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Postie power on the streets of Belfast. Another story ignored by corporate media

Guido | 17.02.2006 13:20 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

On Valentines Day a march of over 1000 striking postal workers brought Belfast to a standstill. Locals clapped and cheered the strikers on despite hostile coverage in the local papers. The demo was led by a convoy of taxis from different districts of the city both Catholic and Protestant. There has been no post delivered in Belfast for two weeks now. The workers renewed their commitment to continue the strike at a rally following the demo. So how come this has been completely unreported outside of local papers in Northern Ireland? Exactly what is the government and corporate media so scared of?

Belfast posties: On Strike...
Belfast posties: On Strike...

...and on the march.
...and on the march.

Led and supported by local cabbies.
Led and supported by local cabbies.

Do not underestimate their determination.
Do not underestimate their determination.

Or their ability to turn up the volume.
Or their ability to turn up the volume.

nuff said.
nuff said.


The strikers are not asking for more pay or less hours. All they want is an independent review of management staff relations. Bullying by management in Royal Mail Northern Ireland is a huge issue for workers. The management of course deny that it is happening. So why are they refusing the not unreasonable request for a review? Exactly what have they got to hide? The issue came to a head a while ago when a worker started keeping a diary of incidents of bullying by managers. His record was found and confiscated. He threatened to call the Police in unless it was returned. He was then sacked and accused of intimidation himself. This brought to a head a number of grievances. The staff walked out on unofficial strike action, and have been out ever since.

The bosses have tried every trick in the book to discredit the strike. They have even had the front to suggest that the strike is somehow sectarian in nature. This claim was made to look ridiculous the previous Tuesday when workers marched down both the Catholic Falls road and Protestant Shankhill. The last time that happened was over seventy years ago. The bosses have also assumed that as the strike is unofficial and therefore without any financial assistance it would crumble. One Northern Island Trade Union has donated £20,000 to the hardship fund. Donations have also come in from businesses and the FBU. Sorting offices on mainland Britain have refused to handle the backlog caused by the strike. Royal Mail have even resorted to flying over managers and sneaking them in under cover of darkness to do some of the work. The reality is that Royal Mail are desperate to win this strike and break the union in preparation for privatizing the postal service.

So lets recap: A historic march across the sectarian divide, no post in the capital of Northern Ireland for two weeks, a bitter unofficial strike over treatment by management.

Hands up everyone who has read about this in the newspapers or seen it on TV? Are the corporate media worried that reporting this might give workers over here ideas? Are they unable to report industrial action without being able to accuse the workers in question of being greedy? Is Northern Ireland only newsworthy when the story involves a murder or kneecapping? Where are our caring-sharing (supposedly leftwing) newspapers like the Guardian or Independent? Could it possible be that the mainstream news with regard to industrial relations is well and truly in the pocket of the government? Heaven forbid….

Guido
- e-mail: guidoreports@riseup.net

Additions

Belfast postal wildcats win!

19.02.2006 14:36

At a packed meeting at lunchtime on Friday 17th February, in Transport House, Belfast, striking postal workers decided to end their wildcat strike and return to work having won their dispute.

An independent review of industrial relations, the key demand of the strikers, has been won. Strikers also forced Royal Mail to agree a non-victimisation clause in the agreement that brought the dispute to a close - while the 12 month no strike clause was effectively scrapped.

see  http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/02/334075.html

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Comments

Display the following 3 comments

  1. guido, thank you — bobby
  2. nice work — sean
  3. great — shirker