Last August 18, the transnational corporation Kraft
Foods Argentina fired 150 workers in its General Pacheco
plant. On August 26, the Union of Food Industry Workers
(STIA) staged a large mobilization, marching through
downtown Buenos Aires to the Ministry of Labor, whose
order to resume production immediately was ignored by
Kraft. The Ministry called the parties to a new
mandatory conciliation hearing scheduled for August 27.
More than three thousand people gathered at 3 pm on
Wednesday, August 26, in front of the Buenos Aires’
Obelisco monument, from where they marched down
Corrientes Avenue to the seat of the Ministry of Labor.
The march included a large number of workers from the
plant affected by the layoffs, as well as
representatives of the Union of Food Industry Workers of
Buenos Aires, and of other organizations and several
regional chapters of Argentina’s General Labor
Confederation (CGT), the Confederation of Food
Industry Labor Associations (CASIA), the
Argentinean Federation of Carbonated Beverages and
Related Industry Workers (FATAGA) and other
trade unions and social organizations.
Upon reaching Ministry headquarters, the general
secretary of STIA, Rodolfo Daer, addressed
the demonstrators, strongly emphasizing that the march
was meant “as a repudiation of the attitude of this
transnational corporation that thinks it can trample
Argentina’s laws, workers and organizations.”
“Our Union will not give up the struggle until each and
every one of the workers laid off is reinstated,” he
said
In addition to Daer, the STIA delegation
that met with Ministry authorities was formed by union
secretary Lidia Crespo, administrative secretary
Silvia Villareal and two members of the Internal
Committee of the General Pacheco plant, where the
layoffs occurred.
After a meeting of more than an hour with Labor Deputy
Minister Noemí Rial -during which the
demonstrators maintained a lively vigil outside the
Ministry-, the delegation informed that the Ministry had
ordered the company to resume operations under
completely normal conditions, including the
reinstatement of the fired workers, beginning with that
day’s night shift, at 10 pm.
Addressing the crowd of demonstrators, Rodolfo Daer
thanked fellow organizations, including the IUF,
for their support, and repeated STIA’s intention
to firmly defend the jobs of the affected workers and
not stop until they are reinstated, “as was decided
unanimously by our Governing Committee.”
Consulted by
Sirel regarding the latest developments in
this conflict, Lidia Crespo said that “Kraft
Argentina has not changed its attitude in the least
and maintains the employer lockout despite the Labor
Ministry’s order to resume operations, thus
demonstrating once again its intention to trample our
laws and disregard our government authorities.”
Crespo
reported that a Plenary Meeting of Delegates was held
today to examine the situation in depth and decided to
keep the union mobilized pending the outcome of the new
hearing convened by the Labor Ministry for later today.
The period for mandatory conciliation ends in the first
week of September.