Striking Workers at Liberian Rubber Plantation Clash with Police
International Herald Tribune
April 27, 2007
HARBEL, Liberia:
Striking workers at the Firestone Rubber plantation in the West African nation
of
said.
Between 6,000 and 8,000 workers at the plantation, which is run by a
subsidiary of Japan-based tire giant Bridgestone Corp. and is Liberia's largest
employer, have been striking since Tuesday. They are demanding the removal of a
top manager, Labor Minister Kofi Woods said.
The Firestone plantation offers one of the few steady jobs for unskilled
laborers in war-recovering
The West African nation emerged from more than a decade of civil war in 2003 and
has had a democratically elected government in place for just over a year.
On Friday, striking workers set up roadblocks and threw rocks at a force of
Liberian police and United Nations peacekeepers called to the site to disperse
the crowd, police Chief Munah Sieh said. She said police released tear gas into
the crowd and fighting broke out. Sieh said three of the six wounded were
police officers.
One of the injured, 50-year-old worker Anthony Saah, said he was attacked by
police.
"I was not involved in the riot. The police rushed on me and said I was
one of those throwing stones; they hit me with sticks on my head," he
said. Saah was waiting to be treated at a hospital for head wounds.
About a dozen people were arrested and charged with rioting, Sieh said.
The strike started as company and government officials met in the capital, Monrovia, to review the
contract that allows Firestone to operate on the 200-square-mile
(500-square-kilometer) tract of land.
Worker spokesman Rancy Barco said the manager they were demanding be fired
had tried to undermine the union. He did not provide further details.
Firestone has been operating in
concession agreement was re-negotiated under the country's two-year transition
government, but is being reviewed again by the new administration.