Originally Posted by Rana
Well, you are wrong once again, there has been violence on both sides, as always!
Management violence
Management violence usually takes the form of bullying of or aggression against union organisers or sympathisers in the workplace. It is rarely if ever delivered by employers or senior managers directly, but by front-line managers (e.g. chargehands or foremen) or by other employees incited by management. In a number of well-known cases, however, violent action has been taken against union workers, and unions have charged that this was at the instigation of management or of government bodies sympathetic to management's aims. Well known examples include:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chea_Vichea, leader of the Free Trade Union of Workers of the
Kingdom of Cambodia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia on January 22, 2004.[1] He had been dismissed by the INSM Garment Factory (located in the
Chum Chao District of Phnom Penh), as a reprisal for helping to establish a trade union at the company.
Isidro Gil, a leader of the
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nationa...dustry_Workers at the Bogotá - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia bottling plant of the Coca-Cola company who was shot dead at the plant on December 5, 1996. Four other leaders of the union have been killed since 1994, as have other union leaders in
Colombia.
Shankar Guha Niyogi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, a leader of the Mukti Morcha union movement in the
India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, on September 27, 1991,[2] allegedly by a hired assassin, in the middle of a major dispute about the regularisation of workers' contracts in the steel and engineering industries. The alleged assassin and two industrialists were convicted of his murder but released on appeal; their release is itself now subject to appeal.
Victor G. Reuther - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, a leader of the United Auto Workers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, who survived an assassination attempt in
1949, with the loss of his right eye.[3]
Violence against union leaders can occur within a highly charged political context, and is rare in straightforward industrial disputes - not least because historically, management has often had ready recourse to the law to enforce its position. The
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolpuddle_martyrs were Penal transportation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and firearms by the police.
[edit] Union violence
Union violence is rarely aimed at managers or employers. Attacks on employers' property do occur - the word Sabotage - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia derives from French workers' practice of hurling their clogs (sabots) into machinery as a form of protest - in the furtherance of industrial disputes. A modern example was the destruction of electrical transformers by members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/I]]
The targets of true union violence are normally nonunion workers.[
Wikipedia:Citation needed - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.[4]
Examples of union violence include:
2004 AFL-CIO push their way into a Republican field office in Orlando FL, breaking the wrist of one staffer. AFL-CIO member Van Church is unrepentant: "If his wrist was fractured, it's a result of his own actions in jerking the door the way he did."
1999 - During protests by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Local 1547 against a non-unionized workforce getting a contract, picketers threatened and assaulted workers, spat at them, sabotaged equipment, and shot guns near workers. The Alaska Supreme Court ruled that the union had engaged in "ongoing acts of intimidation, violence, destruction of property"
.
1999 - During protests by Laborers' International Union of North America - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Local 310, picketers punched a worker, and threw coffee cups at workers.
1999 - Members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Local 120 were convicted of striking a worker, and imprisoning another one in a truck trailer.
1998 - Teamsters Orestes Espinosa, Angel Mielgo, Werner Haechler, Benigno Rojas, and Adrian Paez beat, kicked, and stabbed a United Parcel Service - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia worker (Rod Carter) who refused to strike, after Carter received a threatening phone call from the home of Anthony Cannestro, Sr., president of Teamsters Local 769.
1998 - During the Communications Workers of America U.S. West strike a worker was threatened with a gun, and a manager was hit in the head with a rock.
1990 - on the first day of The Daily News (New York) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Strikers followed replacement laborers and threatened them with baseball bats. Strikers then started threatening newsstands with arson, or stole all copies of the Daily News and burned them in front of the newsstands. Independent sources estimated over a thousand reports of threats. The newspaper recorded over two thousand legal violations. The Police Department, recorded more than 500 incidents. 50 strikers were arrested. Bombings of delivery trucks became common, with 11 strikers arrested on one day in October.
1984 - Taxi driver David Wilkie was killed by NUM strikers while driving a non-striking worker during the UK mining strike
1983 - Eddie York was murdered for crossing a United Mine Workers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (UMW) picket line.
1926 - Striking workers derail The Flying Scotsman train with over 100 passengers on board
Union violence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia