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Burmese Refugees Battle Oppression in U.S. Plant

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by James Parks, Nov 3, 2009

Photo credit: Three Rivers Coalition for Justice  
  Aung Oo, foreground, and Tim Hand, far right, are on strike in support of their co-workers at W&K Steel.  
 
   

Aung Oo fled his native Burma with his family to escape the brutality, ethnic violence and repression of that country’s military dictatorship.

After being allowed to legally migrate to the United States under the refugee resettlement program, he faces another kind of oppressionworking for an employer that pays him half what he should make and that forces him and his co-workers, both native and foreign, to work in unsafe conditions.

So on Sept. 8, Aung Oo and a U.S.-born employee, Tim Hand, went on strike against W&K Steel on behalf of all the other 35 workers in the plant, located in Rankin, Pa., just outside Pittsburgh. They are still on strike.

In a letter to W&K, they demanded that management correct such egregious safety violations as water running down into electrical panels, frayed extension cords with exposed wires in standing water, lack of ventilation, exposure to extreme cold weather and lack of safety training. They also demanded an end to discrimination and equal pay for equal work.

(You can help gain a fair deal for the W&K workers by writing to the company’s owner, Ed Wilhelm, and demanding that he immediately stop exploiting the workers and meet with the Three Rivers Coalition for Justice to resolve these issues. Write to: Ed Wilhelm, W&K Steel, 98 Antisbury Place, Rankin, PA 15104.)

Several W&K workers described their experiences to AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka and spoke to a group of international labor leaders at the AFL-CIO Convention in Pittsburgh. The workers also will testify Nov. 13 at a National Workers’ Rights Hearing sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance (APALA). The hearing will be at the AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Talking with Trumka, one refugee told how he and his family of five live in a small two-bedroom apartment. He works an average of 50 hours a week and grosses approximately $25,000 annually, with overtime. Other workers say they are expected to run large presses and shears that cut steel beams, but have no guards to protect against severing fingers and hands.

The American-born workers at W&K don’t fare much better. They say they must endure unsafe working conditions, with workloads increasing and time to safely perform the tasks decreasing. They also say the company’s health plan is unaffordable and the pay is low.

Hand said he is on strike because the way workers, native and foreign, are treated is dangerous.

Exploitation, verbal abuse and disrespect toward the refugees is a major issue. The refugees are paid half of what I make, even though they perform the same work as me. This is wage discrimination in my eyes, and it is not right. Just because they do not speak English very well does not give anybody the right to exploit them or pay them less.

The Burmese refugees came to the United States to escape oppression, only to find themselves working in unjust conditions here, says Chad Rink, an organizer with the Ironworkers and a member of the Three Rivers Coalition for Justice, which is assisting the workers.

“The refugees feared challenging the unsafe working environment, shoddy housing and substandard wages because they are afraid they will lose their jobs and be forced back to Burma,” Rink says.

Aung Oo says he is on strike because America is supposed to be a land of opportunity and equality.

I stood up and went on strike not only for myself but for all the refugee workers in the shop because our community is suffering. I know that we are exploited.

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8 Comments

  1. uberVU - social comments on 03.11.2009 at 21:07

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by PeoplesWorld: AFL-CIO: Burmese Refugees Battle Oppression in U.S. Plant http://bit.ly/2igB1r...

  2. Frisco Worker on 04.11.2009 at 12:22 (Reply)

    A true example of cooperation between native and foreign born workers struggling together to right wrongs. For all the anti-immigrant bigots who post on this site it probably won’t make any difference because they would side with the bosses when push comes to shove since it is in the bosses interest to pit native against foreign born workers and has been since the beginning of time.

    1. IllegalsGoHome on 04.11.2009 at 18:02 (Reply)

      I have been posting to this site for quite a long time now and I don’t recall any ‘anti-immigrant’ posts. Unless, of course, you happen to be referring to people just like me who DO post as anti-illegal. There are immigrants and there are illegals. THEY ARE NOT THE SAME THING! If you immigrate to this country by obeying the law and coming here legally you are an immigrant. If, on the other hand, you ‘break in’ by completely ignoring our immigration laws and thereby showing extreme disrepect for our country you are an illegal. And just like an immigrant is not an illegal and an illegal is not an immigrant neither is an anti-illegal an anti-immigrant. Come here legally and we’ll welcome and accept. Come here illegally and we won’t. It’s as simple as that.

      1. Frisco Worker on 05.11.2009 at 12:08 (Reply)

        How many immigrants do you think get here because they are anti-working class and/or have plenty of money in their pocket ie: Cuban gusano’s, Zionists supporters, rich capitalists willing to spend their money in U.S., etc.. Instead of fighting the poor and working class immigrants about they being “illegal” it is our responsibilty to reach out to them and try to organize the unorganized.

  3. Dr on 04.11.2009 at 18:24 (Reply)

    Frisco worker I have said this before I am not anti-immigrant I am anti-illegal immigrant.These people if the story is true and I have no reason to doubt it are here legally.They came the way all should come through the proper channels and no one has the right to treat them this way.I don’t want illegals treated this way either but i most certainly do not believe they should be shoved ahead of the legal immigrant.We need to seal our borders enforce our immigration laws and then deal with the illegal immgration problem.To simply make them citizens is not the answer.Whatever job they have here is at the expense of some legal citizen any type of healthcare,welfare,or education is at the expense of some legal citizen.They didn’t come here as refugees they came here as SCABS.

    1. IllegalsGoHome on 05.11.2009 at 17:23 (Reply)

      Dr we’re just wasting our time on people like Frisco Worker. He obviously is pro-illegal and sees no wrong in ‘unlawful occupation’ of our country.

  4. Dr on 05.11.2009 at 20:31 (Reply)

    IllegalsGoHome,I know the only thing that will let him see how wrong he is is when some illegal has his job or his childrens job.By then it will be to late for him to understand that they are not just poor folks looking for a better life,they certainly aren’t refugees from some war torn 3rd world country.Their country is wealthy just more corrupt than ours,they should be trying to change their homeland not looking for rights in ours.

  5. Minnesotan on 12.11.2009 at 20:06 (Reply)

    For my job, I help legal refugees, including Burmese refugees, find and keep employment and get off of welfare, which changes them from recipients of government assistance to taxpayers who contribute to your Social Security and other benefits.

    The refugees and immigrants of today are the American citizens of tomorrow. I am descended from refugees and voluntary immigrants.

    Refugees like Dr. Albert Einstein have made America strong. At my workplace, I work with 90% Hmong people. One of my co-workers is related to Kham Xiong, who was killed at Ft. Hood. Kham’s family helped rescue American pilots shot down over Laos in the Vietnam War era. My Swedish economic immigrant great-grandfather earned medals serving in the US Army. It was easier to legally immigrate in the days of Ellis Island.

    Today I showed the article above to my Job Club class who are Burmese and other refugees. We talked about the union idea and workers’ rights. Burma (now redubbed “Myanmar” by the current government), used to be known as the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) and now is run by the same people under the more PR-friendly name State Peace and Development Council. They had to leave Burma or die.

    Now they are making “Made in USA” products, getting organized as this story shows, and learning they don’t have to be alone in standing up to unfair employers.

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