Martha Ojeda - Mexico

interview with
Martha Ojeda
Labor rights activist - Mexico
by Wayne Ellwood
New Internationalist magazine,
March 1997
You can tell straight away that Martha
Ojeda is a force to be reckoned with. The passion in her ringing,
rapid-fire Spanish is infectious as she describes the lives of
the half-million maquiladora (a literal translation means 'assembled
by machine') workers who labor in the low-wage assembly plants
tucked inside the Mexican border. She has been an activist, organizer
and worker in the maquiladoras herself for nearly 20 years.
Recently she became Director of the Coalition
for Justice in the Maquiladoras (CJM), a network of church, labor,
environmental and women's groups from Canada, the US and Mexico
that advocates workers' rights and improved environmental conditions
in the region.
Martha's first maquiladora job was with
the American pharmaceutical company, Johnson and Johnson, in her
home town of Nuevo Laredo in 1975.
'When I first started I felt lucky to
get that job,' she laughs. 'I can tell you I know how to use a
sewing machine. But I have seen our life along the border change
a lot in the last ten years, each day gets much worse than the
last.'
NAFTA, the free-trade deal between the
US, Mexico and Canada sparked a maquiladora building boom but
little has been done to prepare the communities for the surge
in growth. 'Thousands of families live in houses made of cardboard
packing cases and wooden shipping pallets,' she says bitterly.
'Most have no water or electricity or toilets. The companies even
charge for the old shipping crates. It can cost 10,000 pesos ($150)
to get enough to build a house.' It's ironic, she says, that the
Government provides roads, sewage, electricity and water to the
factories while the workers 'right next door' are given nothing.
Living conditions for most Mexicans have
plunged since the 1994 devaluation of the peso. Maquiladora workers,
who were earning an average $30-$50 for a 48-hour week, have seen
wages fall by half in the last three years. One study commissioned
by the CJM found that the average wage of $20-$30 a week allowed
for 'marginal survival' only.
What makes the situation doubly difficult
is that they must fight both the companies and Mexico's corrupt
trade-union movement. The state-sanctioned Confederation of Mexican
Workers (CTM) invariably weighs in on the side of the employer
when workers press grievances. Now, though, there are signs of
change. A grassroots movement has been growing throughout the
maquiladoras to create independent unions to challenge the 'business
unionism' of the CTM. And Martha has been one of the movement's
main activists.
She helped organize the battle to form
a new union at the Sony plant in Nuevo Laredo. 'When I started
with Sony in 1979 there were 25 employees. By 1982 there were
2,000 of us assembling audio and video cassettes. We wanted a
union that was independent and represented our views, with leaders
elected democratically. In April 1994 we had a peaceful demonstration
outside the factory to protest against fraudulent elections for
CTM union delegates. The company brought in fire trucks with water
cannons and police with clubs. They beat us badly and there were
many injuries. After that we decided to go on strike.'
Four days later the Governor sent in 150
police cars. Workers were attacked and the strike was broken.
Eventually, with the cooperation of CTM informants, the rank-and-file
activists were fired and blacklisted. Afterwards, Sony even lodged
a suit against 40 leaders of the independent union movement to
recover the costs of lost production. Now, says Martha, ' if those
workers, or even their children, try and earn a few pesos selling
on the streets they are harassed by police'.
Part of the CTM deal with the Government
includes what Martha calls 'a national accord' between the state,
the business sector and the CTM. In practice this means that while
salaries are controlled prices are not. 'Why is it,' asks Martha,
'that Mexican law says workers are entitled to share the profits
but we almost never see this money'?'
The US giant ALCOA provides one example.
The company employs about 13,000 workers in the border region
who assemble electrical components for car makers like Toyota
and Ford. Each employee makes around $30 a week. In 1994, when
the company made a profit of $443 million, each of its Mexican
employees was handed a profit-sharing check for $12.
'We took some workers to the ALCOA meeting
in Pittsburgh last year,' Martha explains, warming to the recollection.
'The workers told the meeting how they can no longer afford meat,
fruit, milk or vegetables and tried to explain that with inflation
it now takes almost a day's wages to buy one bottle of milk. Do
you know what the ALCOA executives said? That inflation is not
their responsibility. '
It's statements like provide fuel for
the independent union movement in the maquiladoras. And, even
though the victories have been few so far, Martha Ojeda's enthusiasm
has not been dampened. 'When I see the solidarity from groups
in Canada and the US, the faxes that come into our office, that
gives me courage and hope that we can create decent lives and
working conditions in the maquiladoras. I used to think I lived
in a little town lost on a map, alone in the world. Now know that
workers everywhere are struggling for the same thing.'
Coalition for Justice in the Maquiladoras,
USA: 310 W Ashby, San Antonio, TX USA 78228. Tel 210 732-8957
Fax 210 732-8324; Canada: c/o Jesuit Centre for Social Faith and
Justice, 947 Queen St E., Toronto, ON M4M lJ0. Tel: 416 469-1123,
Fax: 416 469 3579.
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