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Power Plays
Depending on where you sit, the decision by a State Labor Government to sell off the division of the power industry responsible for its long-term planning is either bold or reckless.
Interview: Still Flying
ACTU Secretary Greg Combet looks beyond the bid to save Ansett to a broader union agenda for 2002.
Women: Suffrage or Suffering
Alison Peters marks International Women's Day by surveying the achievements - and shortcomings - of a century of female suffrage.
Industrial: No Coco Pops For Brenda
The working poor get short shrift from the hypocritical Minister For Workplace Relations says Noel Hester.
Unions: Back to the Heartland
Lidcombe, western Sydney. A boring cultural desert, right? Wrong, wrong and wrong again according to CFMEU officials who talked to Jim Marr about relocating their headquarters to a working class base.
Activists: Getting to the Point
Rowan Cahill reports on a development battle that has fractured a South Coast community and the role the union movement has played to drive a just outcome.
International: Push Polling
On the eve of elections in Zimbabwe, trade unionists are paying the price for their commitment to democracy.
Economics: Debt Defaulters
Amidst the colour and movement of CHOGM little was said about the pressing issue of debt relief, writes Thea Ormond.
Poetry: Those Were the Days
The Golden Wing lounges have closed. The last of the commiserating Ansett workers have long since departed those makeshift taverns.
Review: Black Hawk Dud
If you want to find out exactly what went wrong during the US Marines' 1993 peacekeeping operation in Mogadishu in Somalia, do not see Black Hawk Down.
Satire: Fox-Lew Launch Rescue Bid for Beta Video
Businessmen Solomon Lew and Lindsay Fox have shocked the financial sector with a daring bid to rescue the communications giant Beta Video.
Egan Sells His Brains
Spying Bill Targets Strikers
Dunny Wars: Will Workers Carry the Can?
Drivers Appeal To Commuters
New Tack on Asylum Seekers
Go Forth and Multiply � Unions on Women
Howard Shuts Workers Out Of Steel Talks
Questions Remain As Rio Rings Changes
Labor Hire Swifty Exposed
Unions Fight 'Industrial Blackmail'
AIRC in Contracting Debacle
Mayne Chance For A Wage Deal
IT Workers Get Their Own Geek Scopes
PNG Women Visit Australia
Brazilian Unions Study Aussie Experience
No Shangri-la in Jakarta
Activists Notebook
The Soapbox
Love Thy Neighbour
Bruce Childs explains why he's reactivated the Palm Sunday committee to take a stand for refugees. The Locker Room
Debt Before Dishonour
In a week that featured allegations of drugs in footy, fast horses and faster cars, Phil Doyle struggled to keep up. Week in Review
Bullies Rule, OK?
Jim Marr considers a week which highlighted the absolute joy of being big, rich and powerful in a lassez faire world. Tool Shed
Leader of the Free World
George W Bush barricades himself in this week's Tool Shed with the sort of double standards that gives world domination a bad name.
How to Beat the Banks
Collins Goes Cahill
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Vic Trades Hall Council
IT Workers Alliance
Bosswatch
Unions on LaborNET
Evatt Foundation
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News
No Shangri-la in Jakarta
A food and beverage worker at the five-star Shangri-La Jakarta hotel, who has been shut out of her workplace for more than 16 months, has just finished a tour of some of Melbourne and Sydney's top hotels - thanking Australian workers for their support.
"Thank god for everything you have done," Maureen Elizabeth says.
"I am very lucky, I am very, very lucky that so many people keep supporting us in our struggle - without your support we cannot do anything."
The LHMU and its members - like other hotel unionists around the world - have supported the Shangri-La hotel workers campaign by contributing money to a Rice Fund to feed picketers.
In Australia many of hotel union members are sympathetic to the Shangri-La cause because their families come from Asia - Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Hong Kong and Malaysia.
LHMU secretary Annie Owens promised her union would continue to support the Shangri-La hotel workers in a number of ways, including financial support for the Rice Fund.
Maureen Elizabeth had worked at the Shangri-La Jakarta hotel for more than five years, and prior to that at the local Hilton and Mandarin hotels - but today, because she is on a blacklist for her union activities - she can't find another job.
The Shangri-La Jakarta hotel is one of 38 hotels in an Asian regional chain owned and operated by one of the world's richest men, Malaysian-born billionaire Robert Kuok.
You can inquire about backing the Shangri-La Rice Fund by contacting the Asia and Pacific region IUF office in Australia at 02 9264 6409 or on e-mail at: [email protected]
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Issue 127 contents
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