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Christian Science Monitor
6 September 2001
Russia's bold new proletariat
Independent labor unions are springing up, but a Kremlin-backed bill could
nip them in the bud.
By Fred Weir
Special to The Christian Science Monitor

MOSCOW - The workers at Ivanovo Mashzavod had quietly endured almost 10
years
of enforced idleness and irregular salaries as their machine-building
factory
struggled to survive the tough post-Soviet economic winter.

But when fresh orders started flowing in last year, and a new manager
decided
to launch an "American-style" efficiency campaign with layoffs, wage cuts
and
cancelled benefits, they rebelled.

Experts say that, throughout Russia, workers are beginning to demand their
share from the country's two-year spurt of economic growth. Flexing muscle
against management is a dramatic departure from the days of the Soviet
"workers' paradise," in which labor protests were not tolerated.

"We went on strike," says Anna Smirnova, the engineer who led the 230
workers
of the Ivanovo plant, some 200 miles northeast of Moscow, in a week-long
walkout that ended when management agreed to negotiate new terms last month.
"We were loyal to our factory all through the bad times, and then when
things
start to get a bit better, the managers wanted to cut us out. We felt there
was no alternative but to show them some strength."

Although the Mashzavod workers have always theoretically belonged to a big
and powerful national trade union, they had to learn the rudiments of
self-organization. The local leadership of the Machine Builders Union
advised
against taking labor action, and then suggested that union leaders would try
to work things out on a personal level with plant management. The chairman
of
the Ivanovo regional trade union committee, Vyacheslav Stepashkin, admits
that approach was a mistake. "The workers took matters into their own hands
and won the respect of management," he says. "They showed us that our old
style of trade-union work, which was to act as partners of management and
enforcers of social peace, is simply not suitable in the new market
economy."

As workers get bolder, they find themselves up against not just the tactics
of management, but resistance from their own union leadership. Russia's
Soviet-era Federation of Independent Trade Unions (FNPR) looks formidable on
paper - about 40 million members - but in practice, it is a vast bureaucracy
that seems more concerned with staying in the Kremlin's good graces and
preserving properties it inherited from the USSR than in defending the
rights
of rank-and-file workers.

"The FNPR was schooled for decades in making deals at the top and doling out
social benefits in a paternalistic way to its members," says Yevgenia
Gvozdova, director of the independent Agency of Social and Labor
Information,
Russia's only non-governmental group monitoring the labor movement. "There
is
a big debate over whether the FNPR can be reformed at all."

Although there are no reliable statistics on labor actions in Russia,
experts
say the grassroots picture has changed radically over recent years. A wave
of
wildcat strikes followed the 1998 financial crash and ruble devaluation, and
led to substantial growth in unions not affiliated with the FNPR.

Last year, by staging road blockades, Zachita Truda, among the most militant
of the independent unions, forced a Gazprom subsidiary to relocate workers'
housing from a site downwind from the oil producer's poisonous sulfur
emissions.

Though strikes are fewer today, amid relative economic stability, workers
are
restless and inclined to take action locally. "The tendency of the official
unions to support the government and pay only lip service to defending their
memberships is becoming a big problem for them," says Andrei Ryabov, an
expert with the Carnegie Endowment in Moscow. "Russia has yet to develop
trade unions that represent workers as their main task, and don't fear
confrontation with authority."

For the first time since the Soviet Union collapsed, Russia's economy began
growing in 1999. "When businesses were bankrupt and producing nothing, there
was nothing for unions to do," says Kirill Buketov, Eastern Europe
coordinator for the International Union of Food Workers, which recently
helped Russian workers unionize the local branches of McDonald's and Coca
Cola. "When you're talking about sharing out an expanding profit, that's
completely different."

Some activists fear the dawning of Western-style labor relations could halt
if a Kremlin-sponsored bill that would permit only one union to exist in
each
factory is passed by the State Duma later this year. The controversial new
labor code was stalled for more than a year amid union objections to
provisions that would reduce the role of collective bargaining, lengthen the
working day to 12 hours, and slash Soviet-era worker privileges.

But the FNPR subsequently agreed to support a watered-down version, after a
clause was added that mandates registration of only the largest union in
each
workplace. The Duma passed the revised bill on its first reading in July.
"Essentially we will return to Soviet times, where one big state-controlled
union represents everybody," warns Oleg Babich, a leader of Zachita Truda.
"Of course, FNPR, which inherited its huge paper membership from Soviet
times, will be registered everywhere. Other unions will be effectively
banned
from collective bargaining. But without pressure from independent unions,
how
will anything ever change?"

Other labor activists are not so pessimistic. In Ivanovo, Ms. Smirnova says
there's no going back: "Our managers are on notice that they need to work
things out with us."

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