With Siderlei de
Oliveira
Cargill:
Enough!
“Together we can beat the beast”
In the
framework of the harsh battle being waged in Brazil against Cargill’s labor
policy, one of the most authoritative sources on this issue, Siderlei Silva de
Oliveira, president of CONTAC and the National Health-at-Work Institute of
Brazil, traveled to Buenos Aires, where he spoke with SIREL in an exclusive
interview. The aim of this trip was to move forward in the development of
coordinated actions between Cargill workers of Argentina and Brazil
Gerónimo Venegas,
UATRE
General Secretary,
and
Siderlei de Oliveira,
CONTAC
President
|
-What’s the
main mission of your trip to Argentina?
-The main
reason I’m here in Buenos Aires is to establish networks connecting Cargill
workers from Brazil with Cargill workers from Argentina.
This will go a long way towards strengthening an international movement that we
hope will force this company to listen to reason, so that they will resume
negotiations and honor the agreements it makes. We had already discussed this
idea in an international seminar held in São Paulo last year, in which
Brazilian IUF affiliates representing workers of the transnational
corporation Cargill participated, along with a delegation of the
Argentinean Union of Rural Workers and Stevedores (UATRE).
What we want to
do now is intensify an alliance specifically with UATRE and Argentina’s
food industry unions, as was defined in the Thirteenth Regional Latin American
Conference of the IUF in October 2006. We have to optimize the levels of
coordination -both for discussion and struggle purposes- among workers along the
entire agriculture and food chain the transnational company operates in. The
methodology we’ll apply will be to work at every point of the chain, as
Cargill is a highly diversified company in terms of products, which range
from soy to sugar cane to poultry production, and more.
In this sense,
the alliance with UATRE will enable us to organize and coordinate within
the sector, starting at the primary production of those commodities, which
Cargill produces a great volume of in Argentina and also processes
them there. In Brazil we are also working simultaneously with manufacture
workers and rural laborers, that is, in every link of the chain.
-This union
will only be between Brazil and Argentina?
-This is a
network that we’re starting here, but which we plan to expand to other places,
as we have already spoken with trade unions in many countries, including the
United States. The stage we’re at now is one of data gathering and of seeing
how this gigantic machinery called Cargill works on a global level. We
want to find out what the working conditions at Cargill are like in other
countries, and if it’s just in Brazil that the corporation behaves as it
does. The information we are able to gather in Argentina will be very
valuable for our struggle.
To combat a
beast of this magnitude, you must find out where it lives, what its habits are,
what it feeds on. That’s the stage we’re at now.
-What’s the
status of the negotiations with Cargill in Brazil?
-Right now the
negotiations between Cargill and the unions are at a standstill, despite
our having struggled for two years to open up spaces for dialogue, and having
sought solutions to improve this transnational corporation’s working conditions.
Cargill is a company which has absolutely no respect for trade unions,
and which does nothing to improve working and health conditions for its workers.
It has even gone as far as forbidding workers from voluntarily contributing to
their unions, in an attempt to render them totally defenseless in the face of
company abuse. I think Cargill has made its antiunion policy very clear,
having hurled its workers back to the times of the very first industrial
revolution, turning them into hostages and slaves of the company.
-What work
methodology does it use in its factories?
-Cargill
is without a doubt the worst company we have in Brazil in the poultry
industry. Its policy of systematic violation of workers’ rights is evident in
its refusal to allow outside medical assistance to enter the factories, in
particular its poultry production plant. Workers are treated by doctors in the
company, and they are sometimes taken out in ambulances from inside the factory.
-Can the
physical damages suffered by workers be verified?
-Yes, because
the “worst” thing is that the company’s volume of production is increasing more
and more, thus speeding up the work pace, which reaches unbearable heights. This
is causing workers severe repetitive strain injuries, as is the case with those
working in production lines. And I say that this is the worst because what it
does is it leaves workers disabled for life. But you can also see it when
workers exit the factory at the end of the workday, with their arms and hands
marked or scratched. This is an atrocity that this transnational corporation is
committing behind closed doors, so that the rest of Brazilian society will not
find out about the abhorrent working conditions in Cargill.
-Is it true
that Cargill is attempting to turn the conflict into an ideological issue?
-What happens
is that Cargill belongs to a reactionary family, what we would call
“backwards.” For them any capital-labor relation is a political problem. That’s
why they gave their version: “What we have in Brazil is an ideological
problem: socialists against capitalists.” So they treat us unionists like in the
Cold War, as if we were an obstacle to production. In my opinion, they’re crazy.
But, hey, these people see workers as the enemy. That’s an incredible
contradiction, as it is a state-of-the-art company in terms of satellites,
remote digital controls and technology; but at the same time it is centuries
behind in other issues, such as the way they treat their own workers.
-What is the
position of the Brazilian government?
-The Ministry
of Justice has a bad image of Cargill, and from time to time it penalizes
it. But we want the government to adopt a tougher stance, in the decisions that
affect the company the most, such as tax or export benefits. Our position is
that the government should grant these benefits, but only insofar as such
benefits are reflected in the company’s treatment towards its workers. In any
case, we’re not dealing with a normal market company that operates according to
the rules of a democratic country. This “slave driving” company cannot be
treated the same as so many other good companies that meet their social
obligations. Cargill is a highly diversified company, which has problems
in every activity sector it operates in: coffee, chocolate, fertilizers,
chemical products, soy, sugar cane, seeds. At present, one of its two private
ports is closed due to environmental problems. But our priority is the national
campaign against the poultry industry, where Cargill is the perfect
example of evil, of bad corporate activity, of slave-driving treatment and
anti-union policy.
-What have you
done to make Cargill’s practices known?
-We haven’t
stood still, and we’ve sought international support and networking, to raise
awareness about this situation among European consumers of Cargill
products. We’ve also formed alliances with consumer defense groups and with
trade union networks in the Old Continent.
In Buenos Aires, Gerardo
Iglesias and Javier Amorín
© Rel-UITA
May 28, 2007