Strike in SABMiller
STIBYS: A struggle that involves us all |
The
conflict between Honduras’ beverage workers’ union and
SABMiller is over much more than just the South African
transnational corporation’s violation of the collective
bargaining agreement.
This is not the first time that we are forced to report
on
SABMiller,
and every time we do so it is to denounce the
company’s double standards. One such case occurred in
November 2006, in Peru, when an accident took the
life of a worker hired under an outsourcing scheme at
the Lima brewery, and simultaneously another
worker lost three fingers in a different accident –this
time at the Trujillo brewery (see
Peru: SABMiller, Criminalizing the market). In March
of last year we published an article under the title
SABMiller's social irresponsibility where we
commented on the notorious case of the raffle for a
Fernando Botero painting organized by the brewery in
Colombia, and in that article we also examined
the shady aspects involved in the purchase of
Bavaria
by the South African corporation. These examples are
enough to bring to mind how
SABMiller
is not exactly known for providing and generating what
the ILO calls decent working conditions, while at
the same time it stands out for its fierce antiunion
practices.
The transnational corporation is now apparently
concerned with cleaning up its image. In the N° 352
edition of the magazine AméricaEconomía,
out on January 6, Lucía Valdés Lezaca writes from
Bogotá about the company, in a piece entitled
A Different Beer. She highlights how well business
is going for
Bavaria
-or
SABMiller,
which is the same- in Colombia, with a net profit
of 106.5 million dollars in the first nine months of
last year. This growth (23 percent in operating profits)
seems to be the result of the introduction of a number
of changes, such as different advertising criteria, new
brands and products, and more stylized bottles, among
other novelties.
Further on in her article, the reporter mentions how
“the executive officers of the South African corporation
were very surprised when they learnt that Bavaria
had decided to abolish unions in the company,” and adds
that “sources close to the company had said that this
structure is not seen with favorable eyes by the new
shareholders, who prefer to have traditional unionism,
and that although employees and management had just
signed a new version of the Agreement for 2008, they
would try to revive it.”
For the benefit of her readers, Ms. Valdés should
have done a bit more research on
SABMiller’s
opinions and practices towards unions. If she’d done so,
she would’ve had to report that a “traditional union”
has existed for decades in Honduras, a union
called Union of Beverage and Related Industry Workers
and known by the acronym STIBYS. And she would’ve
had to add that for the past year and a half STIBYS
has been demanding that Cervecería Hondureña
(a subsidiary of
SABMiller)
honor the collective bargaining agreement signed in the
year 2003; and that as a result of the company’s
unyielding attitude the various legal instances of
direct negotiation, mediation and conciliation failed,
forcing the union to call a strike as of next January
11.
But not everything the reporter says merits criticism. I
admit that the journalist contributes some interesting
pieces of information. One is that Andrés Peñate,
former director of the Administrative Security
Department (Colombia’s intelligence agency) is now
employed by
Bavaria
as its Sustainable Development director. We will deal
with this character in a future article, for now let’s
just say that his background tells us a lot about his
responsibilities in the company.
The other piece of information is the implementation in
Bavaria
of programs that measure workers’ performance, like, for
example, one called Performance Management, where
employees are forced to set monthly performance targets
for themselves, which are then supervised by their
immediate bosses. These programs, like the Corporate
Social Responsibility program or the
Employee Share Ownership Program (ESOP), are
actually meant to replace solidarity, which appears to
have become obsolete.
For all these reasons, there is much more at stake in
the struggle of our fellow workers of STIBYS than
the mere compliance of the collective bargaining
agreement. That is why their struggle is international
in scope and why it is a struggle that involves us all.