NEWS & LETTERS, December 1997
Docker solidarity stymies scab ship
Oakland, Cal.--Several hundred came to a rally called by the Liverpool Dockers Defense
Committee outside the Alameda County Courthouse, Nov. 18. We were celebrating the victory
of having kept the Neptune Jade from unloading its scab cargo in Oakland at the end of
September. Part of the Singapore-based Neptune Jade's cargo had been loaded by scabs in
Thamesport, England, where the Mersey Docks & Harbour Co. (MD&HC) is the port
authority.
MD&HC locked out 500 dock workers in Liverpool in 1995 because they refused to
cross a picket line there. The International Longshore Workers Union (ILWU) honored the
picket lines set up spontaneously in Oakland by labor, Left and student supporters. The
Oakland picket line had been set up as part of an international action campaign in
solidarity with the Liverpool Dockers. Not only was the Neptune Jade not unloaded in
Oakland, it was also turned away from Vancouver. Japanese dockers unloaded only cargo that
could be reached without touching scab containers.
An employers' group is now going after any picketers they can identify, claiming they
violated a temporary restraining order limiting the number of pickets. They singled out
whoever they could identify to take legal action against: picket captain Robert Irminger,
a member of the Inland Boatman's Union; Jack Heyman, Local 10 ILWU executive board member;
the Labor Party's Golden Gate Chapter; the Peace and Freedom Party, and even the Laney
College Labor Studies group. Irminger was offered a settlement of a suspended one-day jail
sentence and a payment of a $2,000 fine for employer's legal fees if he would name the
other individuals and organizations on the picket line.
This McCarthyite tactic is being used against all the defendants. The chair of the
Laney College Labor Studies Department, Albert Lannon, has sent out a special appeal. He
said the Laney Labor Studies Club participated in a picket line only before the temporary
restraining order limiting the number of pickets. Now he's being asked to inform on his
students and isn't getting any support from the college administration. He's asking for
community support.
The bosses are taking such extreme measures against academic freedom, the First
Amendment right to peacefully demonstrate and to free speech because this speech had a
dramatic effect. As Irminger said at the rally: "There is a global assault by
shipping companies to break unions worldwide. They are going after the ILWU no holds
barred because it is a beacon to all dock workers. We put our thumbs on the pulse of
commerce. Stopping work at the point of production really inflames them."
--Ron B.
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