Editor?s note: Developments since this interview was conducted earlier this year have
borne out the predictions expressed by the CNT-Iberia representative interviewed below.
Last week, Reuters reported: ---- ?Cutbacks at Iberia could force Madrid?s Barajas airport
to allow other airlines to use the terminal previously reserved for the exclusive use of
the Spanish flag carrier and its Oneworld alliance partners, Spain?s industry minister
said on Thursday. ---- Loss-making Iberia, part of the International Airlines Group (IAG)
along with British Airways, is undergoing a major restructuring and has shed thousands of
staff and a number of routes to cut costs, reducing traffic at the airport. ----
Passenger numbers at Barajas airport so far this year are down by almost 4.5 million on
the same period last year, largely because of Iberia?s reduced services.
In the first eight months of the year, 26.6 million travelers used the airport, a 14.3
percent decline year on year. In August, Barcelona?s El Prat airport overtook Madrid in
monthly traffic statistics.
IAG said in August that a recovery was beginning to take hold at Iberia thanks to the
restructuring. Losses at Iberia, Europe?s biggest carrier to Latin America, fell to 35
million euros ($47.6 million) in the three months to June 30, from 93 million euros in the
same quarter last year.?
?Solidarity among the workers must be the cornerstone of our defense as a class beyond the
boundaries imposed by states?
Translated and reprinted from El Libertario
On Wednesday March 13 in Spain an agreement was signed between the unions UGT (General
Workers Union), CCOO (Workers? Commissions), SITCPLA, Asetma, USO and CTA-Flight. We
interviewed the comrades of CNT-Iberia, who are developing a struggle for the rights of
workers.
Part 1
When and how did the process of dismantling Iberia begin?
This is a long process, but it can be said to have begun with the merger of Iberia and
British Airways, to form the holdling IAG in November 2009. The fact is that there are
previous stages that parallel the process of disintegration of the public sector in Spain
since the 80s. For example, considerable business activity has been outsourced as a way to
divide workers and gradually destroy social and labor rights previously won by the
workers. In 1994, under the PSOE government , European laws forced a liberalization of the
aviation market in the interests of ?very necessary and beneficial ? competitiveness ,
which led to the privatization of Iberia in 1996 under the PP government . Since then the
company has been outsourcing ever more of its operations and production, such as the
management of certain airports, the transportation of goods within airports, flight
simulators, catering, security, transportation of flight crews, etc.
Thus we come to November 2010, the date formalizing the merger with British Airways and
the creation of IAG, the new holding company that combined the two companies. The merger
was presented to the workers as a joining of equals, where both companies would increase
their growth potential and strengthen their position in the aviation market, ending up as
the third largest airline company in the world by revenue. One year later, in November
2011, the creation of low-cost subsidiary, Iberia Express, was announced, which really has
been the spearhead of the dismantling of Iberia, as it has been used to outsource on a
massive-scale the productive resources of Iberia. It will lead, almost certainly, to the
absorption of Iberia by the English company in 2015.
What is the official reason of the company for the creation of Iberia Express?
According to the company, the creation of Iberia Express was the best and only way to make
Iberia profitable and competitive, to improve its competitiveness in the market of short
and medium haul flights (national and European-bound flights), dominated supposedly by the
low-cost model. In this model, companies like Ryanair have slashed prices thanks to
subsidies paid by nations to fly to certain airports. Iberia Express was not only a path
to saving Iberia but, according to the company, a way to create 500 jobs at a time when
the country is facing a serious crisis, and a means to maintain existing jobs and working
conditions in Iberia. A year later, we can see from the results the real direction of the
company: 3,141 layoffs, steep salary cuts, and the loss of important labor rights.
What actions did the workers take prior to the first situation? What actions did C.N.T ?
Iberia take?
From the beginning, the workers have been skeptical at the creation of Iberia Express. In
fact, the situation is understood by most workers as a process similar to that of a few
years ago, between 2006 and 2009, with the creation, also by Iberia, of the low cost
carrier Click Air. This resulted in the covert outsourcing of much of the production and
of the productive means of Iberia (in the form of aircraft and commercial routes) and the
virtual disappearance of Iberia from the Barcelona airport. In 2009, the low-cost
subsidiary created by Iberia, Click Air, merged and was absorbed by Vueling, a Catalan low
cost airline headed by Josep Piqu?, a former Minister of Industry in the People?s Party.
Vueling has now become the leading Spanish airline as measured by the number of
destinations offered, the second by fleet size, and the third largest airline by passenger
numbers.
Faced with the threat posed by the creation of Iberia Express to the future of our jobs,
the CNT union section in Iberia took the initiative by reaching out to other unions in the
company with the goal of creating an alliance, through labor unity, that could face this
new threat posed by Iberia Express.
The majority unions did not respond to this call for unity. Nor did any of their
offshoots, leaving the CNT with, initially, the CGT, the CESHA (that would later abandon
it following an agreement signed by the CCOO and UGT), the CTA (ground employees), SEPLA
(the pilots), and STAVLA (cabin crew and flight attendants). That led to various protests,
demonstrations, rallies and call for strikes between February and May 2012.
What has been the role of the majority unions in creation of Iberia Express and the merger
of Iberia with the British?
Here it is necessary to show that the majority unions in Spain, are in reality state
institutions in the service of the incumbent government, more a state institution than all
those agencies funded primarily by state budgets. These organizations do not operate in
the interests of the working class, but rather according to their own interests as
organizations and in the interests of their ruling bureaucratic elites. Where these
bureaucratic elites are transformed into professionals defending workers? interests,
funded and supported by agents of power, they have come to be an important part of the
process of legitimation of the system of capitalist inequality itself.
Typically, as has been done for many years in Spain, they played the tactic of
demobilizing the workers. Since December, the minority unions among the ground-based
workers ? the CNT, CGT and CTA CESHA (land) ? denounced the consequences that would follow
the creation of this low-cost air carrier. This culminated in the January 2012
announcement of a demonstration of several thousand workers of the company and with a call
for imminent strikes scheduled for February. The situation was good and the workers were
well disposed towards the idea of increasing pressure upon the company. Then, two days
after the demonstration, the CCOO and UGT as a unit signed an employment security
agreement which entailed the preservation of jobs and working conditions through 2015. The
agreement has now been revealed as worthless and as a mere instrument for social peace for
as long as necessary, as the company continues to cement its strategic plan, leading the
company into a position of economic losses that could justify the labor restructuring
facing us today in Iberia, and the future dismantling of the company.
Although the CNT section in the company continued to denounce this corporate strategy and
the majority trade unions and tried to keep pressure on the company by calling for
intermittent shutdowns over the course of more than three months, together with CTA on the
ground and with STAVLA and SEPLA in the air, the efforts to demobilize labor militants
were effective, making it impossible to recover the needed pressure upon Iberia and
obliging us to call off the strikes in May of that year. What hurt the CNT section was a
lawsuit by the company for the illegal strike. Although Iberia won the suit initially,
there remains the possibility of taking the company to the Supreme Court and appealing the
dismissal of the entire strike committee of the STAVLA union (flight crews). Currently,
thanks to alternate means, 5 of the 14 dismissed are back.
Part II
Does the economic crisis in the Spanish state have to do with the dismantling of Iberia?
Although the economic crisis logically could have something to do with a reduction in
company profits, it does not justify in any way the proposed restructuring, much less the
dismantling of Iberia. This as I said before, was a plan drawn up in advance with the aim
of using Iberia to prop up British Airways, which has a debt of some 4,500 million for the
pension fund of its employees. It is designed to increase the short-term profits of their
shareholders, most of which are financial institutions. Demolishing working conditions and
workers? rights Iberia, at a time when the Spanish laws have changed, with the excuse of
the crisis and of incentivizing employees, actually encouraged layoffs of the workers, the
lowering of wages, and facilitated dismissals and removed obstacles that prevented
companies from escaping collective agreements.
According to state and private media, Iberia is no longer profitable and it is almost
impossible for it to sustain itself ? it is true? Or this situation is being artificially
generated and if so how?
The media are also funded by different elite groups, when not directly belonging to them,
and the confidence of the media in the information provided by the government or
businesses limits the information we receive, establishing a bias favoring the interests
of these groups.
This particular view of the economic situation of Iberia promoted by the media is the
expression of the interests of Iberia management. It is a way of generating more favorable
public opinion, as much among the workers as in the general population, toward the
supposed need to restructure the company, so that it is understood that the only way to
keep thousands of jobs is by accepting the measures proposed by Iberia.
However, the reality is quite different. Iberia has been a fully profitable until this new
direction for the company was taken, led by S?nchez-Lozano and Antonio Vazquez, who were
elevated to leadership of the company by the financial group Bankia (the majority
shareholder of Iberia). Previously, the company had accumulated more than ten years
consecutive profit and had generated some 2,500 million euros in cash reserves. In fact,
it can still be a profitable company with good growth potential if it were to change its
current economic and trade strategy. The outsourcing of its productive capacities has made
it third among its competitors, Vueling, Iberia Express, Air Nostrum and British Airways.
So that can explain the looting and the imminent labor restructuring, the function of
which will be to decrease labor costs to the minimum through the destruction of the labor
rights won by the workers and as a prelude to the partitioning and dismantling of the company.
Part III
What are the consequences for the workers?
No doubt thousands of layoffs will be added to the already agreed upon 3,141 layoffs; and
there will be a gradual loss of labor rights and a cheapening of our work.
What actions is CNT ? IBERIA taking?
The CNT has actively participated in the strikes called by the majority trade unions,
understanding that our participation in these mobilizations was necessary. But we had
little confidence in the CCOO and UGT. We called for a further three day strike over
Easter after it was called off by the CCOO and UGT as a result of the government-mediated
agreement reached by these unions and their affiliates on March 14. We called it because
we understood that the agreement did not solve the underlying problems and did not
guarantee the viability of the company, and, therefore, the future of our jobs. Nor were
that the sacrifices demanded of us in any way adequately made up for by what the company
offered us in return. But it was called off a few days before it was to happen, reminding
us once again of the demobilizing function of these so called majority ?unions.? They had
ended the labor struggle again, signing ? with the encouragement and approval of the
workers ? a deal brokered by the government and tailored to the interests of Iberia.
Here it is necessary to explain that contrary to the general data which place the
membership over 14% in the Spanish state, in Iberia the percentage may be around 80%, of
which CCOO and UGT can boast 70% on land. So fear, patronage, and social submissiveness
and reluctance towards disobedience make the work of the union a tough task.
In the CNT, we continue working and organizing with the other minority unions and worker
militants within the company. This is done with the aim of creating the necessary
awareness that we know we will need sooner rather than later to continue resisting the
future that we have foreseen ? to try to defend ourselves against the real violence,
generated by capitalism with its system of exploitation.
How can we act in solidarity with your struggle from other countries?
The truth is that the best way of showing solidarity with us is to publicize and spread
the conflict in all those places where Iberia still has presence. In fact, sometimes the
conflict has been promoted through the AIT so that comrades can develop actions as they
see fit. This is done with the intention of raising awareness of the conflict outside of
the Spanish airports and of putting pressure on the company by extending the labor
conflict beyond the national boundaries that characterize the company, though not the
scope of its activity.
In the CNT we understand that workers? solidarity must be the cornerstone of our defense
as a class, beyond the boundaries imposed by states, because we are all of the same class,
the working class, and all of us should share the same desire: for the elimination of this
system of oppression and exploitation, of this inhuman system based on the inequality of
men and peoples, capitalism, to be replaced by a system of equality and justice, by which
man can develop freely. What is essential in this globalized world, dominated by a global
labor market, is to find a joint strategy between revolutionary organizations both within
and outside our borders that can give strength and substance to the workers? struggle.
Working translation by Steven Fake
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