SLOMR
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Free Trade Union of the Working People of Romania | |
Sindicatul Liber al Oamenilor Muncii din România | |
Founded | 1979 |
---|---|
Date dissolved | 1979 |
Members | 2,400 |
Country | Romania |
Affiliation | International Confederation of Free Trade Unions |
Key people | Ionel Cană, founder Paul Goma Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa |
Office location | Bucharest, Romania |
SLOMR (Romanian language acronym for Sindicatul Liber al Oamenilor Muncii din România - Free Trade Union of the Working People of Romania) was a Romanian free trade union which was founded without prior preparation in February 1979 as a means to oppose the control exercised by the Communist Party of Romania during the country's communist period.[1] Initiated along the same lines as Solidarity, which was created one year later in the People's Republic of Poland,[2] it grew to about 2,400 adherents within four weeks, and was dismantled by the authorities of Nicolae Ceauşescu's regime, coordinated by the Securitate,[3] over the next three months.
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[edit] Background
In January 1979, a group of fifteen workers from the shipyards in the Danube port of Drobeta-Turnu Severin approached Ionel Cană, a physician who had worked in Olt County amongst workers and had recently moved to Bucharest; Cană, who had already helped workers draw up petitions complaining about labour conditions, agreed to the men's proposal to set up a union.[4]
[edit] Creation
The founding declaration, signed by 20 persons,[5] was broadcast by Noel Bernard over Radio Free Europe on March 4, 1979.[6] The names of the 20 founder members of SLOMR, with their occupations and addresses, were appended to the text. The document stated that the organisation, legally established under Romanian law, was affiliated to the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.[7] Pointing at the declining work and living conditions and at the difficulties workers had in expressing themselves freely and defend their interests, the declaration indicated that the new labour organization was not backed by any political force, and that its objects were to ensure justice in the social and labour areas.[8]
The intention of the new trade union was to enter the struggle against unemployment, for better working conditions, for safety and health in the factories, for the revision of the wage system and the pension system, for the reduction of the weekly work period and the suppression of unpaid overtime, etc. The new union, insisting on the legality of the steps it had taken, requested a frank dialogue with the authorities for the settlement of these claims.[9]
Soon, about 2,400 of workers from various localities such as Bucharest, Ploieşti, Constanţa, Târgu Mureş and Timişoara joined the new union,[10] which also added to its programme more general claims such as freedom for all workers, including peasants, to change their place of work, the right to a decent wage for peasants and the right to freely sell their products and the suppression of terror and internment in psychiatric hospitals of those who demanded that their rights be respected. The dissident Romanian Orthodox Church priest Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa offered to be a spiritual adviser.[11] The new trade union was also supported by the writer and dissident Paul Goma.[12] An additional manifesto calling for the legalization of unofficial trade unions and observance of the right to free association has been released as well.
[edit] Repression
The SLOMR's establishment and the issue of its constituent statement were almost immediately followed by a wave of repression against the body and its members — it included massive arrests, involuntary commitment in psychiatric hospitals, exile, systematic harassment, beatings, as well as a summary trial and prison sentence passed on the SLOMR founder and other leading members.[13] Thus, the 20 founders have been arrested and sentenced to prison, Ion Cană being condemned to a 7 years term for "disseminating fascist propaganda".[14] Another trade union leader, Gheorghe Braşoveanu, has been confined to a psychiatric institution while the prominent opponent Vasile Paraschiv has undergone harsh psychiatric treatment.[15]
In April the SLOMR, in an open letter to Ceauşescu, protested against the arrest of its members, among them Cană and Braşoveanu (the two were eventually released in 1980).[16] Cană's successor as chairman, Nicolae Dascălu, was sentenced in June to 18 months in prison for allegedly passing state secrets to Amnesty International.[17] Further 153 leaders of the union, among them Virgil Chender from Sighişoara,[18] were arrested on charges of "parasitism" and "hooliganism" and placed under house arrest, interned in psychiatric hospitals, deported, imprisoned or expelled from the country after serving their sentences.[19] Father Calciu-Dumitreasa was sentenced to ten years in prison.[20] A number of trade unionists were also obliged to sign statements disclaiming the existence of the Free Trade Union. At the same time, the authorities launched a campaign of slander, and image destruction spreading false rumours and extremely harsh threats designed to destroy the union.[21]
After the initial arrest of the leaders of the union, others took over the task of organising the union but a month later they were arrested as well and the remainder were subjected to permanent harassment.[22] In a last and successful attempt to dismantle the entire organization, in June several hundred union members were arrested throughout the country at the same time.[23] The communist Romanian regime alleged not to have any knowledge of the new union.[24]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Ilieşu; ILO reports
- ^ Frunză, p.526; Popescu
- ^ Popescu
- ^ Deletant, Ceausescu..., p.100, Occidentul...; Frunză, p.526; Popescu
- ^ ILO reports
- ^ Deletant, Occidentul...; Popescu; Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ Frunză, p.526
- ^ Frunză, p.526; ILO reports; Popescu
- ^ Deletant, Ceausescu..., p.100, Occidentul...; Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ Deletant, Ceausescu..., p.100; Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ Popescu
- ^ Ilieşu; ILO reports; Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ ILO reports; Popescu; Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ ILO reports; Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ Deletant, Ceausescu..., p.100; ILO reports
- ^ Deletant, Ceausescu..., p.100
- ^ ILO reports
- ^ Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ Sturmthal, et al., p.80
- ^ ILO reports
- ^ ILO reports
- ^ ILO reports
- ^ ILO reports
[edit] References
- Reports nr.218/1982, 222/1983, 233/1984, 236/1984 of the International Labour Organization
- Dennis Deletant, Ceausescu and the Securitate, M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, New York, 1995; Occidentul şi disidenţa din România sub regimul lui Ceauşescu ("The West and Romanian Dissidence Under the Ceauşescu Regime")
- Victor Frunză, Istoria stalinismului în România ("History of Stalinism in Romania"), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990
- (Romanian) Sorin Ilieşu, Raport pentru condamnarea regimului politic comunist ca nelegitim si criminal (Report Regarding the Condemnation of the Communist Regime), October 2005 (at the Group for Social Dialogue site)
- (Romanian) Andrei Luca Popescu, "Un sindicat în ciuda lui Ceauşescu" ("A Union Despite Ceauşescu"), in Cotidianul, November 17, 2006
- Adolph Sturmthal, Alexander J. Motyl, Adrian Karatnycky, Worker's Rights, East and West, Transaction Publishers, Piscataway, 1980