Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey
Full name | Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey |
---|---|
Native name | Türkiye Devrimci İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu |
Founded | 1967 |
Members | 327,000 |
Affiliation | ITUC, ETUC, TUAC |
Key people | Kani Beko, Arzu Cerkezoglu |
Office location | Istanbul, Turkey |
Country | Turkey |
Website | www.disk.org.tr |
The Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey (Turkish: Türkiye Devrimci İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu, DİSK) is one of the four major national trade union centres in Turkey. It was founded in 1967[1] as a breakaway union from the Confederation of Turkish Trade Unions, and has a membership of 327,000.
DİSK is affiliated with the International Trade Union Confederation, and the European Trade Union Confederation.
Development until the ban in 1980
DİSK was founded by Kemal Türkler, Riza Kuas, İbrahim Güzelce, Kemal Nebioğlu and Mehmet Alpdündar representing Türkiye Maden-İş, Lastik-İş, Basin-İş, Türkiye Gida-İş and Türk Maden-İş, respectively. All of these unions were until that time affiliated to Türk-İş, except Gida-İş which was independent.[2]
DİSK was born at a time when relatively broader rights and freedoms had been recognized by the Constitution of 1961. The trade union acts of 1964 accepted the right of the workers to collective bargaining and strike, and revolutionary and socialist movements gained momentum on the politic arena. In fact, with the exception of Mehmet Alpdündar, the founders of DİSK were also among the founders of the socialist Workers Party of Turkey (TİP) in 1961.[2]
The first general assembly meeting of DİSK took place in Istanbul on 15 June 1967. Among the resolutions adopted at the congress were: support to the campaign „War Against Hunger" launched by the student organizations and establishing a solidarity fund with the assistance of larger unions to help the weaker ones. By 1967, 6 other unions (Turizm-İş, Kimya-İş, Bank-İş, EMSIS, TADSIS, Gaziantep Tekstil) had joined DİSK, which reported its total membership as 65,730.[2]
In 1970 the Justice Party (AP) and the Republican People's Party (CHP) submitted to the parliament a draft law that would endanger the existence of any other confederation than Türk-İş. The board of DİSK convened on 3 June 1970 and decided to form resistance committees in accordance with the right of resistance in the Constitution. On June 15 and 16 the workers employed at enterprises organized by DİSK stopped work and leaving the factories started to march. This action ended with the declaration of martial law in Istanbul in the evening of June 16. DİSK leaders and a large number of workers were arrested and tried at military courts. The law was annulled by the Constitutional Court on 9 February 1972. The confederation reported a total of 88,650 members as of end-1970.[2]
DİSK leaders were again arrested after the military intervention on 12 March 1971, and the work of the confederation slowed down markedly during this period. Yet, further trade unions joined DİSK, raising the total membership of the confederation to 270,000 as of 1973.[2]
The period after the fifth congress (21–24 May 1975) witnessed a boost in the popularity of DİSK, which now counted 25 members. The most important growth occurred with the affiliation of the former Türk-İş member Genel-İş under the leadership of Abdullah Baştürk. By this time the membership of DİSK was close to 600,000. In 1977 participation to the First of May demonstration organized by DİSK was even larger than the previous year, but the peaceful demonstration ended in a blood bath when unknown persons opened fire to the crowd toward the end of the rally and 35 people were killed.[2][3]
On the 6th congress of the confederation that was held on 22–26 December 1977 Abdullah Baştürk was elected as the head of DİSK. Fehmi Işıklar became the secretary general. In 1978 DİSK organized a First of May rally again in Taksim Square and there was a large participation in spite of the bloody events of the previous year. By 1979 martial law had expanded to cover also Istanbul, and the First of May celebrations were held in Izmir, while in 1980 the celebrations were totally banned.[2]
On 22 July 1980 the founder of DİSK and chairman of Türkiye Maden-İş, Kemal Türkler was killed in front of his house in Merter, Istanbul.[4] The public prosecutor in Bakırköy indicted the alleged right-wing militants Ünal Osmanağaoğlu, Aydın Eryılmaz, Abdülsamet Karakuş and İsmet Koçak for being involved in the murder. Bakırköy Heavy Penal Court 2 twice decided on acquittal of Osmanağaoğlu. Each time the Court of Cassation quashed the verdict. On 1 December 2010 Bakırköy Heavy Penal Court 2 ruled that the case had to be dropped because of lapse of time.[5]
Before the 1980 coup, four main trade union federations with differing political orientations dominated the labor scene. The main union organization, the Confederation of Turkish Trade Unions (Türkiye İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu—Türk-İş) was politically moderate, adhering to legal limits on its activities. The other major union group, the Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey (Türkiye Devrimci İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu—DİSK), originated from a faction of Türk-İş in 1967. DİSK was much smaller than Türk-İş but more militant. In addition, small numbers of workers belonged to the pro-Islamist Confederation of Turkish Just Workers' Unions (Türkiye Hak İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu—Hak-İş) and the right-wing Confederation of Turkish Nationalist Workers' Unions (Türkiye Milliyetçi İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu—MİSK).[6]
The 12 September period
The 1980 military intervention severely restricted trade union activities. Following the 1980 coup, the military government prohibited collective bargaining until May 1984.[6] After September 12, 1980, the National Security Council suspended the activities of DİSK and its affiliated unions. Their assets were confiscated and put under trustee administration. 52 DİSK leaders were arrested and put on trial with the demand of death penalty on the grounds that they had „attempted to demolish the constitutional regime".[2] By the time the military court delivered its verdict in 1986, the DISK trial had 1,477 defendants. The DISK trial was one of many mass trials that progressed ponderously through the military courts, presided over by high-ranking officers of the Turkish armed forces.[7]
The trial at Istanbul Military Court 2 ended on 24 December 1986. The court sentenced 264 trade unionists and experts to sentences between five years, six months and 15 years, eight months' imprisonment.[4] The military court decided in 1981 to close DİSK and ban its members. This ruling was appealed and in 1991 the Military Court of Cassation overruled this decision and acquitted the union leaders. Thus DİSK was able to resume its activities after an interval of 12 years.[2]
New formation in 1992
The 8th general assembly of DİSK was held on 19–22 January 1992. Kemal Nebioglu was elected chairman and Süleyman Çelebi secretary general. By 1994 DİSK had 16 affiliates, 14 of which had organized over 10% of the workers in their branches, and had a total of 330,000 members.[2] DİSK has 11 representative offices in Belgium (European Representative Office), Ankara, Adana, Izmir, Bursa, Antalya, Edirne, Diyarbakir, Samsun, Izmit and Gaziantep.[2]
During the 11th Congress between 28 and 30 July 2000 Süleyman Çelebi was elected to chair DİSK.[8]
The following trade unions are members of DİSK:[9]
Turkish name | Sector | Chair |
Gıda-İş | nutrition | Celal Ovat |
Basın-İş | press | Mustafa Yamak |
Birleşik Metal-İş | metal | Adnan Serdaroğlu |
Dev Maden-Sen | mine workers | Tayfun Görgün |
Dev Sağlık-İş | health | Arzu Çerkezoğlu |
Dev Turizm-İş | tourism | Mustafa Safvet Yahyaoğlu |
Devrimci Yapı-İş | construction | Dursun Açıkbaş |
Emekli-Sen | pensioners | Veli Beysülen |
Enerji-Sen | energy | Ali Duman |
Bank-Sen | banks | Önder Atay |
Cam Keramik-İş | glass-pottery | Mehmet Turp |
Tümka-İş | paper | Ergün Tavşanoğlu |
Lastik-İş | petrol, chemical, tires | Abdullah Karacan |
Limter-İş | shipyards | Kamber Saygılı |
Nakliyat-İş | transport | Ali Rıza Küçükosmanoğlu |
Sine-Sen | film | Zafer Ayden |
Sosyal-İş | social | Metin Ebetürk |
Tekstil | textile | Rıdvan Budak |
Genel-İş | general | Erol Ekici |
See also
- Confederation of Public Workers' Unions
- Confederation of Turkish Real Trade Unions
- Confederation of Turkish Trade Unions
- Taksim Square Massacre of May 1, 1977
References
- ↑ Alex de Jong (11 March 2015). "Stalinist caterpillar into libertarian butterfly? - The evolving ideology of the PKK". International Viewpoint. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 DISK (chapter in Trade unions in Turkey); project of Friedrich Ebert Foundation; Project team: Filiz Aslan ... Oya Baydar (ed.). - 2. rev. ed., electronic ed. - Istanbul, 1998. - appr. 300 pages; accessed on 24 April 2011
- ↑ Compare Taksim Square massacre
- 1 2 İşçi sınıfı tarihi için bir başlangıç, History of DİSK (Turkish); accessed on 24 April 2011
- ↑ Kemal Türkler davası düştü; Daily Hürriyet of 1 December 2010; accessed on 24 April 2011
- 1 2 Human Resources and Trade Unions, chapter in the article on Turkey of the US Library of Congress; accessed on 24 April 2011
- ↑ Briefing on the Turkey Campaign 1988 by Amnesty International; in a private website; accessed on 24 April 2011
- ↑ Süleyman Çelebi hakkında ansiklopedik bilgi, Encyclopaedic information on Süleyman Çelebi; accessed on 24 April 2011
- ↑ According to the official website of DİSK; accessed on 15 April 2013
- ICTUR et al.,, ed. (2005). Trade Unions of the World (6th ed.). London, UK: John Harper Publishing. ISBN 0-9543811-5-7.
External links
- DİSK official site.