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When 'port security' targets workers

by Transport Workers Solidarity Committee (transportsolidarity [at] yahoo.com)
Who Are The Terrorists:US Port "Security" Is Targeting Workers and Anti-War Protesters
There will be a protest on Tuesday March 7 at 4:00 PM to protest the police terror attacks
on April 7, 2003 in the Port of Oakland

URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/03/05/EDGF0HI7QO1.DTL PORTS DEBATE
When 'port security' targets workers
- Jack Heyman
Sunday, March 5, 2006

At the start of the war in Iraq three years ago, several hundred demonstrators protested at the Port of Oakland. Oakland police officers opened fire on the protesters and longshoremen going to work with so-called "less-than-lethal" weapons, injuring dozens and arresting 25. Then-Police Chief Richard Word said the riot-gear clad police force was deployed at the behest of the maritime companies. The California Anti-Terrorism Information Center had warned police that "terrorists" could be in the demonstration.

A port safety and security plan for the San Francisco Bay, crafted primarily by the U.S. Coast Guard, didn't distinguish between terrorists, workers or anti-war protesters. The ACLU, the National Lawyers' Guild and even the U.N. Human Rights Commission condemned the action directed at people peacefully exercising their First Amendment rights. Now the Oakland City Council, without acknowledging any wrongdoing, is reaching out-of-court settlements with the longshore union and the 59 injured plaintiffs who sued. The settlements in the case, known as ILWU Local 10 vs. City of Oakland, have already reached nearly $2 million. The Oakland Police Department is revising its crowd-control policies, but few believe that will change anything.

Today, "port security" is on the lips of every politician in the rush to bolster the war on terrorism. Both Democratic and Republican parties voted for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Both voted for the "national security" measures, such as the Patriot Act, which President Bush deems necessary to carry out the wars abroad and at home. For dock workers, "port security" means intrusive background checks and cameras in rest areas. Will the next step be to ban port strikes, protests and public access to port parks?

Dock workers, who labor in one of the most dangerous industries, are angered when government officials target them as if they were terrorists. In 2002, then-Homeland Security Chief Tom Ridge threatened to mobilize troops against longshore workers if there were a strike. Yet, when maritime employers shut down all U.S. West Coast ports by locking out longshoremen, no action was taken against the companies. The police shooting of longshore workers demonstrating against the war in the Port of Oakland only reinforced the dock workers' anger at being targeted as terrorists.

Despite all of the rhetoric, "port security" remains a pork-barrel issue, and not at all focused on the working people whose lives and livelihood are grounded in and around the ports. Ninety-five percent of the containers unloaded by dockworkers are not checked for hazardous contents, although the technology exists to scan for toxic, radioactive or explosive cargos.

The recent furor over the Dubai-government-owned DP World taking over management of six American ports offers a glimpse of a sideshow. President Bush, whose friends and family have been ensconced in Middle East oil deals, asserts that opposition to the sale will create anti-U.S. views. Yet it is Bush's foreign policy and the war in Iraq that have enflamed the Arab world. The ruling monarchy in Dubai has been so loyal to the United States that it offers its port as a military support base in the U.S. war against Iraq, but anti-Arab sentiment stirred up by the ports debate has questioned its reliability in running American terminals.

Today, most marine terminals in the United States are owned by foreign companies, while ownership and security of the ports in which they operate remains in government hands. The maritime trade has been international since before Columbus accidentally landed in America while seeking a shorter navigational route to the Spice Islands. Hundreds of thousands of jobs are based on global trade.

U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., in seeking to exploit Bush's political bungling of the terminal operations sale and to look "strong" on port security, is proposing legislation that would require terminal operators to be American-owned. A retaliatory trade war launched by other countries could threaten many trade-based jobs and turn back the clock on world trade.

Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown, too, who is running for state attorney general on his new "tough on crime" image, has echoed the call for "port security."

Yet, as mayor, his version of "port security" was supporting the police in shooting wooden dowels at longshoremen and anti-war protesters at the terminal gates as the war began.

Real port security means inspecting all containers offloaded and ending imperialist wars abroad that spawn terrorists, not stifling the free-speech rights of those who work in the ports.
Oakland Rally

To remember and protest police suppression of an anti-war demonstration in the Port of Oakland at the start of the war in Iraq in 2003.

When: 4 p.m., Tuesday, March 7.

Where: Oakland City Hall, Frank H. Ogawa Plaza.

Who: Transport Workers Solidarity Committee, ILWU Local 10.

Jack Heyman is a longshoreman who lives and works in Oakland.

worker-solidarity.org
transportsolidarity [at] yahoo.com


PROTEST OAKLAND PORT
POLICE BRUTALITY APRIL 7, 2003
TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 4:00 P.M.
OAKLAND CITY HALL
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
jackheyman [at] comcast.net

There will be a protest rally at Oakland City Hall on Tuesday March 7th at
4PM. The rally, initiated by the Transport Workers Solidarity Committee and
endorsed by ILWU Local 10, the longshore union, will take place while the
City Council is meeting to take a final vote on the settlements in the case
of the bloody police attack on April 7, 2003 against anti-war demonstrators
and longshore workers at terminal gates in the port. This planned police
deployment shortly after the start of the war in Iraq used so-called
"non-lethal" weapons to stop peaceful anti-war demonstrators from
protesting, war profiteers, the maritime companies, American President
Lines and Stevedore Services of America. The attack was condemned by the UN
Human Rights Commission as one of the most violent acts of government
repression. Mayor Jerry Brown and City Council President Ignacio de la
Fuente, who have backed the police attack, received protest messages from
the late Ossie Davis, Alice Walker, and trade union organizations
representing millions of workers around the world.

It's necessary for all organizations that are concerned about civil
liberties, civil rights, trade union rights, police brutality to mobilize
your members to protest this police attack and the government cover-up.
Speakers at the rally will include some of the victims of the police attack
and messages of solidarity. Paying financial settlements to victims of
police brutality does not solve the problem of the continuous violation of
our democratic rights. Only by mobilizing in masses of working people can
we defend those rights for all.


Labor Solidarity Meeting
On The Anniversary of International Women’s Day

Thursday March 9, 2006 7:00 PM
Fellowship Of Humanity Hall
390 27th St./Broadway Oakland

The Union Busting Epidemic &
How To Fight It




Video Screening of "Lockout 484" &
"Solidarity Has No Borders, Lessons Of The Neptune Jade"

Join locked out Celanese workers from Boilermakers Local 484 in Meredosia, Illinois http://www.lockout484.org, Will Goodo a fired worker from Richmond Comcast, fired Berkeley Honda IAM1546 Shop Steward Nat Courtney, SEIU790, fired SF PUC former steward Phyllis Porter and other fired and victimized workers to learn about the growing union busting epidemic and what to do about it. Over 20,000 workers are fired every year for trying to form a union and more and more workers who have unions are facing discharges and discrimination for union membership.

Benefit For Fired Workers
$3.00 Donation Requested (no one turned away from lack of funds)

Also, there will be an BA solidarity picket in support of the Meredosia workers on Thursday March 9, 2006 at 4:00 PM at National Starch in Berkeley. This company is helping to attack the union. It is located at 746 Grayson St./7th St. in Berkeley, CA. Following the picket there will be a march to Berkeley Honda on 2600 Shattuck & Parker St to support striking IAM & IBT fired Honda workers.

Sponsored by Labor Video Project, Transport Workers Solidarity Committee TWSC, Bay Area Labor Action Coalition (BALC)
For information email lvpsf [at] labornet.org (415)282-1908

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