Mansour Osanlou: Difference between revisions
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Osanloo is President of the Executive Committee of the [[Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company]], the transport workers' trade union in [[Tehran]] in [[Iran]]. |
Osanloo is President of the Executive Committee of the [[Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company]], the transport workers' trade union in [[Tehran]] in [[Iran]]. |
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In December 2005 bus drivers in Tehran were refusing to take passengers' fares, as a protest called by both Osanloo |
In December 2005 bus drivers in Tehran were refusing to take passengers' fares, as a protest called by both Osanloo and the Workers' Syndicate. He and his colleagues could build up again their syndicate (union) after 24 years. In June 2005 (13 Khordad 1384) with great effort and resistance. This led to the arrest of several union activists on December 22, including Osanloo. He was imprisoned more than seven months, and suffered torture. |
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Tehran bus workers were due to strike on 28 January 2006 calling for his release and other demands. However, early that morning, hundreds of union activists were arrested as were the families of many of the workers. |
Tehran bus workers were due to strike on 28 January 2006 calling for his release and other demands. However, early that morning, hundreds of union activists were arrested as were the families of many of the workers. |
Revision as of 17:54, 4 June 2019
Mansour Osanloo (Osaloo) (منصور اسانلو) is a leading trade union activist in Iran, where he has been imprisoned several times from 2005 to 2008. Osanloo was then held in Evin Prison, serving a five-year prison sentence, and freed in June 2013.[1] He is a founding member of the Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, an independent union that has been campaigning vigorously for workers’ rights.[2]
Background
Osanloo is President of the Executive Committee of the Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, the transport workers' trade union in Tehran in Iran.
In December 2005 bus drivers in Tehran were refusing to take passengers' fares, as a protest called by both Osanloo and the Workers' Syndicate. He and his colleagues could build up again their syndicate (union) after 24 years. In June 2005 (13 Khordad 1384) with great effort and resistance. This led to the arrest of several union activists on December 22, including Osanloo. He was imprisoned more than seven months, and suffered torture.
Tehran bus workers were due to strike on 28 January 2006 calling for his release and other demands. However, early that morning, hundreds of union activists were arrested as were the families of many of the workers.
The Scottish Socialist Party tabled a motion calling for his release before the Scottish Parliament. He was released on bail in July/August 2006 after being kept in solitary confinement for months. After that, he continued his duty with co workers to reestablish their rights.
According to eyewitness accounts, Osanloo was arrested for a second time on November 19, 2006 under suspicious circumstances, along with Ebrahim Madadi, the vice-president of Workers' Syndicate. They were beaten by a group of armed militia and were taken away after shots were fired into the air. This seems to be another case where special police and state-sponsored undercover security named Ansar-e Hezbollah are used in arresting and silencing social and political activists.
In November 2006 he was released on bail of £164,000. He was sentenced to a five-year prison term in March 2007.[3] However, he was allowed to travel to London, England for the International Transport Workers Federation conference and to Brussels, Belgium for a meeting with the International Trade Union Confederation in June 2007.[4]
He was arrested again in July 2007. According to 2007 reports by the International Transport Workers' Federation and the International Trade Union Confederation, Osanloo was in imminent risk of losing his eyesight due to injuries sustained from government security forces in May 2005 and June 2007 after he returned from his unionist trips, and exacerbated by a lack of proper medical care by the Iranian authorities while in custody.[5] They sent him to Rajaee Shahr jail, because he tried help to guard workers in Evin prison to organise their union, and they back paid their money of their bosses.
In August 2010, he was sentenced to another year in prison after conviction of a new charge of "spreading propaganda against the system."[6] On 2 June 2011, Ossanlu’s wife stated that he had been granted a four-day medical leave for medical treatment.[7]
Osanloo is an instructor of online, Persian-language courses on labor rights and labor organizing at Tavaana: E-Learning Institute for Iranian Civil Society.[8] He established a new movement regarding workers and teachers site in the name of Hoghooghe Molem and Karegar.(teachers' and workers' rights), and he founded a new solidarity among the wage earners of Iran, by many youth and technicians. They launched the site related to workers, women and human rights activism in Iran. [1] He is a member of Kampain Maeeshat (Living campaign), (Sandoogh Ray Azad) Free democratic box organization. Osaloo and his comrades are organising a new movement to make a global solidarity of Iranian activists, against Islamic fundamentalism in Iran.
See also
- Ministry of Intelligence (Iran) (khabargar.co ) ( face book/ mansour osanlou.com)
- Bahareh Hedayat
References
- ^ Mansour Osanloo set free, June 2013 Archived 2013-06-15 at archive.today
- ^ Rights Crisis Escalates, September 2008 Archived 2009-01-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Tait, Robert (2007-05-30), "Tehran officials charge three Americans with spying", The Guardian
- ^ Taheri, Amir (2007-06-27), "Union Hero: Labor battles in Iran", New York Post, archived from the original on 2007-09-29
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Repression Continues in Iran". libcom.org. October 20, 2007. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
- ^ "Cases". Amnesty International USA. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^ Mansour Ossanlu’s Temporary Freedom in Iran, June 6, 2011
- ^ "Mansour Osanlou". Tavaana. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
External links
- ITF campaign page
- Freedom will come - The Mansour Osanloo story
- Mansour Osanloo - A quand la liberté
- Mansour Osanloo - La Libertad Llegará
- 自由のために - マンスール・オサンルーの闘い
- Freedom will come - The Mansour Osanloo story (Arabic)
- Freedom will come - The Mansour Osanloo story (Persian)
- Labournet on the case
- Appeal for financial support
- Indymedia on his case
- Letter[permanent dead link ] about 28 January arrests
- latest on dispute
- letter calling for his release after second arrest
- model letter calling for his release
- more[permanent dead link ] from Labournet, with photo
- latest report on his detention
- Interview with Mansour Osanlou - YouTube video part 1
- Interview with Mansour Osanlou - YouTube video part 2
- Interview with Mansour Osanlou - YouTube video part 3