July 2009

Rabbis ask Histadrut labour union for help in wages campaign

July 20, 2009 by Andrew Casey   Comments (0)

A group of 500 rabbis filed suit against the state and the Union of Local Authorities yesterday, demanding millions of shekels in raises for wage erosion over 2002-2004 and 2006-2008, the Israeli newspaper Haarets reports in a Business Brief column.

The rabbis, who belong to Histadrut labour federation, have asked the National Labour court to order the state and the ULA to pay compensation for withholding wages, along with interest and linkage to the consumer price index.

The group claims the treasury has not kept the collective bargaining agreement signed with the Histadrut in 1988, which requires evaluating every two years whether their salaries have eroded versus certain other groups of public employees. (Haim Bior)

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Jewish leadership, unions unite on Iran

July 3, 2009 by Andrew Casey   Comments (0)

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Today's Australian Jewish News is running the following news item about the global trade union protests against the Iranian regime.

 

In an unusual partnership the Jewish community recently joined with Australia’s union movement to protest labour conditions in Iran.

According to reports, about 100 unionists gathered outside the Iranian Embassy in Canberra last Friday.

The crowd wanted to present the ambassador with a letter from the Australian Council of Trade Unions calling for the Iranian  government to respect basic workers’ rights.

Before the protest, Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) president Robert Goot said, “ The ECAJ expresses its solidarity with Australian trade unionists and other Australians in calling upon the Australian, and other governments, and the International Labour Organisation to increase pressure on the Iranian Government to stop assassination attempts, persecution, arrests, threats, violence and other repressive measures against workers and labour activists.”

He explained that the International Labour Organisation – a UN-associated organization to which Iran belongs – found Iran had violated discrimination conventions.

Iranian employers and educational institutions had been noted in their discrimination against minority groups, namely the Jewish and Baha’I communities.

Discrimination in employment on the basis of religion is especially entrenched with regard to posts within the judicial system, election to Islamic labour councils and access to university education,” Goot said.

While the Iranian ambassador Mahmoud Movahhedi refused to meet with protestors, Kim Sattler, secretary of Unions ACT, asked police outside the embassy to pass on a letter.

The protest was part of a global action day of justice for Iranian workers, with similar events held overseas in places like Belgium, Thailand, Japan and Nigeria.