Russian Workers Are Ready to Defend Chrysotile Industry
ASBEST, Russia, April 10, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --
- Residents of Asbest and the International Trade Unions Movement "For Chrysotile" organized an event to draw attention to the problems of the chrysotile industry
- Members of the construction workers trade union also joined the flash mob
One hundred bright green balloons with the words "We're for Chrysotile!" added color to the cloudless sky accompanied by the sound of "industrial fireworks," or explosions in the quarry of the world's largest Bazhenovsky field of chrysotile asbestos.
(Photo: http://mma.prnewswire.com/media/487331/Movement_for_Chrysotile.jpg )
This is how the recent 100-year anniversary of Uralasbest mine industrial complex trade union was celebrated. Residents of Asbest of the Sverdlovsk Region occasionally organize extraordinary public events to draw the attention of the public to issues in the chrysotile industry. On this particular March day, participants from the visiting session of the executive committee of the trade union of construction workers of Russia from Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Krasnodar and Samara Regions joined in the flash mob.
Asbest residents (and the nucleus of the International Alliance of Chrysotile trade unions) have been defending the interests of the world chrysotile industry for over ten years in Geneva at sessions of the parties to the Rotterdam convention, where the lobbyists of substitute materials work to include this natural mineral in the list of prohibited dangerous chemical substances. Not without reason, these Ural activists find support not only from all four corners of Russia, but also in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, India, Cuba and other countries.
There have been countless projects in the span of the anti-asbestos war, including scientific and medical investigations, excursions to the enterprises with the release of "secrets" on the working process, large-scale rallies in different countries, professional contests, marches, and motor rallies.
"In 1997, the trade union organized a march from Asbest to Ekaterinburg: the group of workers from the industrial complex marched to the Ural capital to prove their readiness by all means to fight for their rights," recalls Valery Yustus, chairman of the Sverdlovsk regional organization of the construction workers of Russia trade union. "Last year we also organized a 50-kilometer motor rally so the workers of Uralasbest mine, their colleagues from the Orenburg Region, the Republic of Kazakhstan, and city-forming enterprises Sukhoy Log and Beloyarsky could celebrate the international day of chrysotile protection. I'm not saying it's impossible to go to Geneva either, because we are at a risk of losing everything if we do not prove to the whole world that workers still live long, happy and safe lives engaged in chrysotile production. "They want to take that all away from us," says Yustus. "But not on my watch they won't!"
To better express the idea of the desire to quietly work and raise their children without worrying about tomorrow to those who do not understand it, several public unions have been organized in Asbest, such as the Youth Union of the Chrysotile Industry, and the Women for Safe Labor and Social Stability movement. The association of veterans also united over 15 thousand people whose employment in the chrysotile industry is between 30-40 years.
Extra information: [email protected]
Useful links:
Website of the International Trade Union Movement for Chrysotile:
www.nochrysotileban.com
Twitter of the Chrysotile Association Non-Profit Organization:
https://twitter.com/Nochrysotileban
Yourword project website:
www.yourword.info
SOURCE International Trade Unions Movement "For Chrysotile"
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