Iraq union agreement with Iraq ministry

Published: Oct. 11, 2007 at 4:17 PM

BASRA, Iraq, Oct. 11 (UPI) -- One of Iraq’s two major oil unions has apparently signed a truce with its nemesis, the federal government, over challenging the draft oil law.

The Al-Sabah newspaper reports the General Unions of Oil Employees in Basra, also known as the General Union of Oil Workers, reached an agreement at a recent meeting.

The two sides have been at odds over a variety of working conditions demands, as well as a draft oil law that the unions claim was made without enough input and contained oil contracts they fear will give too much to foreign and private oil companies.

Faraj Rabat Mezban, GUOE’s director of culture and media, said 19 union leaders met with Nabil Ahmed, a representative for the Ministry of National Security.

That ministry includes the oil protection force, which guards oil sector installations, and other forces and confronted striking oil workers in June.

In the agreement the GUOE affirmed the Parliament is the sole legislative body in Iraq but that anyone is able to object or comment on proposed or passed legislation, a reference to the ongoing debate over the oil law.

The union also agreed to scale back on threats, provocation and civil disobedience over unmet demands, which some members have made to the media.

The workers and ministry officials will put together a list of demands, which will be taken to the Council of Ministers and the Ministry of Oil.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints


NASA selects small business projects (21 min)
Toronto man wins Silverdome auction (32 min)
Watercooler Stories
Jockstrip: The world as we know it.
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
UPI Sports Calendar for Tuesday, Nov. 24
fark
Katie Couric, you look good, won't you back that azz up, you's a fine anchorwoman, won't you back...
Ft. Lauderdale man smokes 115,000th joint after years of averaging 10 a day, but never gets high....
The more germs a child is exposed to during early childhood, the better their immune system in later...
Kirk Camerowned
Photoshop this hypno-gizmo
Nearly six in ten Mexicans say living in the U.S. is much better than back in Old Mexico. Lou Dobbs'...