GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
complying with the laws of the country and they have been jailed for actually
upholding the laws of their own country.
When I went there I took the opportunity wearing a different hat, not
representing our federation, but representing the International Transport
Workers Federation, because I sit on its urban transport committee to meet our
sisters and brothers within transport unions in Turkey and they told me that
protest now is almost a thing of the past. Trade unionists who try to protest
against anything are likely to be jailed, beaten up and then maybe released
after a few days. I want to give you an example of this before I go on to
Kurdistan, because I think that it is really important that we have a focus on
Kurdistan, because by far, by far the people that are worst treated within
Turkey are the Kurds, but this malaise now is affecting all society. I will give
you this example and this will be close to all of you, because we are all trade
unionists. They are building a new airport in Istanbul and Erdoğan wanted the
airport completed before the elections because he saw that that would boost
his party. They threw away all the regulations around health and safety and
people started to die, workers were dying on an industrial scale. 50 odd people
were killed in the space of a year. So the unions had the temerity, the temerity,
they did not even call a strike, to call a protest, to call a protest. Do you know
what the response to that was? To jail all the union leaders. They were never
charged, but they were locked away for almost six months just for having the
temerity to call a demonstration. So that is the level of repression that we have
got there.
I was moved when we actually went to Kurdistan by what the people of
Kurdistan are putting up with. I had the privilege to meet Leyla and I am really
worried now for her health. The picture that you showed there shows that she
has deteriorated from when I saw her and she is now in a critical condition.
The stories that we were being told were harrowing. Paul Scholey from Morrish
Solicitors who is there at the back was there with us as well and Paul actually
said (and I hope you do not mind, Paul, that I say this) that actually what we
saw in Kurdistan was worse than what we had witnessed when we went to
Palestine, and that is saying something, that is absolutely saying something.
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