In this
guest post, written on request, Jan Willem Goudriaan, Deputy General Secretary
of the European Federation of Public Service Unions (EPSU), updates the
experience with the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) on the Human Right to
Water. Based on a discussion of the struggles over water privatisation in
Thessaloniki/Greece, he assesses how the ECI has been linked with local
struggles and demands for an alternative Europe (for the earlier post see European Citizens’
Initiative on Water and the alternative to Austerity Europe).
We were sitting with George, the President of
the Thessaloniki Water Workers’ Union at a restaurant in the Plaka tourist
district of Athens. He had to go home by bus that evening and we were grabbing
a sandwich and French fries. It was after the demonstration that had brought
thousands of activists to Athens for the Alter-Summit 8 June 2013. Many other protesters as well as people that had participated in
a gay pride parade were moving through the narrow streets looking for a place
to eat. Crisis-hit Greece looked far away. But George brought us back to
reality. He was explaining the process of the privatisation of the water
company in which he works, the concerns of the workers as well as those of the
municipalities and people. George and others had worked to propose alternatives
to the privatisation such as Initiative 136. This initiative would allow the
citizens of Thessaloniki to buy the company. However these proposals were
turned down by the agency responsible for the privatisation plans in Greece,
the Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund (Taiped). He also explained how
groups have joined in a campaign to keep the company public. The campaign SOSte
to Nero received support from EPSU and a huge banner was hung on the offices of
the municipality in defence of public water.
The Thessaloniki Water Company is highly profitable and it pays dividends to its shareholders, the state and municipalities. The privatisation of the company through the selling of a concession would lead to loss of income for the state. George was enthusiastic about a documentary that would be shown on television later that week to argue the case for public water. The documentary was made by SaveGreekWater, another water movement group. He expected that it could lead to another wave of protests. Water privatisation is very unpopular in Greece, as shown by opinion polls. We also talked about the success of the Greek water unions and the water movement in collecting signatures for the European Citizens Initiative Right2Water. Greece would pass the minimum threshold. The initiative and its demands to legislate on the human right to water and that the Commission should not liberalise water services were seen as part of the same struggle. The ECI had over 1 million signatures and already more than 7 countries over the minimum threshold and was the first ever successful ECI that June. Even before the end of the ECI it had influenced the political process when in February 2013 European Commissioners Barnier and Potocnik declared that Water is a Public Good and stated that the EU would not privatise water services. Subsequently the Commission removed water services from the concessions directive, something that was criticised by the private water industry lobby organisation, AquaFed. It was later shown to have actively influenced the European Commission not to legislate on the human right to water and sanitation.
Brutal closure of ERT
That documentary of the Greek water movement
would not be broadcast, however. Just a few days after our meeting, the
government shut down the public broadcasting company. The brutal closure of the
Greek public broadcasting station ERT caused widespread anger across Greece and
Europe. On 11 June, with a simple announcement more than 2500 people were
dismissed. Greek people came out in defence of the ERT and a general strike was
organized by the two trade union confederations on 13 June 2013. EPSU reacted
sharply and called it a scandal in a letter to the Greek Prime Minister Samaras
arguing that his government was attacking a public good and public
service. Following broad protests as well as an ambiguous court decision
that the closure was not legal, Dimar (Democratic Left party) of Fotis Kouvelis
decided to leave the coalition government. It was a move seen by some as
cynical as the party continued to support the policies of the coalition to
implement austerity even though these have thrown the country deeper into
recession and poverty. The latest figures from Eurostat showed that the economy
had continued to shrink in 2013, 2 in 3 young people unemployed. That this is
not seriously addressed, and that no serious efforts are being made to invest
to create jobs is outrageous and will have long-term and lasting impacts on
Greek society and the EU. And it is similar for Spain and other countries.
Photo by campact |
Rich Greek families
Closing the public broadcasting station reveals
the agenda of the austerity measures and who benefits. In this case that is the
private broadcasting stations, and some owners have close ties with Prime
Minister Samaras. One of his most important connections is with the Bobolas
family. The father, George Bobolas, owns a large media empire via the
publishing company Pegasus. One of the central pieces of this media empire is Mega
Channel. It is a mouth piece of government and right-wing propaganda, similar
to the Berlusconi media in Italy. This company was seen as the main beneficiary
of the ERT closure. Son Leonidas, in turn, is the owner of the construction
company Ellaktor. This construction company was the vehicle for the family to
get involved in the mining sector. It had shares in the venture to exploit the
Haldiki mines. The Courts had ruled in a similar case that the economic
gains were not worth the potential loss in biodiversity. According to the local
population and concerned environmental and other groups, the rules for granting
such mining concessions, which should provide the government with funds and
would give private capital the ownership of natural resources, were not
followed. Large protests were organised to stop the mining programme but were
met with police violence on several occasions. The police classically defended
the interest of capital over those of the local citizens. George and others in
the Greek water movement joined the demonstrations.
Privatisation of
Greek water companies: EYATH
And the interests of George and the Bobolas
family were again to clash as Bobolas are potential beneficiaries of the
austerity agenda. As part of the Troika programme the Greek government has been
forced to draw up a long list of companies which are deemed fit to be
privatised. On the list are electricity and water companies such as the
Thessaloniki Water and Sewage company. There were two consortia interested, one
around the Israeli public water company Mekorot, and the other one around the
French multinational company Suez Environment. Both consortia also involve
Greek interests, with Suez teaming up with Ellaktor of Bobolas junior and
Mekorot joining hands with the Apostolopoulos holding, which owns a large
number of clinics together with German private health care company Asklepios.
Greek, European and international action groups
have asked these bidders to withdraw their interests in a joint letter, July 2013. They are not wanted in
Thessaloniki. Local activists started to reflect on a referendum as a way to
mobilise support. The Greek government made clear it is set against a
referendum. It has argued that the privatisation programme is a national issue
with the Thessaloniki case being a local implementation. Hence, there can be no
local referenda. It is easy to understand that if the Greek government would
allow local people to express themselves, large parts of its privatisation
programme would unravel. And that would upset the Troika as debt reduction and
loan payback would not be achieved. The Eurozone President, Dutch Finance
Minister Dijselbloem has explicitly welcomed the progress the Greek government was making with the privatisation of
the two Greek water companies, 17 December 2013. And I add: progress in their
logic.
Photo by campact |
One person that embodies the austerity logic
more than others is European Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs,
Olli Rehn. He has been a staunch advocate of cuts in public spending as the
measure to address public deficits and of reduction of wage costs to restore
the competitiveness of economies. On his blog he argued that Spanish workers would do well
to accept drastic cuts in their wages and accept more labour market
flexibility. And for him anything that hinders this flexibility needs to
be abolished and that includes national and sectoral collective agreements and
minimum wages. For a growing group of economists this whole austerity programme
makes less and less sense as countries are plunged into recession. They see the
social misery it has caused in the EU as preventable. The predictable
negative impact on public health, increase in poverty and crime are well documented now for Greece.
European Citizens'
Initiative Right2Water and the Thessaloniki Water Referendum
The Commission published its conclusions on the
ECI 19 March 2014 and again there was a large interest from the media. The
response was disappointing though. I have said that the Commission lacked ambition. The Commission did not represent proposals to
legislate on the Human Right to Water and Sanitation. Neither did the
Commission indicate how it wished to exclude water and sanitation services from
the EU-Canada free trade agreement (CETA), the EU-US agreement (TTIP) and the secret negotiations to come to an global agreement on trade in
services (TISA), all of which link with the TransPacific
Partnership negotiations (TPP). All these agreements have come under
increasing scrutiny and criticism from global coalitions of unions and other
campaigning movements as social and democratic interests are traded away.
The Final Stretch for
the Thessaloniki Water Referendum
George and his colleagues continue their local
struggle. With leaflets, local radio interviews, discussions with people and support from a broad range of actors
including from the Greek Orthodox Church, they try to mobilise the people to
come out and vote Yes for the public water company on 18 May. They seek to
convince people that there are no merits in the selling of the control over the
company. Based on extensive research there are no efficiency gains to be made with
private interests. And with the consortium around Mekorot not having registered
a bid following the critique, the Greek government cannot even get a good price
as only Suez Environment is interested. This company is actively campaigning to convince the people of its position but its
role is well documented It looks certain that Suez will face years
of local resistance as in other places across the world such as in La Paz,
Bolivia and Buenos Aires, Argentina and Jakarta, Indonesia, all places where Suez was ultimately driven
out by local people due to price rises, lack of promised investment, or just
because people wanted to control the company that provides that most essential
of public services: drinking water and sanitation.
On Sunday 18 May the people of Thessaloniki will determine the
future of their company and the vote will have a large symbolic value for all
the many people that fight neo-liberal policies and want a change in Europe. A
group of EPSU affiliates will monitor the referendum, ensuring that it takes
place in a fair manner. An international group of observers will be on the spot
from countries such as Austria, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands
and Sweden. Many others are expressing support recalling their experience with
privatisation like in the UK or drawing
attention to the wave of re-municipalisations. They stress that private
operation of water services is not about ensuring the human right to water, nor
about doing good for local people, but about making profits and paying
dividends to shareholders. The local referendum, like the Right2Water European
Citizens' Initiative, is another experiment in participatory democracy. Suez
should be concerned about running businesses against the interests of citizens.
The people of Alcazar de San Juan in Spain took their experiment in democracy a
step further when just collecting signatures did not prove enough. They engaged
in direct action to make their views known and stopped privatisation. And
rather than oppose the local people, the Greek government should welcome the
active engagement of citizens and take the Italian province of Lazio as example where public management is promoted. Or the Spanish city of Zaragoza, which will ensure that the running of its
water company is based on the participation of many local groups. These are all
signs of a vibrant European social movement capable of resisting and fighting
the austerians and developing
concrete and practical local examples to build an alternative as well as to
show and demonstrate European solidarity across borders.
The referendum on water privatisation took place in Thessaloniki on 18 May 2014 as planned. Proposals to privatise the company were overwhelmingly rejected with 98% of votes against. EPSU now expects Suez and its Greek partner Ellaktor to listen and to withdraw their bid. See http://epsucongress2014.eu/press-communication-victory-democracy-suez-must-listen-people-thessaloniki
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