The Latin American Federation of
Coca-Cola Workers (FELATRAC) is born,
representing 60 trade unions from ten
countries of the region.
Last May 7, the FELATRAC was
formed in Buenos Aires. This
constitutes a key step in the process of
accumulation of labor forces, which
results directly from a strategy that
involves the political democratization
and the decentralization of tasks that
was backed by our affiliates in the last
Regional Conferences of the IUF.
In this way, the Tenth Latin American
Regional Conference of the IUF (Buenos
Aires 1991) established new forums,
called Professional Departments,
for sector-based actions. As we
recognized the need to overcome the
dispersion of efforts and resources, we
introduced these meeting points where we
could redeploy our activists and
encourage more people to participate,
and thus contribute to broaden and
deepen the processes of collective
discussion and action throughout the
region.
“The Beverage Department was formed in
1998, in Minas, Uruguay,
in the framework of a regional meeting
of beverage workers,” Raúl Álvarez,
general secretary of the Argentinean
Federation of Workers of the Carbonated
Water Industry (FATAGA) and
newly elected president of the
FELATRAC, recalls. “At that meeting
-Álvarez continues- we agreed to
pursue various lines of action aimed at
increasing the efficiency and
effectiveness of the struggle of our
sector’s workers. As of that date, we’ve
had that responsibility, which we share
with the IUF’s Latin American
Regional Office (Rel-UITA).”
Antonio Adourián,
president of the Union of Coca-Cola
Workers of Uruguay, highlighted that
“one of the aspects I most value in the
IUF and its affiliates is its
capacity for solidarity. At the time of
the military coup in Uruguay, I
was forced to come to Argentina,
where I was welcomed by fellow workers
at the FATAGA. Today, as we form
the Latin American Federation of
Coca-Cola Workers, many fellow
workers come to mind, but two in
particular: Enildo Iglesias and
Dan Gallin, who I met in
Buenos Aires in 1971.
If we’ve come this far, it is to a great
extent thanks to the work and political
vision of these and many other fellow
workers of the IUF throughout all
these years,” Adourián stressed.
For its part, the Brazilian
delegation, formed by Siderlei de
Oliveira of the CONTAC and
the CNTA’s Antonio Filho
and Artur Bueno Camargo,
concurred in reasserting that unity in
action is the way to face our current
challenges. The unification experience
carried out during the Parmalat
crisis in Brazil shows us the
path that we must take.
Carmargo
and Siderlei also remarked that
when they came into contact with the
IUF in the late 1970s, they were
made aware of the glorious struggle of
the Union of Workers of Embotelladora
Central (STECSA, Coca-Cola,
Guatemala). “In the study circles
held at the height of the military
dictatorship in Brazil, no other
issue would incite fellow workers more
than the struggle of the STECSA
and the global boycott against
Coca-Cola organized by the IUF
in solidarity with Guatemalan workers,”
CONTAC president Siderlei
highlighted.
“It is evident that we have not arrived
at this Federation by chance -Camargo
added-; this Federation is the
result of a long process fueled by the
Education Program and the solidarity of
the Swedish labor movement; by the
efforts carried out by the IUF’s
Regional Office over the years, which
contributed to consolidate the labor
movement among food and agriculture
workers throughout the region and, in
particular, in Brazil. Nobody
gives us anything for free. The
FELATRAC arises from the efforts of
our rank-and-file activists, from our
own demands and needs. It’s not a “new
apparatus” created for Coca-Cola
workers. No.
The FELATRAC was built by the
very organizations that represent the
workers of this transnational
corporation in Latin America,
respecting the times and the differences
in labor traditions.
This is extremely important and it urges
us on to continue down this road that we
ourselves are paving,” CNTA
president Carmargo emphasized.
The FELATRAC is born representing
60 trade unions from ten countries of
the region. This will position
Coca-Cola workers better in the
negotiation processes and in the search
for new strategic alliances. The
Federation, which benefits politically
from the IUF’s broad
representative base among Coca-Cola
trade unions, is also an open forum for
thousands of workers, from which other
unions will be invited to join this
experience and our International
organization.
To carry out its activities, the
FELATRAC has adopted a simple
operating structure, formed by a
president, a vice president and four
coordinators, one for each sub-region of
our Regional Office.
Francisco Argüeta,
general secretary of the STECSA
and vice president of the FELATRAC
reflected that: “These efforts to
consolidate the IUF’s actions
before the transnational corporation
Coca-Cola are coordinated with our
efforts to design a union structure that
will provide coverage for all the
workers of the transnational corporation
in Guatemala. Now, together with
the FELATRAC, we have to
strengthen the efforts of our sister
organizations in Honduras,
Nicaragua and Panama, and
continue to move forward until every
Coca-Cola worker is unionized.”
Consulted about the challenges that the
Federation will have to face, Enrique
“Quique” Torres, legal advisor to
the STECSA and the Trade Union
Federation of Food, Agroindustry and
Related Industry Workers (FESTRAS),
said: “Negotiation is a natural part of
what unions are, and the scope of our
gains is determined by the strength of
each organization. For a long time, the
STECSA was an island in the
context of Latin America, and in Central
America in particular. That put us in an
extremely vulnerable position. But,
things change. Now the islands are the
organizations that are not part of the
FELATRAC, and it is up to us to
encourage them to join this movement,
while at the same time, as Pablo
Quiroga of the FATAGA said,
we have to step up the struggle so that
there isn’t a single Coca-Cola
plant whose workers are not unionized,”
Quique urged.
David Morales,
general secretary of the FESTRAS,
has represented Latin America in
more IUF-Coca-Cola Company
meetings in Atlanta than anyone
else. “Our power of negotiation with the
company is stronger -David
underlines- when our demands are
presented by a structure such as the
FELATRAC, which represents 60
unions. And like you said to the
authorities of the FEMSA that
participated in our Workshop, we’re not
looking to complicate things. The aim is
to find solutions to the problems we
face and be able to prevent conflicts
through dialogue and negotiation. The
FELATRAC -Morales continued-
represents the vast majority of the
unions of Coca-Cola workers in
our region, and that’s saying a
lot; it’s a reality that cannot
be ignored by national authorities nor
by any of the Company’s franchises.”