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    Brasil - AmBev

 Meeting of the National Committee of AmBev Workers

Beer transnational corporation to be continually monitored by unions nationwide

 

Convened by the National Confederation of Food, Agroindustry, Cereal Cooperative and Rural Workers (CONTAC) and the National Confederation of Food and Related Industry Workers (CNTA), the National Committee of AmBev Workers met last Tuesday the 25th in Sao Paulo with an attendance of 98 percent of all the unions in the country.

 

According to Siderlei de Olivera, president of the CONTAC and the CUT National Institute of Health, Labor and Environmental Matters (INST), “The meeting of the National Committee of AmBev Workers is the result of the way the company is treating its workers, with methods that are clearly degrading. The gravity of the situation led AmBev unions from the four labor confederations to gather in this meeting: in addition to the United Workers’ Federation (CUT) and Força Sindical, organizations from the New Labor Federation and the General Workers’ Federation of Brazil (CGTB) were present.”

 

“This meeting enabled us to confirm a number of things -Siderlei continued-, such as the pressure AmBev is using to impose ‘hour banks,’ at a time in which unions and labor federations in Brazil are struggling to reduce working hours and eliminate the excessive work pace in factories. With AmBev being one the world’s largest breweries, we simply do not understand how it can also have one of the worst track records in the treatment of workers, imposing its policies through coercive means, threatening to close down plants, and pitting workers against workers, among other tactics.”

 

Siderlei declared that “This cannot go on. First we will coordinate actions and carry them out at the national level, and then we will take global action, because we know that this transnational corporation is applying the same policies and procedures everywhere, and especially in Latin America. The first efforts will be focused on strengthening this National Committee, coordinated by the CONTAC and the CNTA. From now on, any AmBev-related problems will be dealt with there. Then, we will contact unions in other countries of Latin America to suggest that they adopt this same modality of National AmBev Inter-Union Committee, as a way of creating spaces for effective coordination.”

 

Consulted by Sirel, CNTA president Artur Bueno de Camargo observed that the meeting was convened after “both organizations (the CONTAC and the CNTA) became aware of the abuses and unfair treatment that AmBev subjects its workers to in Brazil. The meeting revealed pay inequalities, as well as a generalized rejection of the ‘hour bank’ among workers, and a questioning of the so-called Factory Excellence Program (PEF), which awards bonuses to workers who meet the targets set by the company. In addition -Artur Bueno continued- we formed a committee that will meet on April 24 to survey conditions in every AmBev plant in Brazil, with the aim of devising a joint action plan.”

 

“There is widespread discontent -Artur said-, and we will try to negotiate on these and other issues. The general feeling is that if the company refuses to negotiate with us, we will carry out a coordinated action, which could be anything from a demonstration to a strike.”

 

Moreover, the CONTAC and the CNTA have decided to publish a joint newsletter that will be distributed simultaneously in all of AmBev’s factories in Brazil.

From Montevideo, Carlos Amorín
Rel-UITA
March 27, 2008

 

 

 

Photos: Anderson “Batata” Bernardes

 

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