Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Migrant Workers and Strikes: or on the Tightly Packed Contradictions of Global Capitalism

Post author By Goran Lukic and Tibor T. Meszmann

Post dateJune 7, 2024

Départ de la marche des sans-papiers. Source: Wikimedia Commons


Note from LeftEast editorsThis article is a slightly expanded and edited version of a text, which appeared first in Slovak in Kapital. We publish the English original with permission. The article appears within the framework of the East European Left Media Outlet (ELMO).

“For capitalism migrant workers fill a labour shortage in an especially convenient way. They accept the wages offered and, in doing so, slow down wage increases in general.” – John Berger, The seventh man1975: 251

“Aber die Hauptsache am Menschen sind seine Augen und seine Füße. Man muß die Welt sehen können und zu ihr hingehn1.” – Alfred Döblin, Berlin Alexanderplatz

Migrant workers embody multiple contradictions of social, political, and economic life that humanity faces in contemporary global hypermobile capitalism: they are structurally weak, occupy vulnerable and often outsourced positions under the controlling hands and influence of employers or more complex state structures. Both those employers and state structures tend or rather pretend to know, in a paternalistic fashion, the interests of workers better than these workers themselves. Employers offer them short-term financial rewards for hard work, and the fewer questions workers have, or problems they might raise beyond the wage question, the better. States, on both the sending and receiving ends of migrant labour, establish infrastructure that is more or less developed and more or less outsourced to private intermediating actors. These intermediary actors are less visible but extremely powerful. From the start, they financially capitalise on migrant workers by charging them obscene fees for “arranging them the proper paperwork” to go abroad, thus turning them into migrants.

In the quote above, John Berger reflects on the moment in which migrant workers are “instrumental” in maintaining a labour market and “running the show” but also key for a particular historical moment in which nation states regulated economies in conditions of labour shortages. Today, when labour shortages are back on an even greater global scale, we see a vicious cycle of extreme competition, rapid labour migration, promises of high gains, high risks, and rising social costs. Perhaps now the wage suppression Berger spoke of is less visible, but compared to the 1970s, today working conditions are deteriorating even more rapidly and with greater and deeper structural significance. In our “Modern Times,” deterioration of labour standards is pegged to an ongoing general deterioration of the meaning and political recognition of (wage) labour. New and ever more flexible forms of wage labour – such as temporary agency work combined with several layers of outsourcing and transnational posting – continue to appear and local workers are increasingly pushed out of certain sectors. All these trends remind us of the uneasy relationship between slave and ‘free’ wage labour as discussed by Engels. The fragmentation of employment is the new reality and therefore chances of forging collective identities and organising are increasingly difficult. Institutions governing labour markets are likely to be overburdened with work, operate with outdated legal tools, and in an increasing number cases don’t even dare to use the powers they do have, like the shutting down of  companies that violate labour laws. Key labour market institutions need significantly more financial, technological and human resources, as well as expertise. It is a matter of political will, whether these institutions – trade unions and employer organisations included – will receive sufficient support to cope with new challenges and have better capacities to improve labour standards. Alternatively, non-governmental organisations are increasingly providing supporting services that are in the core competencies of welfare state institutions and labour institutions. The latter scenario then creates two imperfect actors, which work in the same area, but with different authorisation, capacities, and competencies. Rather than creating complementarities, here the ultimate effect is negative: a schizophrenic situation which is legitimising the weakening of relevant institutions. 

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At the same time, migrant workers definitely aim ”to see the world and go after it”. Thus if we believe Alfred Döblin, they embody something most human: enjoying freedom, adventure, without restraint for gaining experience. But in the age of global capitalism this freedom is transformed into daily precarity and their humanity into commodified exploitation. As will be discussed, migrant workers’ existence is also related to their potential to organise and fight collectively, through strikes or other means. 

Here we explore the obstacles to and the conditions of migrant worker collective action in the current global context of rapidly growing and expanding labour migration. First, we provide an overview of the potential of migrant labour organising, collective action and a brief catalogue of migrant workers’ self-organisation and collective action in the past few decades. Second, we zoom in on the experience of one regional initiative in Slovenia. 

Migrant worker collective action: the conditions and dialectics of (self-)organisation and collective action

In the early 2000s, a wave of strikes by migrant workers in China exposed working conditions in the capital-intensive, foreign-owned industries of the Pearl River Delta, signalling a new era of workers’ struggle. Since then strike waves have continued to flare up in China’s manufacturing sector, which continues to rely on millions of migrant workers. These strikes demonstrate new forms of collective power and changing patterns of organising. Sociologist Chris King-chi Chan has argued that before the strikes, employer and state-driven power structures dominated not only the social relations of the workplace, officially installed trade unions but also of the communities where workers lived. Centrally important to labour organising, as Chan and his colleagues observed, was a historical point of time, a concrete event in which skill started to matter even in conditions of unlimited supply of migrant labour. The turning of the tides occurred when skilled workers’ autonomy came under management’s attack. Interestingly, and when locality, ethnicity, gender, age started to matter as constructive reference  points for building working class solidarities.  Still, in the absence of an independent union, collective action did not appear as part of formal trade union organising. Florian Buttolo and Tobias ten Brink argued that the strike wave was able to endure and appeared in various shapes precisely because of the Chinese government’s relatively permissive stance toward the movement and its tolerance for bottom-up wage pressure, but not for independent union movement and organisation, including autonomous collective bargaining. In other words, trade unions as a class organisation have been contested by a structurally more powerful actor: the state. 

In other words, space had opened up for worker militancy but not for a stable, institutionalised social compromise. Migrant workers in China have been an active force seeking their own class organization that can represent the interests of workers in a relatively hostile setting, where class organization has been ineffective and freedom of association denied. Similar fragile temporary waves, or patterns of ‘wildcat’ strikes and collective actions of migrant workers – without stable organisational or institutional formations – can be observed also in settings such as among construction workers in Dubai or workers in foreign-owned manufacturing in Vietnam, where political authoritarianism, capital-labour fixes of high capital inflow meet  with high migrant labour concentration.. In the Vietnamese case, the existence of a basic organisation of workers already created conditions for strike action, or made strikes easier to happen.  

The question opens up, whether in more beneficial settings – with entrenched social labour market mechanisms and established collective bargaining structures – migrant workers can be organised, especially if they meet open trade unions? Or if, more generally, welfare state institutions governing labour markets are sensitive to new needs, and there are public investments in accommodating the most vulnerable? From an organisational point of view, especially if they had or received enough resources, some trade unions have been successfully experimenting with recruitment and general engagement with migrant workers at the community or labour market level, rather than at the workplace level (in the UK) or with mobilisation of migrant workers (in the Netherlands) but have not solved the issue of sustainable organisation of migrant workers. Finally, on the transnational level, there is mostly failure: transnational union efforts to organize migrant hyper-mobile workers collide with the logic of national protectionism, as many trade unions insist on developing solidarities on national level only, exclusively focusing on the defence of existing institutional arrangements. Here too, as the organisation of truckers has recently shown successes are possible but fragile.

In today’s EU, the employment of migrant workers is in many places associated with high levels of turnover and geographical mobility of labourers. According to a recent argument, such high mobility, and keeping labour markets in extreme flux is actually a new source of power for migrant workers. More cautiously, Alberti and Pero argue that migrant workers innovative and mobilisation potential have to be grounded in unique-own-formed organisation: “migrant workers can develop innovative collective initiatives located at the junction of class and ethnicity that can be effective and rewarding in material and nonmaterial terms bargaining and mobilisation strategies appear inadequate to accommodate the bottom-up initiatives.”

Départ de la marche des sans-papiers. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Migrant worker organising and identities are burdened with fundamental global but also gender inequalities and multiple power relations. Reproductive and household labour is a case in point: domestic labour is increasingly commodified in the rich North, and labour provided from the (semi)periphery or the Global South. In more regulated settings, as Rogalewski (2018) points out, migrant workers – caregivers from CEE can be the most militant and committed union members, bringing new life into existing – in this case Swiss – union organisations and structures. In less regulated settings, the struggle is more difficult, as struggles of domestic workers’ movements in the USA and India, or Latin America show. The struggle and collective actions of undocumented domestic workers is typically a long one, and fruits are ripening very slowly, as the French ‘sans-papier workers’ fight for legal status shows. Here, researchers observed an “agonistic coproduction by state policy and union strategy” in which the worker’s identity became an unsolved issue for both the state and the union. Neither actor could agree on when one started and stopped legally being a worker.

Migrant worker bottom-up initiatives often brought to the union various novel methods of strike or other forms of collective action. In the case of undocumented workers in France, at the peak of their protest wave, 7000 workers occupied enterprises, temporary work agencies and employer federations, while their counterparts in Belgium started a hunger strike. Besides direct action, migrant worker mobilisation and strike, as Oliveri suggests, might be a new source of power and paradigm model for citizen – activism adjusted to the era of global neoliberalism: the general strike of migrants, agricultural labourers in 2010-2011 Italy contested the exclusionary, racialized and competitive model and also brought to the frontline an alternative social model based on equal entitlements to rights, solidarity and real democracy. Such a conclusion is especially appalling as these migrant labourers were in an extremely vulnerable position: they were intentionally segregated and contracted via illegal hiring methods, and as noted above, their worker identity is not clear. We must not forget that recent direct action of migrant workers, such as occupying the premises of the enterprise of hunger strike, are fragile forms, showing only the potential of collective action compared to the classic highly organised trade union actions that proceed with high mobilisation such as strikes. 

Migrant Workers in the EU labour market periphery

Migrant workers are increasingly present in the labour markets of Eastern European countries too, which simultaneously lose workers to higher-wage countries. In Slovenia, as in many other CEE countries, migrant workers are associated with labour shortages and an accelerating labour turnover. The speed of migration interacts with turnover and labour shortages and creates a new labour market reality. Migrant workers are typically income maximising. When contracting, they are guided by one question: how much can they earn. In doing so, they are also pushed from expectations in their home country to earn and send back the necessary money. In their income maximisation, they are also encouraged to take up opportunistic behaviour, and are willing to follow employers’ initiatives that go against established rules such as accepting illegal employment, shady practices or willingly undermining labour standards. Migrant workers also change jobs very quickly if they find that they do not earn enough. Employers quickly adapt, and are willing to change workers – because they think others will come. In some sectors, employers are increasingly tempted to employ below established labour standards or to violate regulation, and factor the penalties into their calculus. The ultimate effect is that there is a normalisation of illegal or at best questionable labour practices in many sectors: small violations are increasingly accepted and thus become new norms.

The migration infrastructure continues to develop at an amazing speed: transnational (out)sourcing, posting, and temporary agencies all flourish. So far, welfare state and labour market institutions in CEE have not been coping well with the new labour market reality: they are slow and operate with outdated infrastructure of repressive organisations, administration and bureaucracies, which receive little or no funding, and barely adjust to the new realities. In their inability to cope with the situation, they face the danger of irrelevance and atrophy. Trade unions also seem to react and innovate slowly. Unions tend to be conservative in their insistence on how the welfare state had been traditionally functioning, insisting also on a particular logic of union operation. Especially when faced with migrant workers and their problems, they are clinging to a conservative formalised organisational structure optimised for the old economic and institutional set-up, building on a stable product market, employment and labour market. 

Examples from Slovenia

In Slovenia, too, even before the 2009 crisis, it was a matter of state priority for the economy that migrant workers come to work and fill shortages, but it was hardly a priority to inform and integrate the workers and their families. Trade unions and some civil society actors  nevertheless recognised that providing information is a key step in the integration, which meant also an introduction to labour market institutions and main rules. Still, other critical questions were only sporadically tabled and discussed: how to finance migrant worker integration or, how to integrate special integration policies such as safe houses for the victims of labour exploitation  into regular public policies? 

In the last decade, projects were prepared to inform migrant workers, but these remained plans at the ministerial level, and the money went elsewhere, for example, into strengthening enforcement of labour legislation and other key institutions, including labour inspectorates. More than a decade ago, everyone was talking about migration, and the necessity of it. It was clear what are the directions and scope of changes, with all demographic trends and observable migration patterns. It is strange to see that today, welfare state institutions and labour market actors including trade unions insist that integration of migrant workers and their families is not really their business. The commitment of trade unions to migrant workers’ integration is still very low: they still do not organise migrant workers effectively. 

The aim of establishing an organisation that specialises in providing information to migrant workers – the Counseling Office for Workers  (Delavska Svetovalnica, DS) was to fill this vacuum. The Counseling Office was preceded by a project set up in 2010 within the framework of the largest Slovenian trade union confederation. That project focused on the “Integration of unemployed migrants.” After its completion in 2013, the team received funds from the Slovenian Employment Office to continue for another two years, after which neither the trade union nor the Ministry of Labor showed interest in funding the project further. In Slovenia the welfare state intentionally gave up on serving complicated outsiders – migrant worker clients –  directly: in practical terms, it outsourced temporarily some of its key functions to civil society and union organisations. DS was preceded by a project set up in 2010 within the framework of the Association of Independent Trade Unions of Slovenia (ZSSS)  focusing on the “Integration of unemployed migrants.” After its completion in 2013, the office received funds from the Slovenian Employment Office to continue for another two years, after which neither the ZSSS nor the Ministry of Labor showed interest in funding the project further. That is when the decision was to establish an association, the “Counseling Office for Migrants.” Altogether it was a fortunate set of resource circumstances: as we saw, it grew out of the union infrastructure, and could rely on its network. It was initially supported by the state. Later it was also based on recognition of the need and strong will of the personnel to proceed with direct work with migrants, irrespectively of insecure funding. Currently, it is a self-financing organisation, mostly from membership fees from migrant workers.

In most cases, the Office works with migrants employed in precarious arrangements. In the case of subcontracted workers of the public limited company operating the Port of Koper, it took the office almost a year to gain trust among a wider circle of workers, and an additional year to grow from meetings with a dozen to several tens and hundreds of workers, some of whom became members of the Office. Despite working in the Port of Koper for more than 10 years, migrant workers, mostly coming from various former Yugoslav republics in the 1990s, were literally hiding in plain sight in the town of Koper, trusting no one. They were performing various physically intensive jobs, spatially scattered across 4 large terminals.  All of them were working for the main company through outsourced companies, and they learnt about their daily tasks the day before. At the peak, more than 20 companies were employing almost 1000 workers. These companies defined themselves as temporary service providers, but not as temporary work agencies because that would imply that the collective agreement of the Port of Koper would cover them too. Workers worked under not only a flexible but also intensive working schedule of more than 300 hours monthly, month by month, year by year. The implication was that these workers were living and working in an imposed ghetto, as second-class citizens-workers: they did not appear in public spaces. 

As they were not employed on equal terms with those directly employed in the Port of Koper and treated as peripheral, lower-value workers for decades, also by core employees, it created  a huge distrust among migrant workers towards others. For the Office, it took several months to break this distrust by identifying and meeting with a “core group” every week. Later, at the weekly meeting more than 80 workers were present, but a very strong connection and communication was maintained with all workers. Supported by workers, Delavka gained momentum to make the case public and raise awareness: the story became a major scandal and featured in the media for months. This created conditions to put the issue of their working conditions on the table of the lead employer – Port of Luka Koper. The agreement was made to employ more than 300 of these workers directly, but not all. Currently, there is an appeal to pay compensations for working as underpaid subcontracted employees: the case is still going through a long court process. 

Organising migrant workers is a difficult, labour-intensive and risky enterprise, a case that classic trade unions would rarely take up because of these reasons. Time, resources and engagement are needed over longer periods of time, as this organising has to break distrust, deal with fragmentation, visible and invisible power relations and inequalities. Learning basic organisational patterns, such as to keep meeting at an exact time and place every week was key to accommodate social outsiders and also a condition to recognise an organisation as theirs. In this way, collegial relationships could develop, breaking down barriers between worker-members and external organisers.

Goran Lukic is among the founders of the Counselling Office for Workers, a non-governmental organisation which has directly advocated for workers and their rights for more than eight years, by phone, through social media, mail and in person in their office in Ljubljana.

Tibor T. Meszmann is a researcher at the Central European Labor Studies Institute, Bratislava,  alumni member of Public Sociology Working Group “Helyzet”, Budapest, and editorial board member of LeftEast.  His research is at the border of the interdisciplinary areas of industrial relations and sociology of work. Tibor’s work covers trade union politics, the world of labor in automotives, and more recently, platform mediated work, especially in Hungary, but also in Serbia: Labour migration is an increasingly common theme to these areas of inquiry.

  1. But the main things about people are their eyes and their feet. They should be able to see the world and go after it.


Hardt, Michael. Empire / Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-674-25121-0 (cloth). ISBN 0-674-00671 ...


... Hardt and Antonio Negri, 2004. Allrights reserved. UBRARY OF CONGRESSCATALOGING IN PUBUCATION DATA. Hardt, Michael. Multitude : war and democracy in the Age of ...

Kyrgyzstan: Environmentalists raise alarm about resumption of uranium mining

Work at a uranium tailings site in Naryn Province. Earlier this month, there was an accident linked to the site that fed fears that Kyrgyzstan’s decision to resume uranium mining may give rise to new hazards and accidents. / gov.kg

By Ayzirek Imanaliyeva for Eurasianet June 19, 2024

Environmental activists in Kyrgyzstan are worried about the rising potential for a disaster following parliament’s decision to resume uranium mining after a five-year hiatus.

The Kyrgyz parliament, the Jogorku Kenesh, earlier in June approved a government bill to lift a ban on the mining of uranium and thorium that had been in place since 2019. The new rules will go into effect after the law is signed by President Sadyr Japarov, as is widely expected soon.

In pushing for a resumption of mining, the government contended that uranium production could supply a much needed financial infusion for the Kyrgyz economy, which has struggled to overcome disruption caused by the Covid pandemic and Russian sanctions. Japarov has stated the resumption of mining could create a $2bn windfall for state coffers.

“We must continue to do any work that will provide even a small economic benefit to the state. Let’s at least in the next 10 years reach the level of neighbouring countries,” Japarov has said.

While casting mining as an economic imperative, the country’s leadership has promised to use new technologies in the development of deposits to safeguard operations and maintain “strict environmental standards.”

Kyrgyzstan has a number of known uranium deposits that have not been exploited since the ban went into effect. Some of the largest deposits are found in environmentally sensitive areas, including adjacent to Lake Issyk-Kul, which is widely viewed by citizens as “the pearl of Kyrgyzstan.”

That lifting of the mining ban is seen by some environmentalists as paving the way for a nuclear power plant (NPP) in the Central Asian state. Officials are moving forward with efforts to build a reactor with the help of the Russian state-run entity, Rosatom. Kyrgyz officials have confirmed interest in building a small modular reactor (SMR) that could supply power for about one million citizens. Kyrgyzstan’s interest in nuclear energy is an outgrowth of global warming and climate change, which is inhibiting the country’s main generator of electricity, hydropower.

The government’s embrace of uranium mining and nuclear power has environmentalists on edge. The prospect of a nuclear reactor operating in a country prone to earthquakes is unsettling to many. Beyond the threats posed by a natural calamity, Kyrgyzstan’s poor safety record in containing the toxic consequences of mining for precious metals, including gold and uranium, is another major concern. Popular protests against environmental contamination, after all, were what prompted the government to press pause on uranium mining back in 2019.

In May of this year, a group of Kyrgyzstani activists appealed to the Ministry of Environment, warning that the resumption of uranium mining could exacerbate already existing environmental challenges. “They are citing figures of up to $2 billion in profits from [uranium mining], but no one is saying what the cost of restoring the destroyed lands will be,” the activists wrote.

Fears of new hazards and accidents aren’t unjustified. On June 1, an accident in the Dzhumgal district of the Naryn Region saw a Rosatom truck careen into a river. The vehicle was involved in an ongoing operation to clean up uranium tailings. Officials at the Emergency Situations Ministry said the truck in question was empty at the time of the accident. But footage circulating on the internet appeared to contradict official accounts, seeming to show black sludge had spilled from the truck into the river.

According to a report published in April by the Reuters news agency, reservoirs with large volumes of uranium tailings are contained by unstable dams. The dams experienced significant damage from landslides in 2017. Another such landslide or earthquake could cause the structures to fail “threatening a possible Chernobyl-scale nuclear disaster,” according to the Reuters report. Toxic waste could spread across the river network that supplies water for agricultural lands in the Ferghana Valley, encompassing Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

Ayzirek Imanaliyeva is a journalist based in Bishkek.

This article first appeared on Eurasianet here.

Despite protests, Serbia readies to mine lithium as early as 2028

Euractiv.com with Reuters
 Jun 18, 2024

A protestor holds a sign reading 'Rio Tinto, Get out of Serbia' during a rally against plans to start mining lithium in Serbia, in Belgrade, Serbia, 13 April 2024

Plans to open lithium mines in Serbia were halted in 2021 after environmental groups started protesting against the proposed projects in different parts of Serbia but several wildlife preservation organizations and NGOs are warning that Rio Tinto and other mining companies have restarted their intentions for operations in the country.

 [EPA-EFE/ANDREJ CUKIC]

Languages: Bulgarian

President Aleksandar Vučić said Serbia could exploit lithium as early as 2028 following new guarantees from Australian mining giant Rio Tinto and the EU over the controversial project, the Financial Times reported on Sunday (16 June).

According to Rio Tinto, Jadar in western Serbia holds one of Europe’s largest reserves of lithium — a strategically valuable metal crucial for electric vehicle battery production.

The deposits were discovered in 2004 but the Serbian government halted the mining project in 2022 after weeks of protests sparked by fears for the environment and public health.

Vučić told the Financial Times that the mining giant and the European Union had given “new guarantees” regarding compliance with environmental standards.

“If we deliver on everything, (the mine) might be open in 2028,” Vučić said, adding that it would be a game-changer for the country and the entire region.

The president said the mine is expected to produce 58,000 tonnes of lithium per year, which would equate to 17% of electric vehicle production in Europe or 1.1 million cars.

Opponents had previously accused Rio Tinto and Vučić of not being transparent about the process and of refusing to publish environmental impact reports.


Serbia's green activists rally against lithium mining

Hundreds of Serbian environmental activists on Thursday (3 February) blocked Belgrade’s city centre, demanding a ban on all lithium and borates mining and exploration in the Balkan country.

On Thursday, the mining giant published an environmental impact report that aimed to assuage concerns and reset the terms of the debate, the group promised “safe, reliable, and proven technology”.

Rio Tinto denounced “a broad misinformation campaign based on defamatory elements” advancing “unsubstantiated claims” that the project would harm water resources, soil, biodiversity, air quality and human health.

In September 2023, Serbia signed a letter of intent with the European Commission for a strategic partnership in batteries and raw materials.

Serbia's parliament speaker seeks debate over Rio Tinto's lithium project


Reuters
Mon, 17 June 2024 

Illustration shows Rio Tinto logo

BELGRADE (Reuters) - Serbia's parliament speaker and former prime minister Ana Brnabic on Monday sought a debate and approval in the assembly for a contested Rio Tinto lithium project in the Balkan country.

Regarded as a critical material by the EU and the United States, lithium is used in batteries for EVs and mobile devices.

In 2022, the Serbian government revoked licences for Rio's $2.4 billion Jadar lithium project near the western town of Loznica after massive environmental protests.

Brnabic, also a ranking official of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) loyal to President Aleksandar Vucic, said the Jadar project requires "responsible and serious" parliamentary debate".

"We will defend the interests of Serbia in every way, both economic and in terms of wealth and higher wages, pensions and everything that the project can bring to Serbia," she said in a TV broadcast.

Brnabic did not say when the 250-seat Serbian parliament in which the SNS-led coalition has a majority of 183 deputies, could start the debate.

Her remarks came a day after Vucic told the Financial Times that Belgrade is preparing to give Rio Tinto the green light to develop Europe's largest lithium mine.

If completed, the Jadar project could supply 90% of Europe's current lithium needs and help to make the company a leading lithium producer.

Last week Rio published environmental studies which showed that its Serbia lithium project would be safe for the environment.

In 2021 and 2022 Serbian environmentalists collected 30,000 signatures in a petition demanding that parliament enact legislation to halt lithium exploration in the country.

Radomir Lazovic, a leader of the opposition Green-Left Front, said his party would oppose Rio's project in the parliament and through protests.

"We are ready to fight this idea through actions, protests, all legal avenues and by seeking international support," Lazovic told Reuters.

(Reporting by Aleksandar Vasovic; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Pakistan: Ahmadi community members face arrests, vandalism for animal sacrifice on Eid-ul Adha

WION
Islamabad
Written By: Anas Mallick
Updated: Jun 19, 2024, 

This photograph taken on March 27, 2017, shows a view barriers on the road leading to an Ahmadi sect mosque at Rabwah in Chiniot District in Punjab Pakistan 


STORY HIGHLIGHTS

In 1974, Pakistan's parliament under the premiership of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto passed a law that declared Ahmadis to be non-Muslims, and the country's constitution was amended to define a Muslim as someone who believes in the finality of Prophet Muhammad

Dozens of members of minority Ahmadi community were arrested in Pakistan for allegedly sacrificing animals on Eid-ul Adha.

The four million-strong community is deemed non-Muslim under the country's constitution.


The Jamaat-e-Ahmadiyya Pakistan, which represents the minority community in the country, strongly protested against the authorities for allegedly preventing Ahmadis from offering their religious rites within the confinement of their homes during Eid.

Notably, contrary to other reports in the media, WION can confirm that no members of Ahmadi community have been killed in the acts of violence and vandalism that erupted in the country over Eid-ul Adha earlier this week.

"At least 36 members of the minority Ahmadi community have been arrested for offering sacrificial animals for slaughter on Eid-ul Adha in the country mostly in Punjab province," Jamaat-e-Ahmadiyya Pakistan official Amir Mahmood told news agency Press Trust of India.

Mahmood accused radical Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) of fanning the hatred and leading acts of vandalism against the Ahmadi community in the country.

"Preventing Ahmadis from offering their religious rites within the confinement of four walls is a grave violation of their human rights as well as a clear violation of the judgements by the Supreme Court of Pakistan," he said.

Mahmood said that Ahmadis are being harassed throughout Pakistan and especially in Punjab, not only by extremists but also by law enforcement agencies.

Mahmood said the police not only detained Ahmadis but also their sacrificial animals.

Also read | Ahmadis in Pakistan say intimidated ahead of Eid Al-Adha feast

"Instead of protecting Ahmadis from harassment and violence, the police officials are calling in Ahmadiyya leadership in various police stations and are threatening them that if any Ahmadi is found performing the 'Qurbani' or offering Eid prayers, then they are in imminent danger from the TLP," he said.

"It has come to be known that the intelligence agencies have also issued a threat alert on the occasion of Eid against Ahmadis," he said.

Unlike the overwhelming majority of Muslims across the world, Ahmadi Muslims do not subscribe to the conventional teachings of Islam and dispute the finality of prophet Muhammad.

In 1974, Pakistan's parliament under the premiership of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto passed a law that declared Ahmadis to be non-Muslims, and the country's constitution was amended to define a Muslim as someone who believes in the finality of the Prophet Muhammad.

The law made it a crime punishable by death for Ahmadis to use Islamic greetings, the traditional call to prayer, or to pray in mosques.


Since 1987, the members of the community remains banned from practicing their faith in public.


(With inputs from agencies)


Anas Mallick is an international journalist who has been working as a field reporter for 7+ years now. With a focus on diplomacy, militancy, and conflict
Disney told L.A. residents to move to Florida for a planned campus. They did, it was canceled and now they're suing

Meg James
Wed, Jun 19, 2024

The Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Florida. (John Raoux / Associated Press)

Walt Disney Co. continues to face fallout from its scuttled plans to move 2,000 California employees to a proposed Florida campus — a controversial decision the company reversed last year following the return of Chief Executive Bob Iger.

In 2021, then-CEO Bob Chapek and parks and experiences chairman Josh D'Amaro announced plans to relocate employees supporting Disney theme park and resorts — including the celebrated Imagineers — to a planned $1-billion office park in the Lake Nona area of Orlando. The move was designed for Disney to take advantage of Florida tax credits, but the cross-country shift was deeply unpopular among employees who were asked to uproot their lives in Southern California.

Now some Disney employees are suing the company over the canceled relocation.

According to a lawsuit filed Tuesday against Disney in Los Angeles County Superior Court, numerous workers heeded the company's calls, dutifully sold their homes in Los Angeles and moved to Central Florida.

Plaintiffs Maria De La Cruz and George Fong, both current Disney employees, alleged they were fraudulently induced to relocate to Florida by being led to believe that they would lose their jobs if they turned down the move. De La Cruz and Fong agreed to the relocation in November 2021. The lawsuit said Disney told affected employees they would have 90 days to "consider and make the decision that's best for them."

De La Cruz, a vice president of product design, sold her Altadena home in May 2022.

"Mr. Fong also sold his home, which was a particularly painful decision because it was the family home he had grown up in and inherited," the lawsuit said. Fong is a creative director of product design; his family home was in Los Angeles.

But a year after they had sold their houses and moved, Disney canceled the project.

Read more: Disney cancels plan to move 2,000 workers to Florida amid DeSantis fight

A Disney spokesman did not immediately provide comment.

The proposed class-action lawsuit seeks to represent "all current and former California Disney employees who relocated from California to Florida as a result of Disney's announcement of the Lake Nona Project." It seeks unspecified punitive damages.

Initially, Disney envisioned it would eventually save money on the $1-billion Lake Nona development, due to lower worker costs in Florida. It was also drawn by tax credits offered by the state for relocating businesses.

But the project became swept up in Disney's legal and culture war wranglings with Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a one-time presidential hopeful.

One month after Disney filed a federal 1st Amendment lawsuit against the Sunshine State and its governor, it pulled the plug on the Lake Nona development. (The legal matters have since been resolved, and Disney has affirmed its commitment to continue a massive Florida parks expansion). The project's cancellation also coincided with significant cost cutting across the company.

Read more: Bob Iger was brought back to fix Disney. No one said it would be easy

Disney explained the reversal in a May 2023 statement: "Given the considerable changes that have occurred since the announcement of this project, including new leadership and changing business conditions, we have decided not to move forward with construction of the campus."

Disney, at the time, acknowledged that some employees had already moved. The company said it would discuss the situation with individual employees, including making plans to move them back to California.

But compensation packages offered to affected employees by the company were inadequate, the lawsuit alleged.

The lawsuit said numerous Disney workers refused to make the move. Some remained employed by the company.

Read more: Disney earnings top Wall Street expectations amid proxy battle with Nelson Peltz

After Disney reversed its plans, home prices in the Orlando area fell, according to the lawsuit filed by attorney Jason S. Lohr of the San Francisco law firm, Lohr Ripamonti.

Since 2022, home prices in Los Angeles climbed, and higher interest rates complicated the financial picture, the lawsuit said.

Fong has since bought a home in South Pasadena that has "considerably less square footage than his previous Los Angeles home," the lawsuit said. De La Cruz is in the process of moving back to California.

Times staff writer Stacy Perman contributed to this report.

Read more: Disney at 100: Seven ways Walt's company forever changed entertainment

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Son of Myanmar’s Suu Kyi ‘concerned’ as mother marks birthday in junta detention


Local media reported that supporters of Suu Kyi had held gatherings to mark her birthday, including wearing flowers in their hair—long her signature look. — 

Wednesday, 19 Jun 2024 

YANGON, June 19 — The son of Myanmar democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is “concerned” about her health, he told AFP today, as the Nobel laureate turned 79, passing another birthday in military detention.

Suu Kyi has been detained by the military since it toppled her government and seized power in 2021, plunging the Southeast Asian nation into turmoil.

The Nobel laureate is serving a 27-year sentence imposed by a junta court after a trial condemned by rights groups as a sham to shut her out of politics.

Suu Kyi has now spent almost a quarter of her life under house arrest in jail at the hands of the military, whose iron grip on politics she has battled for decades, her son Kim Aris told AFP.

“While I am sure maymay’s many years under house arrest will have prepared her for her current period of isolation, given her age and ongoing health issues, I am concerned about her circumstances,” he said, using a Burmese word for mother.

Suu Kyi, who remains hugely popular in Myanmar, has been largely hidden from view since the coup, appearing only in grainy state media photos taken during court proceedings.

Local media reported that during her months-long trial, Suu Kyi had suffered dizzy spells, vomiting and at times had been unable to eat because of a tooth infection.

In April, the junta said she had been given “necessary care” as temperatures in the military-built capital Naypyidaw, where she is believed to be held, reached 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).

Arrests

Local media reported that supporters of Suu Kyi had held gatherings to mark her birthday, including wearing flowers in their hair—long her signature look.

Authorities arrested 22 people for marking Suu Kyi’s birthday, local media reported Wednesday.

Police in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city, arrested 22 people who had posted pictures of themselves wearing flowers in their hair, Eleven Media reported, citing an anonymous official.

Other local media said around a dozen had been arrested in the central Myanmar city for wearing flowers or praying with them in public.

A prominent pro-junta Telegram account posted several photos claiming to show those arrested, including one of five people with their legs placed in stocks.

The military seized power making unsubstantiated claims of fraud during 2020 elections won resoundingly by Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD).

The junta’s subsequent crackdown on dissent has sparked a widespread armed uprising that the military is struggling to crush.

The junta has rebuffed numerous requests by foreign leaders and diplomats to meet Suu Kyi.

Her only known encounter with a foreign envoy since the coup came in July last year, when then-Thai foreign minister Don Pramudwinai said he had met her for more than an hour.

Her son Kim told AFP in February that she was in “strong spirits” after receiving a letter from her—their first communication since she was detained in the coup.

There had been no communication since, he said Wednesday, adding that he had been given no information about her location or condition.

“As always I appeal to the military junta to free maymay and all other political prisoners and to respect the overwhelming vote of the people for democracy and freedom,” he said. 

— AFP

BEGUN BY THAI STUDENT PROTESTERS THE HUNGER GAMES SALUTE HAS BEEN ADOPTED ACROSS SOUTHEAST ASIA


 A Myanmar junta prisoner transport vehicle. Photo Credit: DMG

Myanmar: Junta Arrests Scores Of Residents In Sittwe

By 

The military regime abducted about 200 residents from Mingan Ward in Arakan State’s Sittwe Town on Sunday. They have been held incommunicado since, according to residents.

Ten vehicles full of junta troops arrived in Mingan Ward at around 1 p.m. on June 16, and went door to door arresting people, said witnesses.

A family member of one detainee said: “They made arrests until 4 p.m. They didn’t explain the reason for the arrests. Some were taken blindfolded. We don’t know where they were taken to.”

The detained residents range in age from 15 and 50 years old, including both men, women and children. Some residents from Yaychanpyin, Aung Taing, Palin Pyin, Ohyayphaw and Kyettawpyin villages who were forcibly moved to Sittwe Town recently were also detained.

Family members do not know their whereabouts, and have expressed concerns for their safety.

Some detainees reportedly phoned their families on Sunday evening, and told them that they were in Darpaing (Muslim) Village in the west of the township, and that they were told that they would be released if a ransom was paid.

“Family members received a phone call asking for ransom money of 700,000 kyats per person,” said a resident.

As of press time, DMG could not independently verify those claims.

The regime reportedly arrested more Mingan Ward residents on Sunday night as junta personnel knocked on doors purportedly to check for unregistered overnight guests.

“They came again and arrested more people around 9 p.m. My friends were also arrested. I don’t know where they were taken to,” said a Sittwe resident.

Many residents have fled the Arakan State capital for fear of possible fighting between the Myanmar military and Arakkha Army, but many low-income families cannot afford to flee the town.

One resident who remains in Sittwe said: “We don’t feel safe in the town, but we are left with no choice. We are constantly worried that they might come and we were already consumed with worries about how to make ends meet.”

The regime arrested more than 300 residents of Byaing Phyu Village in Sittwe Township on May 29, killing at least 76 people and burning many of their bodies, according to the AA. It has also prosecuted some detainees.


Development Media Group (DMG) was founded on the Thai-Myanmar border on January 9, 2012, in accordance with the current requirements of Arakan (Rakhine) State, by both residents inside the country, and former residents now in exile, who see value in meaningful quality media and applying news media as a powerful resource for regional stability, peace-making, and holistic and sustainable development.