Tagged: Derry

#GlobalMayDay2021: Actions across Ireland

The IWW Ireland supports the call for Global May Day 2021. Here are some of the activities arranged by the local branches.

Belfast

Belfast IWW mark International Workers Day in Writers Square in Belfast City after gathering at the International Antifascist monument dedicated to the international brigadists. Our actions formed part of Global MayDay celebrations across Ireland and internationally with other revolutionary syndicalist unions and organisations.

source: facebook.com

As part of our May Day actions we set up a short history of May Day, the IWW, and Industrial Unionism in Writers Square. We were able to chat to passers by about the reason we mark May Day and the state of trade unionism today.
The IWW won’t give you special credit cards or package holidays, but we will always fight for the dignity and right of our class to all that our hands produce.

source: twitter.com

Derry

Another glorious day in Derry’s Guildhall Square as Wobblies helped celebrate International Workers Day with a banner drop in the Square. The action was in solidarity with national and international actions carried out by a number of revolutionary unions as part of Global May Day 2021. IWW members set up a free street exhibition on the IWW, its history and solidarity unionism as well as stencils, stickers and flyposting as we commemorated international workers day.

source: facebook.com

Street exhibition in Derry as part of May Day events organised by the IWW Derry Branch. It made good discussion points during the day as to why the IWW are completely different from that of the ‘business unions’.

source: facebook.com

Dublin

Members of the IWW Dublin Branch took part in a number of actions as part of May Day celebrations earlier today around the city centre.

source: facebook.com

Global Month of Solidarity: Pickets at Lidl in Ireland and Scotland

Members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in Ireland rallied for the second time at Lidl stores in different cities, such as Belfast and Derry.

This time comrades in Glasgow (Scotland) joined the coordinated action with a picket outside the city’s Lidl Store based in Govanhill’s Victoria Road.

The IWW Ireland published this report:

Solidarity pickets continues this week as members of the Industrial Workers of the World Ireland Branch take part in a series of month long international solidarity protests in support of Garment Workers in Bangladesh.

In Belfast and Derry this weekend IWW members held pickets out an number of Lidl stores at the Hi Park Centre and on the Buncranna Road stores as part of ongoing efforts to highlight how 6000 illegally sacked Garment Workers continue to have their wages withheld.

A member of the IWW spoke during todays action on Belfasts High Street stating: “Our union has taken part in a series of international actions in an effort to draw attention to the fact that 6000 members of the Garment Workers Trade Union Centre (GWTUC) were illegally sacked in March and have still not been paid by Dragon Sweater Group.

“We have organised a series of high profile solidarity actions against major supermarket chains such as Lidl and Walmart/ASDA globally who have directly profited from the cheap labour of Garment Workers for years.

“These stores have been and continue to be supplied by garments made by Dragon Sweater Group. Back in March this company, cruelly and illegally terminated over 6000 garment workers positions and refused to pay wages owed to them.”

A representative of the GWTUC stated that “Wages and benefits have gone unpaid to workers, majority of whom have worked for at least five years, some of whom have been employed at the factory for the better part of two decades.

“Dragon Group targeted those workers who have accrued a lot of unpaid benefits and wages. It is a widespread practice in the Bangladesh Garment Industry to leave years upon years of workers’ wages and benefits unpaid, and eventually the owners terminate the workers, bring in a new batch and start the whole process again. So, it is safe to say, that a lot of these brands have benefited from unpaid labor over a number of years.”

Following today’s action a member of the IWW Derry Branch told us that: “By holding a month long series of rolling solidarity pickets, we are demanding that both Lidl and Walmart/ASDA urgently revoke their suppliers contracts from the Dragon Sweater Group to help ensure that ALL workers receive their full wages and payments owed to them, and that their all their suppliers fully adhere to labour rights.

“In doing so, we call upon both of these multinationals to equally ensure that their supply chain is transparent in order to stop the exploitation of workers which is the wish of all their customer’s, here in Ireland and throughout Europe.

“We will continue our solidarity with the GWTUC and others through the CIT-ICL, in an effort to highlight what the Dragon Sweater Group are doing. We demand the reinstatement of all 6000 garment workers and for wages owed to them to be paid in full. We would encourage other unions to come forward and add their voices to the international call.”

As part of today’s solidarity actions, members of Clydeside IWW Branch in Scotland, held a picket in Glasgow’s Southside in support of sacked Dragon Group workers in Dhaka. They held a picket outside the city’s Lidl Store based in Govanhill’s Victoria Road.

source: onebigunion.ie