Ahwazi Municipality Workers Jailed For Protesting Over Six Months Of Unpaid Salaries
By Rahim Hamid
16 June, 2016
Countercurrents.org
Countercurrents.org
Twenty-four Ahwazi
Arab municipality workers in the regional capital were arrested by
Iranian regime security personnel on Monday, June 13 for participating
in a peaceful sit-in demonstration in front of the local municipality
building to protest against non-payment of their salaries for six
months. Seventy staff members at the municipality headquarters in
District 4 of the capital, Ahwaz, took part in the demonstration after
months of complaints over non-payment of their wages failed to elicit
any response from the management.
Despite the peaceful nature of the
protest, scores of Iranian security forces carried out a raid to clear
the demonstrators away from the area outside the municipality building,
arresting the 24 protesters and transporting them to an unknown
location, according to a report from the Iranian ILNA News Agency.
The protest followed a similar sit-in
demonstration by the municipality personnel on the previous day,
Sunday, June 12, during which the protesters demanded that the council
members put pressure on the management to pay their long-overdue
salaries. The INLA report also stated that the municipality workers are
suffering from severe financial hardship as a result of the council’s
failure to resolve the salary payment issue, which has been worsened by
the failure of senior officials to recognise their legitimate demands
for their salaries.
Speaking on condition of anonymity,
one of the protesters said that municipality officials had promised to
pay the outstanding wages before the holy month of Ramadan, a promise
they had already broken. The worker said that despite the fact that the
first week of the holy month had already passed, there had been no
payment of the overdue wages, adding that he is unable to afford the
most basic living costs for himself and his family or to provide
foodstuffs for Ramadan, especially in light of rising costs over
Ramadan.
In similar news, street vendors in
the regional capital continue to be subjected to harassment and
persecution by Iranian municipality agents, with one vendor, Mehdi
Afravi, committing suicide on May 6 by throwing himself under a train in
despair after his stall and goods – his sole source of income - were
arbitrarily confiscated by regime agents.
On May 16, the agents surrounded the
street vendors’ market in Naderi Street in Ahwaz and prevented would-be
customers from entering, thus preventing the already struggling vendors
from earning a living. The municipality’s actions are believed to be
revenge for the vendors’ protests a few days beforehand against
persecution and injustice over their conditions.
Even the regime’s official news
agencies and some political figures have acknowledged the severity of
the economic crisis and injustices affecting Ahwaz and other areas of
Iran.
The Tasnim News Agency, affiliated to
the regime’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), on Wednesday
(June 15) quoted Iranian MP Jalal Kazemi who said, “We have to
acknowledge that the domestic situation, especially in the realm of
livelihoods and the economy is not befitting to the Islamic Republic of
Iran’s status in the region and the world. The economic growth rate is
very low, if not negative, while unemployment among the young,
particularly the educated, is like a time bomb ticking down towards
zero.”
Meanwhile, the MP for Al -Mohammareh,
Abdullah Sameri, heavily criticized the systemic and racist expulsion
of Ahwazi Arab workers from the state-owned marine company in the town
of Al -Mohammareh, condemning the authorities’ unjustified and
prejudiced policies towards Ahwazi Arabs in the region. Sameri said,
“While we are in the beginning of the holy month of Ramadan, instead of
making a positive difference to the tables of the deprived people of
Al-Mohammareh, the company has decided to get rid of 40 Ahwazi workers
who are the main breadwinners for their families, leaving them to suffer
from this dismissal.” The MP further condemned the Iranian oil
minister, BijanZanganeh, for his ministry’s failure to invest in any way
in the region to benefit the Ahwazi Arab peoples despite the fact that
the oil and gas resources in Al-Ahwaz fuel 80 percent of the Iranian
economy.
These latest incidents come not long
after another Iranian oil refining company in Mahshor (also known as
Mahshar) arbitrarily dismissed many Ahwazi Arab personnel for unknown
reasons, replacing them with incomers from mostly Persian provinces of
Iran. This move was made despite calls by local authorities and MPs for
the state to review its discriminatory policies and halt discrimination
against the indigenous Ahwazi Arab people, who face systematic
oppression under Tehran’s hard-line theocratic regime.
Rahim Hamid is an Ahwazi Arab freelance journalist based in the USA
No comments:
Post a Comment