-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the June 14, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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FIGHTING FOR BASIC UNION RIGHTS: 

DAEWOO WORKERS TAKE ON GENERAL MOTORS

By Jeff Bigelow

The General Motors Corp. is preparing to take over the 
Daewoo auto company in South Korea and eliminate the jobs of 
thousands of workers there. This move has direct 
repercussions on the auto industry in the U.S. So Daewoo 
workers are appealing directly to workers here for 
solidarity in their struggle.

On June 2, 10,000 workers marched through the capital of 
South Korea protesting corporate "restructuring"--the code 
word for massive layoffs that force still-employed workers 
to do two and three jobs, often for less pay.

Demands included a 40-hour, five-day workweek, maternity 
rights and an end to violent police repression. A detachment 
of 1,000 workers also demonstrated at General Motor's Korean 
offices to protest GM's proposed takeover of Daewoo auto.

These simple and just demands were met with police terror. 
After the demonstration a leader of the KCTU--the Korean 
Confederation of Trade Unions--was notified that police were 
planning to arrest him just for organizing the protest. 
Police had beaten him and dozens of others unionists last 
June during a hotel workers' strike.

Police violence against Korean unionists is worsening. On 
May 28, police beat workers holding a sit-in at a nylon 
plant to protest layoffs. Some 130 workers were injured, 
many seriously.

In April, as 400 Daewoo autoworkers marched to their own 
union hall--with a court order in hand saying that they had 
a right to do so--police attacked. Dozens of workers were 
very seriously wounded.

The incident, caught on videotape, ignited widespread anger. 
The president of South Korea was forced to apologize.

LAYOFFS IN KOREA MADE IN U.S.A.

The March 15 Wall Street Journal reported that Arthur 
Anderson--a huge U.S. consulting firm--designed a plan for 
Daewoo last December that called for massive layoffs, plant 
closings and faster production.

It was designed to make Daewoo a more lucrative acquisition 
for GM. Many of the layoffs would take place before the GM 
takeover.

GM was, of course, all for Arthur Anderson's plan.

GM is the world's largest car company. It owns Buick, Chevy, 
Cadillac, Olds, Opel, Saab, Saturn, 20 percent of Fiat, 20 
percent of Subaru, 49 percent of Isuzu, 20 percent of Suzuki 
and dozens of other companies. It has operations in over 50 
countries.

Financial institutions own over half of GM. And the top 10 
banks--including Morgan, State Street, Mellon, Morgan 
Stanley Dean Witter--own over 26 percent. These financial 
behemoths have been the architects of massive cutbacks and 
layoffs in the U.S. as well.

THE ROLE OF REPRESSION

Koreans work six days a week. They average 50 hours and make 
$4.33 an hour. With overtime and special bonuses, they get 
about $307 a week, according to official South Korean Labor 
Ministry figures.

Many workers earn far less while being forced to continually 
produce more. Over half of all Korean workers are now 
"temporary" workers with less rights and pay.

Bad enough? No, the bosses want to push the workers back 
even further. In 1996 and 1997 they demanded "reforms" of 
the labor laws. These included no restrictions on layoffs 
and up to 56 hours work without overtime pay. They made it 
illegal for communities to support strikes; banned 
unofficial strikes, picketing to stop scabs and teachers' 
unions; and allowed more scab labor.

The unions fought these measures with massive 
demonstrations.

The government then called in legislators to pass these laws 
in secret at 6 a.m. on a holiday. The process reportedly 
took seven minutes.

The workers protested with a series of massive strikes.

Workers have also resisted International Monetary Fund 
pressure to privatize and sell off South Korea businesses 
and banks at fire sale prices to big transnational 
corporations--largely U.S. corporations.

Workers in energy corporations, telephone companies, banks, 
railroads and subways have valiantly resisted. They know it 
is not just the police who back up these new owners, but the 
U.S. military that occupies South Korea.

Uprisings by workers and students in 1979 and 1980 were 
crushed by hundreds of thousands of troops, which the 
Pentagon oversees. In 1980, thousands of protesters were 
killed.

And ultimately nothing happens militarily in South Korea 
without Pentagon approval.

A representative of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce spoke in 
Seoul on May 25. He said "first and foremost" action must be 
taken to end the "belligerent labor unrest" and that labor 
is asking for too much.

He also said that the Korean government needed to make it 
easier for U.S. companies to take home more profits more 
easily. If not, he added, "There are other markets that are 
more attractive."

He was echoing a 1998 statement by the president of the 
American Chamber of Commerce in Korea, Michael Brown, who 
said that the U.S. was very interested in the passage of the 
repressive labor "reforms."

DAEWOO WORKERS REMEMBER GM BOSSES

GM owned Daewoo from 1978 to 1992.

During that period the number of employees at GM's Baltimore 
plant dropped from 7,000 to 4,000. Injuries from speed-ups 
increased and forced a 26-day strike there in 1991.

At the end, GM agreed to hire more workers in the Baltimore 
plant. While GM was demanding concessions from workers in 
the U.S.--threatening to ship jobs overseas--it was 
exploiting Korean Daewoo workers.

In Korea in 1991, auto plant employees worked an average of 
73 hours a week. On average six workers were killed and 443 
injured each day.

In Korea, all union organizing was illegal at the time. 
Despite that, in 1985, 2,000 Daewoo workers went on strike 
and sat-in at one of the plants against the unsafe 
conditions.

In response, GM called on the police; 8,000 police 
surrounded the plant. The workers threatened to burn the 
computer center if they were attacked. Many ended up in 
prison.

At that time one-quarter of all political prisoners in South 
Korea were in jail for union activity--violating repressive 
labor laws.

GM and Daewoo went their separate ways in 1992. Daewoo 
owners quickly focused on world expansion. In less than 10 
years they became a competitor to GM in a number of markets.

By 1997 Daewoo sold more cars in Europe than GM's Saab. They 
became real competitors in the areas of the world with the 
highest growth rates in car sales.

So GM moved to crush the competition. GM is after Daewoo and 
the control or destruction of its international network--
including factories in nine other countries. Labor's strong 
stand in South Korea is the only thing that has stopped the 
GM takeover.

Now is the time for shoulder-to-shoulder solidarity--from 
autoworkers in the U.S. fighting layoffs and speedups to the 
GM workers battling their bosses in Brazil and Argentina.

An injury to one is an injury to all.
Support the Daewoo workers.

- END -

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