From Electronic Intifada:
Caterpillar destroys livelihoods in Europe and Palestine
Submitted by david on Mon, 03/25/2013 - 23:29
Palestinians pay tribute to Rachel Corrie on the tenth anniversary of her murder — with the aid of a Caterpillar bulldozer.
(Nedal Eshtayah / APA images)
(Nedal Eshtayah / APA images)
Like many Palestine solidarity activists, I’ve long regarded
Caterpillar as a callous firm. A trip to the Belgian city of Charleroi
over the weekend reinforced this view.
Caterpillar recently announced
that it is shedding 1,400 jobs from its Charleroi plant. The measure
has been presented as “indispensable” for reasons of “competitiveness”
by Nicolas Polutnik, the plant’s chief executive. His rationale merits
contempt. Caterpillar, which raked in a profit of almost $5.7 billion last year, is lengthening the dole queues in a city where unemployment already exceeds 20 percent.
War against workers
Far from having no other option than to “downsize,” it is waging an ideological war against workers’ rights. As the second largest
US employer in the country, Caterpillar plays an active role in the
American Chamber of Commerce in Belgium. This grouping has seized on the
global economic crisis to try and unravel hard-won gains by the
country’s labour movement. One of the chamber’s top targets at the
moment is automatic wage indexation — a requirement that employers increase their workers’ pay when the cost of living rises.
Caterpillar’s cruel disregard for the firm’s own employees chimes
completely with its support for Israeli apartheid. Documents published
by the Israeli embassy in Brussels list Caterpillar machines made in Charleroi as being among Belgium’s top exports to Israel.
Brazen dishonesty
Almost two years ago, I confronted
Paolo Fellin, a Caterpillar vice-president, over how his company’s
bulldozers were being used to destroy Palestinian homes. Fellin replied:
“If our products end up in certain parts of the world, then I have no
control over that.”
His dishonesty was brazen. Fellin’s area of responsibility included
the Middle East, so — unless he was incompetent — he knew a thing or two
about Zoko, which acts as Caterpillar’s Israeli dealer. Zoko’s own
website has a section
dedicated to its work for the Israeli army. The section explicitly
states that Zoko has tweaked vehicles so that they can be used for
military purposes: the distinctive black, yellow and white Caterpillar
logo can be seen on some of the vehicles in question. This amounts to an
admission of guilt in facilitating war crimes.
Weapon of occupation
Rachel Corrie is the best known victim of those crimes. It is only
correct that we salute her bravery and selflessness on the tenth
anniversary of her murder. Caterpillar cannot be allowed evade
responsibility for this abominable act. Yes, it was an Israeli soldier
who crushed her to death as she tried to stop him from demolishing a
home in Gaza. But the Caterpillar bulldozer he was driving had been
transformed especially so that it could serve as a weapon of
dispossession and occupation.
A decade later, Caterpillar’s vehicles are still being used for those purposes. As Joe Catron reported last week, Israeli troops have ruined farmland inside Gaza — with the aid of Caterpillar bulldozers — over the past few months.
While in Charleroi, I learned that shortly before management
announced the job losses, local Palestine solidarity activists had been
in contact with trade unionists representing Caterpillar’s workers.
Despite the company’s dealings with Israel, the unionists were
sympathetic to the Palestine solidarity movement, I was told. That
didn’t surprise me: the labour rights movement in Belgium is generally
supportive of efforts to dismantle Israeli apartheid.
It is entirely understandable that saving their own jobs is now the
top concern of Caterpillar’s workers. But this shouldn’t mean that
Palestine solidarity campaigners should stop reaching out to these
workers - or those who remain once the management implements its
“restructuring plan.”
Caterpillar appears intent on destroying livelihoods in both Europe
and Palestine. Taming this corporate monster requires building the
broadest possible alliance.
Boycott Caterpillar!
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