http://blog.aflcio.org/2007/06/06/iraqi-unionists-in-washington-dc-to-protest-us-oil-drain-from-iraq-2/Iraqi Unionists in Washington, D.C., to Protest U.S. Oil Drain from Iraq
by James Parks, Jun 6, 2007
Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein, president of Iraq’s Electrical Utility Workers Union (in light scarf) leads a May Day march in Basra.
The U.S.-backed government has proposed a new law in Iraq that would permit what the oil industry calls “production-sharing agreements” that could put 70 percent of the profits from oil sales in the hands of rich oil companies and leave the Iraqi people with little to run their country.
The plan, which was supported by the U.S. State Department as early as 2003, also has the backing of the International Monetary Fund and some powerful Iraqi political leaders. In fact, the rapid opening up of Iraqi oil for “private investment” is one of the benchmarks in the Iraq funding bill, which Congress passed and President Bush signed recently.
Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein, president of the Electrical Utility Workers Union, General Federation of Iraqi Workers, made it clear workers are fighting the law:
The oil law is a bad for the Iraqi people. It is not fair or equitable. It’s just another name for privatization.
Muhsin Hussein, the only female union president in Iraq, is on a 26-day, 12-city tour of the United States sponsored by U.S. Labor Against The War (USLAW). Today, she joined a rally in Washington, D.C., to protest the oil law outside the offices of BearingPoint.
BearingPoint is the contractor hired to promote the oil law, which was written by a committee of technocrats who talked with the Big Oil companies but ignored the state-run national oil company and the workers, Hussein says. It’s part of an overall effort to privatize state-owned industries.
FULL story at link.