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Socialist Action /April 2001

Editorials

Defend the Charleston Five!

Five trade unionists, employed on the docks in Charleston, South Carolina, face imprisonment for the "crime" of defending their jobs against scabs. The five-members of ILA longshore Local 1422 and clerks and checkers Local 1771-are victims of a frame-up by the police, state officials, and the steamship bosses.

The AFL-CIO has initiated a campaign on behalf of the Charleston Five to demand that the charges be dropped. The defense effort deserves strong support by trade-union activists and civil liberties advocates around the country.

Bill Fletcher, the AFL-CIO liaison to the defense campaign, points out, "This is a very compelling case, one that brings together all the issues-voice at work and the right to organize, issues of racial justice, and issues of democracy."

Local 1422 has a mainly African American membership. Unionized longshore work is one of the few areas of employment in which Black workers in South Carolina can expect to significantly improve their standard of living. But the companies want to end that.

In late 1999, Nordana Lines notified the ILA locals that it would begin using non-union labor to unload its ships. The unions set up picket lines in response. On Jan. 20, 2000, the company, together with the police, staged a provocation in order to break the power of the unions. Some 600 police deployed armored vehicles, helicopters, patrol boats, and mounted units to guard about 20 scabs working on the ship Skodsborg. The cops also gathered in front of the union hall.

In the evening, when the unionists went toward the terminal to form their picket lines, they were pushed back by the police. Several officials of the union, including Local 1422 President Ken Riley, tried to create a buffer between the cops and the pickets in order to calm the situation. After a cop clubbed Riley on the head, a fight broke out.

The police arrested eight union members on the charge of misdemeanor trespassing, but state Attorney General Carlie Condon raised the charges to felony rioting. After a judge dismissed the cases at a preliminary hearing, citing a lack of evidence, Condon went to the grand jury, where he succeeded in obtaining felony indictments against five of the defendants. Condon says he wants "jail, jail, and more jail" for the five.

"The attorney general is planning to run for governor next time around, and he's trying to make a name for himself," says South Carolina AFL-CIO President Donna Dewitt. "I think he plans to make himself a name at the expense of these five guys."

As they await trial, the Charleston Five remain under a curfew requiring them to stay at home between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. unless they are working or attending a union meeting. They are not allowed to leave the state.

In the meantime, the non-union stevedore company that supplied the scab workers, WSI, is suing Local 1422 and Local 1771, the presidents of the union locals, and 27 other trade unionists whom the company said it recognized from photographs of peaceful picket lines. WSI is claiming $1.5 million and damages for its alleged losses.

The prosecution of the Charleston Five is a direct challenge to the right of the labor movement to set up picket lines without harassment by the police and threats of court action. We urge our readers to participate in Charleston Five defense committees that are being set up around the country with the support of the AFL-CIO and its member unions.

A call has been issued for an international dockworkers' day of action to take place in solidarity with the Charleston Five when their trial begins. For information on this event and on local defense committees, contact the South Carolina AFL-CIO at (803) 798-8300.

 

Stop Israeli Aggression!

More and more, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is looking like an undeclared war. In a recent episode, an Israeli military helicopter murdered a Palestinian militant James-Bond style, firing three missiles into the car that he was driving.

Palestinian officials have accused Israelis of assassinating 20 Palestinian militants since the start of the present conflict. Some 380 Palestinian civilians have also lost their lives.

Firefights between the Israeli army and Palestinian armed fighters have become a frequent occurrence, and often involve tanks and helicopters. Palestinian neighborhoods have been bombed and shelled. And in these conditions, the Israeli right, with the wind of Sharon's overwhelming electoral victory in its sails, is calling for a "crackdown."

What could a "crackdown" mean other than a general military assault aimed at crushing and atomizing the Palestinian community? Such a massive terror operation would be a major setback for world civilization, setting the stage for future murderous wars in the Middle East .

Thus, the stakes in the present conflict in Palestine are very high for all people who value peace, democracy, and justice. It is essential that they raise their voices against the escalating Israeli aggressiveness. This is especially important in the United States, the main imperialist sponsor of the Israeli state, which is founded on the dispossession and repression of the Palestinian people.

 

Socialist Action /April 2001