ever new projects for “creating 
new jobs” and every one of them mysteriously fails: the “gigantic” 
ATOK auto plant,  the open mine Shcherbinovsky, the OOO 
Express Bike Factory, the open mine Taeznyi, the OOO Delta Briquette 
Fuel Plant.  These and other projects received 
colossal sums of money from the federal budget.  Today, there are 
neither enterprises, nor jobs, nor money.  One can be 
confident that the project of the new hydroelectric plant will have 
the same ending.

Today the City Confederation of Labor, led by Comrade Vorobiev, is 
the only force that in deeds defends the workers of 
Anzhero-Sudzhensk and by their actions of protests and agitation 
slows down the closure of the remaining enterprises.  If these 
enterprises go, the fate of the city of Anzhero-Sudzhensk and his 
90 thousand people will be sealed.  Just recently, the unique 
enterprise “Sibsteklo,” used to produce glass products for space 
exploration, was shut down.  Its 500 workers were thrown 
out in the street without paying them the back wages for the last 
six months, which was solemnly promised by Governor 
Tuleev.  This plant was shut down while Comrade Vorobiev was in Florence.


It is likely that the authorities of the Kemerovo Region will continue 
using the police and the secret service for further 
provocations against the leader of Kuzbass proletariat.  All workers 
and labor organizations of Russia should take part in the 
campaign opposing the police provocations against Vladimir Vorobiev 
and raise this campaign to an international level.

Comrades, Vladimir Vorobiev needs your support now.  The ability 
of Russian workers organizations to ward off this vicious 
attack against him may yet determine under what conditions labor 
activists will have to work tomorrow.

Please find below addresses of local officials for sending faxes,
telegrams, letters, email messages or making telephone calls.   

We recommend the following text:

----------------
We protest against the harassment of labor leader Vladimir Vorobiev 
for his trade-union work.  We demand to stop 
immediately the illegal interference of FSB and other state agencies 
in the affairs of the City Confederation of Labor of 
Anzhero-Sudzhensk and to provide everything requested by law for 
the realization of the constitutional rights of trade-union 
members to have their meetings, freedom of speech and the defense 
of their interests by collective actions.

----------------

We aalso sk all comrades to use your organizational and informational 
resources to spread the information about the illegal and 
provocative actions of the city authorities and FSB in relation to 
Comrade Vorobiev and the City Confederation of Labor of 
Anzhero-Sudzhensk.  Please send us a copy of your letter to Russian 
authorities so that we can publish it on our website. 
http://www.left.ru/burtsev/vorobiev/index.html

Editorial Board of Left.ru/Left Russia:
Anton Baumgarten,
Tatiana Aparina,
Irina Malenko
Igor Kuznetsov,
Vadim Stolz
Valentin Zorin

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.left.ru

 29 November 2002
        ____________

Russia 650027 Kemerovo
Prospect Sovetsky 58
Regional Admimistration
Governor Aman Tuleev

Fax  +7 (3842) 23-31-56
Tel. +7 (3842) 36-34-09
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Russia, 652470, Kemerov,
Anzhero-Sudzehnsk,
ul. Lenina, 6.
City Administration.
Mayor AlexanderGotfrid
Fax +7(38453) 2-34-56.
Tel.  +7(38453) 2-22-66.
Å-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Chief of City Police
Tel. +7 (38453) 2-55-65.

The Office of Chief Prosecutor,
Russia, 650027, Kemerovo,
ul. Krasnaya, 24.
----------------------------
The Economist (UK) December 9-15, 2000 And what about the workers?
 KEMEROVO Russia's feeble trade unions are still too strong for the
 government's taste.

One potential hotspot is the town of Anzhero-Sudzhensk, 100km
 (60 miles) from Kemerovo. It is poor: until recently the workers at
 its glass factory were paid in loaves. In two recent protests they
 have blocked the nearby trans-Siberian railway. 

 The co-ordinator of those protests was Vladimir Vorobiev, an
 eloquent agitator who runs a small independent trade union. The
 authorities seem unsure how best to blacken his name. The
 governor's office whips out a police dossier, apparently showing
 some brushes with the law 30 years ago. "He's just a common
 criminal," explains a spokesman. 

 Other official and semi-official figures allege, contradictorily, that
 Mr Vorobiev is utterly marginal; that he is extremely dangerous;
 that he is mentally unbalanced; that he is an anti-Semite; and that
 he is a provocateur sponsored by outsiders. Mr Tuleyev says he
 will "simply not allow" any further protests to block the railway. 

 In fact, Mr Vorobiev makes a rather sober impression. Striding up
 and down the living room of a borrowed flat, in front of a row of
 mute but appreciative female supporters, he asks, reasonably
 enough, where the hundreds of millions of dollars provided by the
 World Bank and other international lenders to revamp the coal
 industry have actually gone. Corrupt managers, bureaucrats and
 the official trade unions, he says, combine to keep workers in
 poverty.







_______________________________________________
Leninist-International mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international

Reply via email to