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Rights and Liberties

Woman Asks for Rights, Gets Acid Thrown on Face

By Apostolis Fotiadis, IPS News. Posted January 5, 2009.


After standing up to workplace injustice, two men poured sulphuric acid on Decheva Elena Kuneva, badly disfiguring her.
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 ATHENS, Jan 5 (IPS) -- Around midnight Dec. 22, Decheva Elena Kuneva, a Bulgarian living in Greece since 2001, finished her shift and made her way home. For four years she had worked as a cleaner in the city railways, as employee of a company contracted by the public enterprise.

Employment for a female migrant brought exploitation that Kuneva was not willing to accept.

She often stood up to her employers to demand basic rights. Gradually, she organized workers around her, and became secretary of the Union of Cleaners and Home Helpers (UCHH). As a result, she got the worst shift hours, faced pressure to quit, and since last summer began receiving anonymous phone threats. Her mother, who worked for the same company, was laid off.

But Kuneva was not put off demanding rights for herself and for fellow workers. Someone decided to punish her.

That night two men threw sulphuric acid on her face as she headed home. She lost sight from one eye, vision from the other is impaired. Her face is badly disfigured.

A historian by profession, Kuneva, 44, came to Greece to earn an income for treatment of her only son, who was suffering from heart problems. Now she has lost everything she, her mother and her son relied on.

Fortunately she is not entirely on her own. "We cannot abandon her," Metaxia Stegoulea, president of the Federation of Private Employees, a centralised body of which UCHH is a member, told IPS. "I have not the slightest doubt that what happened to her is because of her union activity."

The bigger unions are now taking up the cause of the other workers. "The real issue is the regime under which these women have to work, below subsistence level wages," says Stegoulea.

They live in conditions of modern slavery, Vasiliki Tsiouni, vice-president of UCHH told the daily Eleftherotipia.

"All our working rights are denied, they do not pay security contributions for us, they do not pay us the hours we work for, they ask us to sign blank papers with income figures that we have never received, they demand we sign a resignation together with the employment contract so we can be laid off instantly without consequences, they do not pay us for overtime work, they do not buy us the rights for heavy and unhealthy labour, so we cannot get proper pension, they blackmail us with threats that we will be blacklisted."

Stegoulea said such labour exploitation is common among big private companies that dominate the sector. "If you observe the prices they offer for public tenders, they are always the minimum possible, it makes one wonder where they make their profit from."

Workers are never employed more than 30 hours a week, so companies do not have to pay increased contributions for heavy and unhealthy labour. Wages are often lower than agreed, or they are paid irregularly -- when they are paid at all.

More than 10,000 people are employed in this sector on an average wage of 560 euros. Companies like to employ migrant workers and women, since they are the most vulnerable.

Despite multiple pleas by unionists, regulatory authorities have failed to intervene effectively. And unions have not been that effective either. Alekos Kalivis, deputy chairman of the General Union of Greek Workers (GSEE) accepts that the union has not been able to support many workers in defending their rights.

"This is the case especially when it comes to sectors of extremely deregulated labour where there are no strong unions to protect very weak categories of employees. We have to respond to this situation in a better and more active way, especially since those who govern the sector increasingly employ organised crime's methods against unionists."

This is not just another case of injustice at the workplace, he says. "You should not ignore the fact that people who govern this sector are connected to parties and political interests. Once again the political establishment of this country becomes the main cause for serious social problems, and this time we speak about a very dangerous one."

 


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When is enough,enough?
Posted by: lewb on Jan 5, 2009 4:35 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is another tragic example of the psychopathic behavior fostered by the power structure based on money. Until we dismantle economies based on money we will continue to face the never ending problems associated with it. Are you sick of war,crime.destruction of the environment,poverty, divisions in our civilizations caused by the inabilty of our institutions to deal with them? Continuing support of this flawed,corrupt system will only result in more misery. We can change the equation by dismantling these inequities. we must use our abilities to redirect our resources and put people who can solve problems in a position to do so. There are brilliant minds everywhere. Many jobs in the monetary system exist only to perpetuate it. Why would we need bankers,accountants,lawyers,insurance adjusters,mortgage brokers and various other jobs that produce nothing except to move paperwork. Think of a world that an abundance of resources to provide our needs that frees us from economic slavery perpetuated by money. If you believe in this view ,support movements that seek to supplant the monetary sytem.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: When is enough,enough? Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson
Misogyny and Migrant Workers
Posted by: Diana Boston on Jan 5, 2009 6:30 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a clear case of misogyny directed at the "second' class citizen: women. This never would've happened had a man been organizing. Women who come from developing countries who migrate to just find a wage that is below minimum is a clear example of the feminization of poverty. When women are considered and treated with dignity and respect then these things won't happen any more. The majority of migrant workers are women. That says something about how women are viewed socially and economically.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Rare in Greece but very common in India.
Posted by: Jennifer Bedingfield on Jan 6, 2009 12:20 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those two criminals sure knew where to get their criminal ideas !

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Workers of the world unite! An old, but timely, call to arms and agendas
Posted by: thekidde on Jan 8, 2009 7:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for people who actualy work and contribute. Not go to meetings, push paper, engage in Ponzi schemes and derivative bullshit. When enough CEO, WTO, IMF, neocon, oligarch, corpirate heads are on pikes, perhaps things will change.

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What kind of person throws acid on someone?
Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com on Jan 9, 2009 5:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's stories like these that remind me why I hate the world and am a misanthrope.

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