Vacationing IBEW
Members Aid Tsunami Victims
March 2005 IBEW Journal
U.S. unions are
mounting relief efforts, donation drives and recovery and
rebuilding missions to help victims of the December 26
tsunami that cast death and destruction across nations
along the Indian Ocean. Some IBEW members vacationing in
Thailand were among those helping the victims.
Tom Cowperwaite, Denver,
Colorado Local 68, Pierre St-Cyr of San Mateo, California, Local
617 and Rick Smith of Kelso-Longview, Washington,
Local 970 worked together to support relief efforts. They
arranged for a large truck from a relief organization to
be parked in "Washington Square," a Bangkok area
frequented by Westerners, and encouraged others to donate
to flood victims.
In two days, the cargo truck
was full. A caravan of three vehicles, including a police
motorcycle escort to help get through roadblocks, made
a 10-hour drive to Phuket, where supplies were distributed.
St-Cyr says: "The IBEW humanitarian tradition has
a worldwide impact. Side by side, Westerners and Thai nationals
showed wonderful cooperation in helping the survivors."
Estimates of lives lost
now exceed 150,000. Thousands more could perish from epidemics
and starvation if adequate medicines and foodstuffs do
not arrive soon.
Some one million people
in Indonesia and Sri Lanka may have lost their jobs as
a result of the disaster, according to a report by the
International Labor Organization (ILO). Most of the jobless
worked in fishing, agriculture, tourism or small, informal
businesses, the ILO said.
The AFL-CIO American Center
for International Labor Solidarity (Solidarity Center)
has established a Tsunami Relief Fund to which unions and
individuals may donate. The Solidarity Center is a nonprofit
organization that assists workers around the world who
are struggling to build democratic and independent trade
unions. Solidarity Center operates offices in India, Thailand
and Indonesia, nations heavily battered by the tsunami.
Individuals and locals interested
in contributing to the relief fund should make out a check
marked "Tsunami Relief," payable to Solidarity
Center Education Fund. Send the check to: Tsunami Relief
Fund, Solidarity Center, 1925 K Street N.W., Suite 300,
Washington, D.C., 20006-1105, or e-mail www.solidaritycenter.org.
Pete Castelli, a AFL-CIO
Solidarity Center representative in Sri Lanka accompanied
members of the Public Nurses Union and doctors on a New
Years mission to deliver medical supplies and food to
flood victims. He says, "For the 16 hours I was in
the area, I could smell the scent of death." Castelli
reports that the local hospital lost 21 doctors and nurses
to the deadly waves. He saw walls of buildings that were "crumbled" and "pieces
of peoples lives, clothes, furniture and tables were pushed
up the side of trees and buildings."
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney
said "No words can describe the horror and suffering
of the millions of people affected We must be ready to
assist our brothers and sisters in Asia who are fighting
for their lives and burying their dead."
Hundreds of private relief
agencies are receiving record amounts of contributions.
The U.S. Agency for International Development has a list
of relief agencies on its Web site, www.usaid.gov.
The tsunami struck a region
that is home to hundreds of manufacturers who were once
based in the U.S., but moved to the Indian Ocean Basin
in search of cheap labor and minimal government regulations.
Dan Rodricks, a columnist
for the Baltimore Sun, notes that Columbia Sportswear has
a plant in Sri Lanka. He says, "I hope Columbia gives
it up big for the tsunami victims and I hope they tell
us about it. They would not be exploiting disaster by doing
so, merely paying their dues and keeping their customers
informed." Rodricks continues, "We want more
than a war on terrorism and a culture of consumerism to
mark the age in which we live. " We should be consumers
who, "while accepting the realities of a global economy,
support corporations that do the right thing for people
and the planet."
St-Cyr remained behind after
the tsunami to witness the rebuilding efforts in Thailand.
He says, "If we Americans had half the resiliency
of the Thais who were hit by the tsunami, our unions would
be a lot stronger." A visitor to Asia for the past
seven years, St-Cyr, press secretary of Local 617 says: "Three
years ago, it was the Bali bombing; two years ago, the
SARS epidemic; last year, the Avian Flu; this year the
tsunami." Yet, he says, people "with so little
are bouncing back.
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