TSSU Statement in Solidarity with Ukraine

“The cause of war is preparation for war” - W.E.B Du Bois

The TSSU General Membership condemns the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022 and the resulting ongoing war. We condemn this violent assault on the Ukrainian people, who have the right to self-determination, stability and prosperity. We call for peace in Ukraine and between Ukraine and Russia. We support the demands made by progressive Ukrainian-Canadian organizations such as the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians (AUUC) for an immediate ceasefire and withdrawal of all foreign military forces from Ukraine. We call on the government of Canada to call for peace, provide material support to refugees, cease economic sanctions that are aimed to hurt working-class people, and work towards Canada’s withdrawal from NATO, as we must build a world governed by cooperation and solidarity, not military force.

Canada’s continued participation in NATO means increased spending on military equipment, a requirement of all NATO members. For example, the Trudeau government plans to spend $22 billion on 88 new fighter jets by the end of 2022. This spending comes at the expense of investments in public health and education when they are desperately needed in the current crises exacerbated by the pandemic. Canada also has a shameful record on arms dealing, for instance, selling billions of dollars worth of military equipment to Saudi Arabia, North Africa, and Europe. Continued militarization and further escalation cannot be a path to peace. War is the dirtiest, most pollutive industry, with the United States military being the biggest polluter on this planet, and the Canadian arms trade a scourge on the environment. War comes at the expense of working people in Canada and elsewhere, and the health of our planet. The threat of nuclear war, an existential threat to all inhabitants of this planet, has never been higher in the twenty-first century. Continued war is not inevitable. 

We support lasting peace in a truly independent and sovereign Ukraine. Currently, Russia and US-NATO are exploiting complex economic, social, political crises in Ukraine for their own geopolitical interests. We condemn Russia, US-NATO, and all other powers for refusing to make earnest efforts to negotiate towards de-escalation, and for not undertaking all possible peaceful efforts to end the war. This includes both this immediate conflict as well as the root causes and underlying tensions that have only escalated in recent years, such as Russia’s military exercises and stationing of long-range missiles and artillery at the Russian-Ukrainian border as well as US and NATO’s increase in weapons sales and military support/funding to Ukraine and their effort to recruit Ukraine into NATO.   

We applaud how the West is opening its borders and greeting those fleeing conflict with open arms. We applaud the humanitarian efforts, the outpouring of support, and widespread media coverage of people impacted by Russian aggression. In addition, Russia’s deplorable war on Ukraine has also exposed deep Western hypocrisy when it comes to conflict. We call upon the Canadian government and Canadian media to extend the same reception to Palestinians, Yemenis, Somalis, and all other peoples across the planet who are fleeing war, famine, and climate catastrophe. We also call for the Canadian media and the Ukrainian government to support the people of color within Ukraine and at the borders, who are experiencing racial discrimination. We condemn war and racism on all fronts.

In addition to the Ukrainian people impacted by the violence, the TSSU stands in solidarity with those who are working for peace, including the thousands of Russians who have been arrested for speaking out against the actions of their government.

In support of Levy Funding asks from SOCA, DNA, FNMISA

The TSSU Solidarity and Social Justice Committee fully supports SOCA and DNA in their demand for Levy Funding for both groups and supports FNMISA in their demand for a raise of their existing funding which has not been increased in 20 years. The demand for levy funding for SOCA and DNA is $1.00 from every full-time student, and $0.50 from every part-time student and the ask for FNMISA funding is an increase to $1.50 per full-time student, and $0.75 per part-time student . The SSJC supports Black students, Indigenous students and disabled and neurodivergent students and we are adamantly against all forms of anti-Blackness, anti-Indigeneity and ableism.  We agree with SOCA, DNA and FNMISA that establishing sustainable and equitable funds within the SFSS for all three groups is necessary in the fight  against anti-Blackness, anti-Indigeneity and ableism, as well as promoting excellence for all three groups within the SFU community.

TSSU stands in solidarity with Iranian teachers protests

January 24, 2021

The Teaching Support Staff Union stands in solidarity with members of the Iranian Teachers Trade Associations (ITTA) who have been protesting for salary raises, better retirement plans and releasing their activists and people who have been arrested in protests.

A wave of nationwide protests by Iranian teachers, retired teachers and other educators has been happening in more than 50 cities in Iran in the past few months. The wave of protests comes amid soaring inflation caused by government mismanagement and by financial sanctions imposed against Iran, which has an immense impact on workers whose compensation does not keep pace with the rising cost of living.  

The Iranian government has been actively trying to silence the protests which were initiated by the Coordination Council of Iranian Teachers’ Trade Associations (CCITTA). According to the New York based Center of Human Rights in Iran, authorities have arrested and imprisoned dozens of teachers’ rights activists “on manufactured charges that reflect the criminalization in Iran of dissent, peaceful protests and assembly, and independent labor activism,” but this has not stopped the peaceful protests. In another attempt to silence protests, Iran's parliament approved emergency legislation on December 15 to raise teachers' salaries following several days of countrywide protests and a three-day strike by thousands of teachers and educators. However, according to the ITTA’s announcement, these legislations do not address the teacher’s concerns properly. The proposed minimum wage is still below poverty line levels and many teachers are excluded from the legislation. Minimum salary is apparently going to be set at about 267 usd, while labor groups insist that the poverty line at the moment in Iran is 400 usd. Minimum wage would not even be half of what a family of 3 would need to survive. On top of that, the government has failed to implement these plans and the protests are going on, with the next one planned for January 29, 2022.

TSSU condemns the arrests and echoes the demand of the ITTA to immediately release imprisoned labor leaders and teachers including Mohammad Taghi Fallahi, the secretary-general of the ITTA in Tehran. Furthermore, TSSU supports and echoes the teachers’ call on the Iranian government to:

The protests in Iran are particularly concerning because Iran’s government uses its security and army forces to brutally and unlawfully suppress any peaceful protests from various groups of people, including university students, teachers, social and political and feminist activists, ethnic and religious minorities. Common potential consequences facing Iranian protesters include: mass arrest, long prisons, torture and other ill-treatment, deprivation from social rights and the right for higher education, and even getting silently killed in prisons or by execution. In solidarity with all protesters in Iran, and specifically, brave school teachers and CCITTA leaders who speak up for better working conditions, we urge Iran’s authorities to immediately respond to their demands and stop suppressing them. 

Awareness of international labour struggles is a crucial component of solidarity with working people and building a better future for workers worldwide. Solidarity of community groups and worker unions nationally and internationally is important in helping workers come to more fair contracts or settlements with employers and governments. Teachers and education workers in Canada, including BC, also face challenges such as government austerity and financial cuts to the education system. These affect working conditions, salaries, retirement plans, and other rights historically won by workers. Moreover, contract workers at SFU are currently fighting for better working conditions for cleaning and food staff by bringing the contract workers in house and RAs at SFU are fighting for a fair collective agreement.  We recognize that these struggles and the struggles of the Iranian Teachers are linked and must be fought and won together. TSSU members thus stand in unequivocal solidarity with teachers and education workers in Iran.

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References:

https://www.rferl.org/a/iran-teachers-protests-pay-rise/31610925.html

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202112237872

https://www.rferl.org/a/iran-teachers-protests-pay-rise/31610925.html

https://www.iranintl.com/en/20211104540769