EQUAL RIGHTS COUNSELLING


From forcing the retirement of company couples to sexual abuse
- counselling cases by different type -

Ju Hwan Lee
Education Officer of KWWAU





The subject matters of cases counseled by the Equal Rights Counseling from January to April are summarized in this column. The total number of enrolled counseling cases is 594. The majority of cases - totaling 295 - were related to employment.

211 cases (59.6%) were regarding unpaid wages, 62 cases (17.5%) dismissal, and 22 cases (6.2%) unfair treatment. Aside from these cases, there were 11 cases (3.1%) concerning gender discrimination, 25 cases (7.1%) sexual abuse in workplace, and 23 cases (6.5%) maternity protection and sick pay.

76.4 percent of visitors were married women. In terms of industrial sectors, 36.7% were from the manufacturing sector, 26.5% were official workers, 8.4% were from the sales sector, 16.3% from the service industry, 11.4% experts or technicians, and 0.6% from the administration sector. The percentages indicate that most cases prevailed from the manufacturing sector.

At present "Equal Rights Counseling" has established 8 branches (in Seoul, Puchon, Ansan, Inchon, Kwangju, Masan, North Cholla, and Pusan), with the central headqurters in Seoul Particularly in this year, the departments of the KCTU and the FKTU and Women's Link have jointly set up a counseling center to deal with issues of gender discriminative employment, indirect discrimination, and sexual abuse within the workplace, and the center has actively fulfilled counseling.


1. Cases of prior dismissal of women workers


  • Pressurization of voluntarily retire-ment for company couples

    There is a company with 1,400 regular workers and 200 to 300 temporary workers. Due to budget reductions, negotiations were held between the company and workers union in order to set a frame for lay-offs. Workers were scored in every aspect; the number of days-off and vacations, punishments and awards, etc. In the case of company couples, if one of them resigned, the other would achieve a higher score, but if both of them refused to resign, both would get a minus score.

    As a result, 140 were dismissed. Excluding those in higher positions, 70% of the sacked workers were women. At that time, there were 33 couples in the company and most of the women in them were dismissed. 6 women tried to reject the order of retirement but finally had to resign. In the case of company couples, even if women were in higher positions, it was always the women who had to resign.

    A woman worker struggled for the survival of her job. The company gave her minus points in career qualification scores, and she was finally retrenched. Her case has been brought to a local labour committee and she is awaiting the result.

    - Equal Rights Counseling, KWWA -


    2. The absence of post-marital and maternity protection

  • Aggravations of health caused by five weeks' maternity leave, being placed on stand-by, changes of workplace to the outdoors.

    She worked in a local monetary office for 10 years. She was given maternity leave for only 5 weeks and she was put on stand-by when she came back to her work. Then, her new work load entailed visiting open markets in a cold winter. Due to her new work, her health grew worse.

    Her former position had already been filled. In her office, the married women used to resigned after marriage and it was the first time maternity leave had been requested. It is obvious that the company is trying to corner her into accepting resignation.

    - Equal Rights Counseling, Inchon Women Workers Association -

  • Forced to retire after notice of marriage

    She was working in a cultural center of a department store. She informed her superiors of her forthcoming marriage. Then, her manager forced her to retire. In another case, a dietitian was replaced by a temporary worker after her honeymoon trip. It is unfair. In fact, most of the customers are married women and this better qualifies married clerks for the job.

    There are more female clerks who will shortly get married, and if she gives up now, her junior colleagues will face the same process. She is daring to bring her case to court.

    - Equal Rights Counseling, Pusan Women's Association -


    3. Sexual abuse within the workplace

  • Sexual abuse in an interview for a private bodyguard

    An interview was held for the position of a private bodyguard. The company wanted bodyguards for the wives of the company seniors. The president of the company interviewed the applicants. The president said that he would call after his observation of individuals.

    He estimated four or five months for his observation. She was called by the president. In the meeting, he made obscene comments and touched her hip. She was treated in a sexually-degrading manner. She left the meeting.

    - Equal Rights Counseling, Seoul Women Workers Association -

  • Irresponsible attitude of the public officers on an appeal of sexual abuse in the workplace

    She was working in 'PC' on Sunday night when her senior manager grabbed her breast. She ran out of the place and has not written a resignation letter. She has worked there for only six months and is single. She wants the man to be dismissed. However, this may be impossible as the president of the company is his brother.

    She does not want to work in this company any more. If she cannot bring about his dismissal, she wants to put him to shame. She called up the labor supervisor of the local office of the Ministry of Labor. The supervisor there said that there was no need to fight if she was leaving the company.

    - Equal Rights Counseling, KWWAU-


Deterioration of labor conditions in Masan Export Processing Zone (EPZ)


Masan & Changwon Women Workers Association reported the results of their research on the employment problems in Masan EPZ. The researchers provided a questionnaire and it was answered by 320 workers in the two weeks from April 6 to April 17. The purpose of the research was to give a clear picture of labor conditions and employment problems in the Masan EPZ.

The questionnaire had five main sections concerning job insecurity, the reasons for job insecurity, what had changed, opinions on the changed labor conditions, and how the company worked out the changes.

According to the results of the research, 67.5% of the respondents felt it was likely they would be fired. The reasons they gave included the social atmosphere (30%), lack of work in the company (27.5%), and verbal indications from their managers (22.5%).

The changes in work conditions detailed by the respondents included compulsory time off monthly and yearly (62.5%), reenforced supervision and management (52.5%), increase of individual workloads (45%), decrease of wages (37.5%), frequent changes of working post (37.5%), and unpaid work (15%).60% of respondents regarded the changes as negative and 47.5% said that the company implemented the changes without observing proper procedures.

The results of the research show that the workers in the Masan EPZ have no choice but to accept the one-sided demands - cut-off wages, compulsory monthly and yearly Time off, increased labor, etc. - because of fears of redundancy. The proper untermeasures as put forward by the workers union in the Export Processing Zone are indispensable.





Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
|

[vol.19] news

WORKING WOMAN 2008. 3. 21. 11:09

  • Open Forum on the evaluation of the Action Center for Unemployed Women on its anniversary and the proposal of counter-measure policies for unemployed women

    The KWWAU held an open forum on June 25 for the first anniversary of Action Center for Unemployed Women. In the forum the activities of the Action Center for Un-employed Women were evaluated and the countermeasure policies against women's unemployment were proposed.

    The Action Center for Unemployed Women has conducted counseling, education, countermeasure policy implementation, research and study, and provided medical and financial assistance for daily living, organization of unemployed women, vocational training, etc. in eight areas of the country.

    Through the evaluation of one year's activities, various opinions from every sector of society were collected for the proposal to the government. The forum opened with the presentation of Choi Soonim, Chief Manager of counseling in the KWWAU.

    The main participants in the discussions, chaired by Dr. Kim Taehong from the Korean Women's Development Institute, were Nam Insoon, Deputy Secretary General of the Korea Women Workers Association United, Lee Sunghee, an expert on women's policies from the National Congress for New Politics, and Kwon Bokki, Chief Manager of Business

    and Assistance of the Peoples' Foundation to Support Unemployment, shared ideas and opinions on self-development for overcoming female unemployment, future tasks and policy direction of women's organizations concerning the unemployment problem, and governmental policy concerning unemployed women.

    - KWWAU -


  • A plan for an open forum with regard to the "employment situation and the way ahead for unorganized women workers"

    Since the IMF bailout, the situation for employed workers has deteriorated. In work-places which do not have a workers union, the situation is worse. It is assumed that their situation is really very bad considering the fact that the workplaces with no union are mostly small and medium size.

    The KWWAU decided to conduct a study on these kinds of workplaces. The 1,691 cases detailed in the collected questionnaires and 20 inter-views were studied. These cases concerned unorganized women workers. The results will be shared and discussed in the forum.

    - KWWAU -

  • The 20th memorial ceremony for the patriot Kim Kyoungsook of YH

    On August 29, the KWWAU will hold a 20th memorial ceremony for the patriot Kim Kyoungsook of YH jointly with the YH Fellowship. Commemorating the struggle of YH, which provided a starting point from which to destroy the Yooshin dictatorship, and admiring the martyrdom of the patriot Kim Kyoungsook, the KWWAU has observed her memorial day every year in Moran Park where her grave is located.

    On this 20th anniversary of her death in particular, we will invite former women workers who were committed to the workers' movement and the workers who are currently active in pro-moting workers' rights.

    - KWWAU -


  • Special night for unemployed women, the project on the establish-ment of 'familyhood' to help unem-ployed families

    Since May last year, the KWWAU has given W150,000 of aid to unemployed families every two months. The project has implemented many structural countermeasures on the unemployment problem and gives real and concrete help to unemployed women workers.

    The KWWAU also held a 'Special Night for Unemployed Women' on May 28 in the House of Working Women in Guro together with unemployed women, those who had participated in training programmes, the volunteer teachers of after-school classes, and female public laborers. There was an Oreum performance and some of the successful case-histories were shared.

    - Seoul Women Workers Association -


  • The third "Preparatory Class to Find Work"

    The Association is now holding preparatory classes to assist in job-finding. It held an opening ceremony for the third class on April 19. There are classes for mending clothes, making clothes, literacy teachers who also help children to vocalize their responses to what they are reading, computer training for secretarial jobs, tele-marketing, etc. We teach four subjects for a period of three months. At the moment we have 130 students.

    - Ansan Women Workers Association -

  • Spring Picnics in May for women head of household

    We held a picnic for female household heads and their children in Nakan folk village on May 30. Entering into the "month of home", May, the programme was directed at recovering courage and love and overcoming difficulties faced. About a hundred people participated in the picnic. We toured some historical places followed by a pleasant lunch.

    Then we had community games, writing letters to other family members, and sharing of the gifts of love. With the assistance of the Public Promotion, the participants were given delicious lunches and presents.

    - Kwangjoo Women Workers Association -


  • A campaign to create jobs by the Unemployed Women's Association

    On April 14, the Action Center for Unemployed Women conducted a street campaign on the theme of "unemployed women looking for jobs", together with the members of the Women Workers Association and the Mutual Aid Women's Association.

    After the campaign, a good number of recruitment offers were made. However, most of the contractors were asking for long working hours, low payment, and for women under 35 years old.

    Most of the unemployed women members are in their 40s and 50s, and hence, the campaign did not yield much fruit. We were again strongly impressed by the difficulties faced by middle-aged women to find work.

    - Masan & Changwon Women Workers Association-


  • Skill acquisition and other necessary training for women workers

    From April 6, working women were invited to night classes for telemarketing and training for teachers wishing to conduct classes on newpaper analysis and comprehension of important issues. The telemarketing class was taught for the first time and it received good feedback.

    On May 20, 31 students of telemarketing class held a graduation ceremony. 41 women are currently attending the newspaper comprehension class. The classes will end on July 20.

    - Puchon Women Workers Association -


  • Short-term vocational training for unemployed women

    Vocational training for women family heads was the only governmental program for low-income unemployed female family heads. However, it was held only once due to problems of government budgeting.

    Therefore, the Association has begun to conduct the short term vocational training programme for the middle aged and low income women itself. The proposed training is for assistants capable of caring for patients, baby-sitting, and nursing after childbirth. The first training will be conducted with 25 women from July 1 - 31.

    - Puchon Women Workers Association -


  • Group counselling for women head of household

    In order to provide a venue for unemployed women family heads to comfort each other and to help each other achieve the will to overcome the present situation, group counseling started from April. Three groups of ten women underwent group counselling for four weeks.

    In the first week life stories were shared, the second week focused on identifying good personal qualities, the third week on controlling anger, and the fourth week on planning for the future. All participants changed a lot through the group counseling. They became more optimistic and cheerful, which in turn cheered up the staff.

    - Inchon Women Workers Association -


  • Job training program

    In March and April two classes were provided for unemployed women household heads. After deep consideration on the situation of unemployed women, the classes were conducted to introduce the principles of managing small businesses and training was given at a basic level and in accessible language.

    During the programme the partici-pants could share their information and promised they would contact each other if they came across job openings.

    -North Cholla Women Workers Association -


  • The sixth street campaign for unemployed women

    The Association holds a street campaign every third Saturday. We have had six campaigns so far. About 50 unemployed women participate in the campaigns. Usually songs are sung with changed words, a performance is put on, three minutes speeches are given, etc.

    It normally lasts one-and-a-half hours. Evaluating the six street campaigns, we have reflected that we should be more sensitive about the problem of women unemployment. On the first anniversary of the Action Center for Unemployed Women, the Association reflected on how much the demands of women workers have been realized.

    We came to the conclusion that we should pay more attention to the demands of unemployed women and should provide more concrete and practical countermeasure activities for them.

    - Pusan Women's Association -


  • The struggle for reinstatement in Pusan Country Club

    Last May, 21 caddies working for the Pusan Country Club were dismissed. The club dismissed many women citing reasons of old age and marital status. On May 16, the Women Workers Trade Union (currently being established) and the Pusan Women's Workers Association launched a protest rally in front of the Pusan Country Club together with the dismissed caddies demanding reinstatement and condemning sexual abuse within the workplace.

    Directly after the rally, the situation was evaluated and a solidarity struggle was determined upon.

    - Pusan Women's Workers Association -


  • The fourth Women's Week ceremony - a campaign for the prohibition of sexual abuse within the workplace

    The KWWAU will conduct a "campaign for the prohibition of sexual abuse within the workplace" in eight areas across the country as a project of the fourth Women's Week from July 1 to July 7. The campaign events will be held twice in every area.

    The campaign will help women to recognize sexual abuse and take proper countermeasure actions. The campaign will also emphasize the responsibility of employers. We will spread awareness of the sexual abuse en masse.

    Particularly in small workplaces and work-places with large concentrations of women such as restaurants and boarding houses, it has almost been impossible to conduct education programmes related to this issue. Therefore we are hoping to increase awareness through street promotions.

    - KWWAU -

Posted by KWWA
|

Working Women Vol.18

April,1999



Women Workers' Rallies in commenmoration of the international women's day were held in eigrt regions. the picture shows actresses who held rehersals


    Voice from the workplace

    stop using the economic crisis as an axcuse to victimize women workers!

  • We'll fight in strong unity until we win!
  • Women wokers, the first victim of lay-off in the public sector
  • Using the logic of the 'struggle of the fittest' to lay off women workers at lower levels Park,Min-na's life story

    Let's take the first step now

    Action center for women's unemployed

    "what's worse is that unemployed women are dismissed and cheated, as well"

    News

    KWWAU's news

    Resolution

Korea Working Women's Network 1998
Posted by KWWA
|

VOICES FROM THE WORKPLACE


Stop using the economic crisis as an excuse to victimize women workers!


Under the current economic crisis, women workers are experiencing severe job insecurity and unemployment. Cases of hardships at the grassroots level are increasing. This article describes some of women workers' struggles against unfair labor practices such as illegal retrenchment and withheld back wages.


We'll fight in strong unity until we win!


by Lee, Myong-sook
(dismissed woman worker of Shin Han Industrial Co.)


Shin Han Industrial Co. is located in industrial complex 1 of the Masan Export Processing Zone (EPZ). About a year ago, the company nearly went bankrupt; however, the company's accumulated losses for several years have been resolved.

The company's recovery is partly due to the differences in currency exchange rates, but it is mainly due to our workers' full efforts. However, the company suddenly retrenched 26 out of 271 workers under the excuse that they had received fewer orders late last year. The number of retrenched workers is just below 10%, the minimum percentage at which companies should report its retrenchment activities to the Ministry of Labor. This is the first case of an official lay-off in the EPZ.

Shin Han Industrial Co. has a ratio of 3 male to 7 female workers. Many of the females are married women workers. The age distribution of workers from their 20s to their 40s is relatively even, and the company has a higher number of workers in their middle ages in comparison to other companies. Furthermore, because its trade union is co-opted, workers who carry out union activities and/or who raise questions to the company, often experience severe suppression by the company.

Under this context, the company has created insecurity by threatening workers with dismissals. Since April 1998, the company has forced workers to work overtime with heavy workloads. The company implied that older workers would be targeted for retrenchment, simply stating "the company has to lay off old workers." The company also oppressed workers who are actively involved in the union.

Workers at managerial levels and co-opted union representatives suppressed union members, thus many union members were removed. The union president sat back and did nothing for the union members as they experienced such serious oppression.

Although we know that the law regarding retrenchments was implemented, workers thought the company would not dare retrench workers because its business was doing very well. However, the company announced that it was temporarily closing down because of a decreasing number of orders since September last year. For three months the company stopped working on Saturdays.

On December 1, management suddenly informed individual workers of a list of those expected to be laid-off. The company laid off 26 workers who were "old" and/or involved in strong union activities, stating "it's okay not to come to work beginning tomorrow."

We, laid-off workers, were so shocked and at a loss, but we started fighting against the company to demand the withdrawal of the unfair retrenchment. The company told outright lies. The company stopped us from entering the workplace, treated us inhumanely and used false propaganda against us to separate us from our co-workers.

We started campaigning against the company's unfair practices at the front gate of the EPZ and asked other workers to support us. As news of our case started spreading to the local community, the company tried to tempt us to resign by offering a conditional one month wage to each of us. Since the company made use of our privacies and shortcomings, 13 workers eventually submitted their resignations to the company within the fixed deadline.

The company also punitively dismissed an additional three workers under the pretext of having false work experience. The company attempted to destroy our struggles against the unfair dismissals. Since January 1999, news of our struggles has spread to the entire local community.

We carried out daily struggles at work and sued the company at the local office of Ministry of Labor for the unfair dismissal and unfair labor practices.

The co-opted trade union which agreed with our unfair dismissals, and FKTU, its umbrella trade union have not given us any help. They are really yellow trade unions and are not genuinely concerned for workers.

We actively campaigned publicly and organized rallies in solidarity with KCTU and other local workers who agree with our resistance against lay-offs and our call for job security for workers. However, we have experienced much difficulty because we do not have an operating democratic trade union in the workplace, we do not work and we are separated from our co-workers.

We have continued waging struggles. The Masan & Changwon Women Workers Association (MCWWA) has given us their heartfelt and strong support and concern. For the last three months, we have used their office like our own homes in order to wage our struggle. We sometimes think, "what should happen if we, dismissed workers did not have an organization like this in our community?"

Now, 10 women workers, mostly married women, continue struggling. We are confident that we will finally obtain our basic rights to sustain our livelihoods and to keep our jobs, when our efforts and struggles become united. Since the local community is well aware of the company's unfair dismissals, other firms which have prepared to implement unfair dismissals and labor practices to lay off workers in the EPZ have stopped their plans.

We see this as an achievement of our struggle. Our struggle will be a shield for preventing workers from being laid off and for preventing unfair dismissals. Now, although we face serious difficulties in trying to sustain our livelihoods and pay our children's educational fees, we know we have any choice but to continue our struggles.

Our difficult situation is reflected by the reality that among 26 workers, whether they join this struggle or not no one has found a job so far. The Ministry of Labor defends the company's side by explaining that the company's actions are not illegal.

The government established a policy that unfair dismissals should be investigated very carefully and banned, but local offices do not listen to workers, and simply go hand in the company. We are going to make an appeal to the local labor committee. But, we worry about how well the local labor committee will represent us.

However, it often just looks at the fake documents handed over by the company. We will do our best to fight against these unfair lay-offs. We understand that we face many difficulties in our struggle, because we are not just fighting against one individual, one company, nor one political party, but because we are struggling against the social systems of money, power and law.

However, we have never made such claims before to those who are powerful. Now, we realize how relieved we, who have been oppressed, are when we speak out strongly against the rich and powerful.

I firmly believe we will win if we struggle until very end, because our struggle is about our sustainability and justice. We struggle in great unity like daughters and mothers, and between sisters. We fight with deep care for one another. We carry out our difficult daily activities, looking forward to the day when we will be able to return to our jobs.


 

Women workers, the first victim of lay-offs in the public sector


By Cho, Kwi-Jeh
(Head of the Women's department, Korean Federation of Public and Social Service Workers)


I am the head of the women's department at the Korean Federation of Public and Social Service Workers (KFPSSW). Most of the unions whose companies are run partly or 100% by the government, or financed by public funds (such as Public Culture Funds and Athletic Funds), are affiliated with our industrial trade union.

Thus, the government orders the dismissal of workers in companies, the reduction of wages and is responsible for the subsequent deterioration of working conditions.

Despite strong resistance from the labor movement, the government passed a retrenchment-related law. Under the law, lay-offs can be carried out despite all of our efforts. However, in the last year, one-sided lay-offs were undertaken without any agreement between labor and management in the public sector, especially in public corporations.

The so-called "honourable retirements" and "voluntary retirements" are nominal. Instead, jobs are forced to be restructured. Among the cases of forced restructuring, women workers' jobs are most seriously threatened for women face forced voluntary retirement and the closure of women concentrated departments, under the pretext that their partners also work in the same companies.

I

n mid-November of last year, I received a call from a head of the women's department at KCTU. She informed me that four (4) female union members (one nurse and three females in skilled and technical occupations) in the Seoul Olympic Sports Promotion Foundation(SOSPF) whose union is affiliated with us, were forced to retire voluntarily. But, they resisted the suppression.

The company ordered them to leave their post and wait for further actions. They have been relocated to a remote place with no window. These women workers were promoted from the fifth rank to the fourth category because their abilities were recognized by the company. Although their capabilities are as high as male workers, they were forced to resign because they are women.

The company established a policy that it would retrench them in December if they do not agree with voluntary retirement by late November. The workers do not agree with the demand from the company which forces the women workers to voluntarily retire,for it attempts to retrench them without making any efforts to avoid their dismissals.

The problem is that the company has not put any effort into evading their retirement. It simply assigns women workers to the forced retired workers' list without negotiating with workers, which is in accordance with the government's (Planning and Budgeting Committee) guideline for personnel restructuring. A bigger problem is that co-workers look down upon women workers who resist.

It is more difficult for them to wage their struggles under a situation in which their co-workers think they should be retired rather than male workers who are assumed to be primary householders. Even union executives agree with the logic that "opposition to forced voluntary retirement" is not worth fighting for and thus, do not attempt to organize a struggle on the women workers' behalf.

However, women union members eagerly support them by claiming, "we cannot accept the dismissals simply because they are women. Let's fight together even though they may be fired." Women workers consulted a labor lawyer visiting the chairperson of company, and demanded him to talk to them.

They also visited the Women's Special Committee directly under the president, in order to make their appeals. However, no changes have been made.

The closer the deadline appeared, the more anxious they became. Eventually, they remembered the words of "Kwon Young-gil" and "KCTU". Hence, they called the women's bureau of KCTU which informed us of their situation. Our industry union persuaded the local union to clearly oppose the company's lay-offs without negotiation with the union and to support the struggles of the women workers.

However, the women workers were only temporarily laid off because the authorities of the company agreed to reinstate women workers on April 1, 1999 and the others by the first half of this year.

Next, I would like to introduce the case of the Daejon Atomic Power Research Institute in which five female workers whose partners work in the same workplace were dismissed. In this case, before our industrial union could intervene, women workers submitted their resignations due to severe suppression by the company within two days.

The company reached an agreement regarding voluntary retirement with its union late last year. But, on December 29, 1998, the company threatened five (5) women workers whose partners also work in the workplace with voluntary retirement by letter. The letter said that if they expressed reluctance to be retired, their husbands would be disadvantaged in their job promotions.

Thus, some of them filed formal paper divorces to avoid being dismissed. On December 31, they submitted voluntary retirement notices to the company in order not to disadvantage their husbands. Three of them are researchers and two are engaged in administration work, who did not ask for an appeal because of their husbands.

In addition, illegal and unfair dismissals of women workers working in public corps. are taking place frequently. For example, the Korean Federation of Small Businesses (KFSB) removed women workers with high school degrees (who mainly do typing and clerical assistance work).

However, the company started employing contractual workers just after management mentioned that these occupations were not needed. Also, as many as 80% of about 400 dismissed workers listed by the Seh-jin Computerland Co. are female workers.

Women are half of the world, but our society does not see women as independent human beings. Even in regards to employment, women are discriminated: women are employed as contractual workers while men work as regular workers.

In the case of women workers whose partners work in the same workplaces, they are largely targeted for lay-offs. Women workers should stand up to fight against social practices that assume women should take secondary roles, and that women should go back to the home.

Like the above case of SOSPF, women workers should fight against the presumption that "Women should leave their jobs, even when unions ignore women workers because they are 'just women.'"

This year, many women workers who are union members have experienced the second round of retrenchment such as the adaptation of a yearly wage system, wage reduction, and decreases in social security for workers. We, women workers should fight for achieving job security and maintaining our basic rights to sustain our livelihood.


 

Using the Logic of the 'Struggle of the Fittest'
to Lay off Women Workers at lower levels
- Korea Tourism Research Institute


by Kang-ock Lee and Sook Kim
(dismissed women workers)

We are illegally-dismissed female workers, although we have worked hard since the establishment of the Korea Tourism Research Institute. We are currently waiting for the result of our appeals to the Ministry of Labor and Women's Special Committee (the latter has transferred our appeal to the former because it did not regard our case as illegal).

The Deptartment of Culture and Tourism opened the Korea Tourism Research Institute to suggest effective policies related to tourism with the support of the "Tourism Promotion & Development Fund." In late August, the Planning and Budgeting Committee ordered a "personnel reduction at higher levels, the maintenance of 25 staff members, 20% reduction in labor costs including ordinary expenditures, and those necessary for the operation of the minimum structure of the company."

The institute attempted to restructure lower levels workers without any form of negotiation with workers. Women workers segregated in technical occupations, were the main targets of restructuring. As a result, six (6) technical women workers were dismissed.

The following issues outline aspects of the unfair lay-off process: First, lay-offs should be legal on the grounds of urgent managerial reasons. The government's Planning and Budgeting Committee ordered the company to reduce the total number of workers from 28 to 25 workers. But, the company retrenched an additional four

(4)women workers to bring the total number of existing workers to 21. However, the company also increased the salaries of the remaining personnel, which blurrs the actual intent of restructuring. In addition, because the labor power of the six(6) laid off workers is necessary, the company transferred three(3) workers to a monthly contractual working basis, which is much more insecure employment.

Second, the company should make all efforts to evade dismissals before dismissals take place. However, the company did not make any efforts to do so. They did not stop new-comers from being employed nor did they reduce the salaries of board members.

Even though the company claims that four (4) workers will be recruited to maintain its total number of workers after the dismissals of the six(6) workers, it is difficult to recruit four workers according to its budget for personnel in 1999. The company did not provide any choice for workers to select their status because it did not follow appropriate procedures for voluntary retirement.

Third, the company should select those workers who will be dismissed according to a due and reasonable process. The restructuring did not target all workers, and it is discriminatory in regard to the selection process. In spite of the same technical position, a chauffeur and a secretary were arbitrarily excluded in the name of "their special technical occupations".

Fourth, the company should undertake sincere negotiations with unions or workers before dismissals take place. The Management-and-Labor Committee was already set up in the company, but the committee made a one-side decision regarding their dismissals on November 30, 1999 without any adequate negotiation. In the committee the workers' side mainly consists of researchers and senior officers in the top level, so the committee has no person to represent workers at lower levels.

When we, dismissed workers raised the issue of inadequate negotiation procedure, the company evaded its responsibility claiming that this is an issue amongst workers, since it already adequately negotiation with workers.

In the process associated with the above lay-offs, women workers at low levels are largely disadvantaged without proper negotiation under the pretext of the social atmosphere of the economic crisis. After the submission, the institute claims "We will choose being fined even if the company decides to commit 'unfair dismissals'.

The company will never allow you to return to your jobs. We will stop your reinstatements" which disappointed and shocked us. Amongst the six(6) dismissed women workers of us, at the initial stage three made appeals, but one was later cancelled. Presently, only two of us have been waiting for results.

The other four(4) dismissed workers are disappointed and have complained to the company, but they feel afraid of their unemployment if they are not able to make their three-month contracts. A worker is not uncomfortable because she is employed by personal contact.

One of them does not understand the real meaning of her dismissal. They are also under a variety of carrots and sticks.The reason why we made an appeal is that we wish to be treated fairly and objectively. However, the Women's Special Committee ignores us, and it only listens to the side of management.

This shows their unfair and discriminatory attitude. It views our case as a problem of management innovation. The Ministry of Labor also sees our case as an issue between management and labor rather than between individuals and the institute, so that the ministry's foremost concern lies with the institute rather with workers, despite the clearly unfair nature of the dismissals.

This reflects discriminatory status of women workers' employment in society. Presently, under the pretext of improving national competitiveness and facilitating economic recovery, Korea is under restructuring.

However, restructuring is undertaken by the logic of struggle of the fittest without any adequate concerns for workers. As a consequence, workers who are relatively weak are disadvantaged and become unemployed. I n this process, women worker-concentrated departments are usually targeted. Hence, although our dismissals can be viewed as personal issues, we will struggle against the discriminatory labor practice until the very end.



Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
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Life story written by Park, Min-na


"Let's take the first step now."


- Mi-Ryong Lim
the first president of the Women's Trade Union of the Seoul Region (WTUSR)




The clean and fresh water of the Tamjin river is really beautiful. Living amongst the severe air and water pollution that exists everywhere in the gray city of Seoul, Mi-ryong remembers this place more fondly. Mi-ryong, who is now 43 years old, still becomes extremely emotional as adulthood approaches and she looks back nostalgically on her childhood spent near the Tamjin river.

Her Revolutionary Characteristics stem from her father

Her hometown, Kak-gol village, Chichon-ri, Pusan-nyon, Janghung- koon, South Cholla province was a small village located deep in the mountains with 40 households, most bearing the family name, Lim. In the early 50s, this war-torn city was occupied by police by day and communist partisans by night. During the war, many people were killed.

Although the police viewed the communist partisans as worthless beggars, Mi-ryong's father had a good impression of them. Over the long period of time in which he worked, he always saw them pay village folks for their meals. Thus, he maintained his criticism on the distorted and unjust characteristics of Korean society throughout his life.

Mi-ryong believes her revolutionary characteristics originate from her father. She was born on March 21, 1957, as the youngest daughter amongst four daughters and three sons. Although her family was poor, her father did not want his children to experience any difficulties while growing up. Even her grown-up siblings lived together. As a result, she does not remember any difficulties in her childhood.

Since Mi-ryong loved reading, she spent many hours in her school library reading fairy tales, as if it were her own room. Mi-ryung was a class leader and she dreamed of becoming a school teacher. However, because her family was poor, she had to give up studying in junior high school. She complained to her parents "Why do we have to be so poor?"

But, after listening by chance to her parent's worries that they could not support her studies, she stopped urging them to send her to school. Later, she obtained her academic qualification after matriculating from an open high school.

After her younger brother went to junior high school, she lived with him in town to support him. She worked in a mushroom factory in town to earn his tuition and support their living costs. She experienced the inhumane and poor working conditions and the deeply unfair treatment under which workers must work.

Since her father taught her the difference between right and wrong, she always spoke out candidly despite her young age. However one day, she was dismissed while protesting about her unfair job shift. She did not know how to appeal on behalf of her rights, and she felt she was the victim of a false accusation.

In 1977, when her brother entered Kwangju Commercial High School, she moved to Kwangju with him and started working at the Namhae Fishing Net Co. which employed about 200 workers at that time. Working conditions were poor, workers had two shifts, and turnovers were high. Many workers joined the JOC. Just several days after she entered the company, a trade union was set up.

Working for 10 years as a union president

I think a meeting destined to happen occurs much like this: her co-worker, Kim Nam-soon who worked next to her was as an active JOC member and union president in the company. While working, Namsoon had discussions about labor issues with her all the time.

However, since she believed that issues related to the agricultural sector were more severe, they carried out long debates. When she realized it was difficult to win against Namsoon who was a trained union president, she bought and read books related to agriculture to make her claims.

Namsoon liked Mi-ryong's sincere and active attitude. That summer, she was nominated as general secretary of the union, which was her starting point in the union movement. In addition, she was impressed by a remark that "a worker is more valuable than any other thing in the world." made by Cardinal Kardin, which encouraged her to join and play an active role in JOC. At that time, she was 20 years old.

During the "Kwangju Revolution" in 1980 Mi-ryong was in Kwangju. One year before, she was elected as a union president with a three year term and she was a JOC president, as well. Since she played a core role in the revolution, it was not documentary history but an on-the-spot history to her.

Because of her brother's graduation from the high school, she lived in the company's dormitory. She went to the Province Hall to do her best in the revolution. In that May, full of "responsibility without any fear", she kept her eyes on the street where a huge number of armed soldiers patrolled around. She cherishes memories such those of Kwangju that May.

Mi-ryong was elected as the second union president in 1979 and was so highly trusted by her union members. She held this position for 10 years. At the initial stage, because the company did not allow full-time staff for the union, she had a difficult time.

Additionally, the company did not even provide space for a union office. Therefore, the union had to be located in an empty room in the dormitory. However, it became a chance to get close to union members on a daily base.

She made the company president who slapped her on her cheek apologize to her before union members

Mi-ryong is strong and just. She never steps back when she finds something wrong. She is stubborn. She looks very gentle in appearance, but she is sturdy in spirit. She was collected and assertive while pointing out essential points during their preparations conducting collective bargaining and negoti- ations with management.

Through her market survey, she found that her company's products have a higher quality than any other. The stingy owner who set up the company with his bare hands took strong pride in producing top-degree quality products. She highlighted this point in her argument "the role of workers is to produce high quality products.

The company plays the role of generating high sales in the market with well-planned marketing and capital. Why should only workers shoulder the company's deficits? Shouldn't the company take any responsibility?" Thus, the trade union usually gained good results.

The company started openly spreading the rumor that the factory was not able to be run because of her. In 1986 and 1987, she had a difficult time because there were some conflicting perspectives between the strong struggles she helped wage and those acceptable by the company.

However, during collective bargaining and negotiations, the owner slapped her on the cheek. She took a resolved attitude. Immediately, she brought the case to the local Ministry of Labor and started a collective action.

At that time, workers often experienced sexual harassment at the workplace, so union members were united. Finally, the owner was forced to apologize to her in front of all the union members. Over the 10 year periods that she was an union president, the owner had to do quite a lot.

In 1987 she served as the head of the Educational Department in the Kwangju Trade Unions' Association where she continued carrying out educational training and solidarity activities for other unions on strike as well as working for her union. Although she was somewhat over the marriageable age, she firmly believed that she was married to the union movement.

However one day, a man made a "sudden" proposal to her. He believed she was his "Miss Right!" after seeing her in a educational training for workers. "How many women are sincere and gentle at the same time?" he thought to himself.

After that, he often called on her and always waited for her in front of her house, no matter how late she returned home. She often felt lonely when she did not see him in front of her house. She came to feel that he was a sincere person.

She felt it was just as good and comfortable to be single as marrying a man with such diligent and reasonable characteristics, so she got married in the Namdong Cathedrale in Kwangju on November 27, 1988.

She buried her oldest child in her heart

1989 reminds her of one of the worst years of her life. While she was extremely busy waging struggles for raising wages and supporting strikes for other unions, she was pregnant. But, she did not take care of herself. Her premature baby was born mentally retarded as if her baby was protesting against her.

Since the company gave notice of its shop closure to the local Labor Committee because of her, she did not have a time to take care of her baby. Her baby was raised by his grandmother, but died in her absence at home when he was around one year old.

She was shocked by his death. She strictly criticized herself because she attributed his death to herself. She decided to make an agreement with the company as a result of her continuous agony. When she asked the company "can you operate the factory if I am not here?" the company promised that it would try to continue its operation even though the company was in a desperate situation with that, she ended her job, and several days later, she went to Seoul.

She was so disappointed and depressed that she had no intention to work any longer. She wanted to run away from what she had done. Because her husband was dismissed, her decision was not difficult to carry out.

Her second pregnancy occurred not long after she settled in Seoul. She was so concerned that her baby grew healthy in her womb that she stayed at home. She gave birth to a beautiful daughter. However, it is not true that she did not face conflict.

It was not easy for someone like her who had worked with the trade union with her fullest effort, to forget everything about unions within a short time. So, she said to herself that she would try to do her best to find out what she was able to do.

Returning to trade union work after delivering two daughters

After delivering another daughter two years later, she had to enter the labor market. Her husband's small business with his brother encountered hardships, so their livelihood was becoming difficult. However, she could not easily find a job.

She worked as an insurance saleswoman for two years. She also worked as an assistant in a restaurant, as a saleswoman selling children's books and a home-based worker in the garment industry. She experienced the difficulties of being a mother, a wife whose partner is not so economically reliable, and a cheap and irregular female worker in the labor market.

During this period, she thought of the meaning of Divine Providence as a Catholic. "If I didn't have such sudden difficulties in my life in Seoul, I may still have continued carrying out my work in the movement based on stubborn principles. Are these unbearable difficulties that God brought me designed to make me become His better worker?"

She realized that she needed a new turning point in her life. When the factory where she worked closed down because of financial difficulties, she felt her limitation as a factory worker. She visited the Seoul Women Workers Association which she already knew of.

She then made the decision to be a friend of women who are largely ignored and mistreated in society, and to take "labor consultations for working women." How to organize irregular women workers was the most urgent issue in the women' workers movement under a situation in which their numbers have increased rapidly.

The necessity for the formation of a women's trade union was discussed as an alternative solution and proceeded sincerely and carefully, thus, her appearance was perfect timing.

Performing women's trade union work is not easy, not only because it is a new form of union organizing different from existing company-based and industry-based trade unions, but also because it requires a strong personnel and financial base.

She made up her mind to reflect on the new form of the movement, her activities as a union president for 10 years and the experiences accumulated in her life at home and in society.

She emphasizes that the female union movement is the only way to solve women's problems under the current Korean situation. In the end of a labor event, when she sang the "Song for Comrades", she could not stop shedding her tears.

The Formation of WTUSR

On the last January 10, WTUSR was established and given its certificate from the government. It already has over 100 members. In her interview with me, some women visited her and often asked for telephone counseling.

The more engaged she becomes, the stronger she feels the necessity for the women's union. Her smile becomes brighter when she sees a woman in her 50s enroll as a member and open a new chapter in her life.

She reacts passively when she explains that she wants to rely on others and feels frustrated and regretful about her seemingly depressing reality. Now, she has hope that every last women can lead the female trade union movement, and that women workers can develop a comprehensive understanding of society, take agency over the direction of their lives, and finally earn the respect they deserve in society.

She strongly believes that society as well as her individual self can be advanced if she pursues her philosophy of life and leads a sincere and active life.

Last Summer, she had a long talk with her husband in memory of the 10th anniversary of their marriage. Her husband confessed that he was able to trust people through her. He grasped her hands to express his heart. He said that he felt thankful to her because she has always been with him with great patience over the past 10 years.

On the contrary, she feels grateful to him because he is always helpful. He does the housework and he is a very gentle father to their children. She hopes he who is now unemployed finds a job so that he can work with joy.

She wishes that her two daughters maintain their present brightness and health. What she eagerly desires is to work together with those whom she carries out activities for making a beautiful, joyful and happy world.



Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
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"What's worse is that unemployed women are dismissed and cheated, as well...."

- Complaints of female job-seekers registered with the Action Center for Women's Unemployment

by Choi, Soon-Im
(head of counseling Dept. of WWAU)





This section will look at trends in women's unemployment and provide information on employment cases of cheating and victimizing female job-seekers, through a variety of activities and statistics regarding job counseling undertaken by the Action Center for Women's Unemployment (ACWU).

Last February 18, when most newspapers said "the number of unemployed people had reached nearly two million," I felt that the Korean unemployment rate would skyrocket to over 9% in the very near future. The Ministry of Labor expects an additional 0.3 million workers to become unemployed this year due to the rapid increase in the number of those who want to enter the labor market for the first time.

However, a higher percentage of unemployed women would be reflected in official statistics (5.6% in November, 1998) if the number of disappointed unemployed people was added.

Counselees, mostly married women with less than a high school degree education

Last year, a total number of 4,192 women excluding cases by telephone and re-counselling cases received counseling by ACWU. Among them, married women made up 74.26% (with 3,113 cases) of the cases. Also, women over the age of 35 constituted 61.4% (with 2,576 cases). Those with less than a high school diploma accounted for 62.28% (with 2,611 cases).

So, married women over the age of 35 with less than a high school diploma constituted the great majority of job seekers. This shows that women are the first targets of lay-offs due to bankruptcies and restructuring, and reflects the difficulty that women face finding jobs without adequate skills and training, although they try to enter the labor market because their husbands are unemployed.

Various reasons are given when women are laid off from their jobs. Women workers are usually dismissed under the excuses that "you aren't householders," "this department can be operated on an hourly basis," and "cheap labor can easily be found because of a large pool of unemployed people." Moreover, mass media exaggerates the severity of the number of male unemployed homeless persons staying at Seoul Station.

I cannot find any article about women who try to keep their families together even under the current severe economic crisis. In addition, women have to endure the anguish and pain in their families by themselves since their husbands are unemployed.

What is worse, it is useless for women to look for jobs when they face such discriminatory attitudes such as "Why you are looking for a job? Even men have difficulties finding jobs in this situation." The jobs that women manage to find largely have terrible working conditions with long working hours and back wages.

K(42 years old) living in Kuro appealed to us saying, "I worked in an electronic firm for 5 years. I was unemployed as a result of the companies bankruptcy. I couldn't find a job because I am old and don't have any special skill. I found a job in a farm cultivating spinach.

They tried to make me work very hard. They didn't even give me time to go to the toilet. My back ached so badly that I could not continue working there. I stopped working after two days. I went back there several times because they didn't pay me my wages.

They threatened me with the knife usually used for trimming spinach. I gave up in my efforts to be paid." After that, she worked in several canteens and restaurants, but most of them did not pay her. This shows that women workers confront incredibly harsh hardships.

Extremely heavy workloads:
Earn your day payment yourself

Many think that unmarried women are in better situations compared to married women. However, those older than 27 years old also have great difficulties. Employers arbitrarily define those women as getting married soon. They are discriminated against in terms of their age, as employers assume that women will resign after they marry.

A(28 years old) living in Songbuk-ku worked as a bookkeeper, but the company was closed because of its bankruptcy. She often received rejections at initial stages of job interviews because she is considered "old." Whenever she was interviewed with firms which do not have set age limits, the first question is usually, "When will you get married?" She is upset because she wants to continue working regardless of whether she marries or not.

you aren't welcome!

you aren't welcome!

In addition, only ordinary clerical occupations are available to unmarried women who are new graduates from universities or colleges regardless of their majors. However, it is very difficult for them to find jobs if they cannot use a computer. The competition is extremely high.

Whether they are married or not, female job-seekers want to continue working in a secure job environment. However, employers want to employ young unmarried female cheap labor who can work on a dispatched and temporary basis and possess a variety of abilities.

Sales jobs where salaries depend on the amount sold, and simple and routine jobs such as cleaners and assis- tants in canteens and restaurants are largely available to married women. In the current situation where the number of job seekers far outnumbers job demand, there is an increasing number of cases of female job seekers who desperately look for jobs but who are usually deceived.

Therefore, on February 18, 1999 the Ministry of Labor announced that employers who recruit workers falsely shall be imprisoned for 5 years or be fined 20 million Won according to the Korean Occupation Security Law.

B (32 years old), a housewife living in Keumchon-ku dislikes sales jobs very much. When she inquired about a job advertised in a community newspaper and was reassured that it was definitely not related to sales, she went to the firm for a job interview.

On the first day, she received an orientation on education for babies and children, but on the second day, the orientation consisted of how to sell textbooks, so she left.

O (30 years old) majored in art education. She began working at a firm producing textbooks for babies and children. Her job is related to textbook publication, but she was not paid because although she colored textbooks, she did not sell any. S (25 years old), an unmarried woman living in Kuro, was employed in a publishing firm under the condition that she would be promoted to a managerial level in the office after her sales work.

However, after three months under the excuse that "you are very good at sales" the company demanded that she continue working sales, so she resigned from the job. After that, the company threatened to charge her compensation if some goods that she sold were returned.

Most job advertisements are false and many
private temporary agencies just take money
from job seekers.

P (42 years old), a female householder living in Wolkyeh-dong saw a job advertisement about a private temporary agency employing primarily female householders, so she sent her resume. Because she was not contacted for two months after the job opening, she called the agency.

They said that she had to buy containers for reserving and selling vegetables at prices between 8 and 10 million Won. Eventually, she gave up her application for the job.

Q (30 years old) living in the Samyang-dong visited a private temporary agency which places tele-marketing jobs. She worked for a month because they said that they would pay some fringe benefits in addition to the 0.5 million Won basic monthly wage.

But her actual basic monthly wage was 0.3 million Won. So, she found another job providing weekly wages. However, this company often withholds her wages. When she heard from a supervisor that the company was moving out, she resigned from the company.

But, later she found that the company filed that she resigned from the job because she made a false statement. So far, she has not been paid back wages amounting to 0.19 million Won.

She was told that T Trading in Kangnam was looking for a nurse who can give health consultations to patients with diabetes. They told her that sales are handled by others, but the company demanded her to perform sales shouting "how can in the world you think to be paid without doing any sales?"

E (49 years old) living in Kumchon-ku had to stop working as an assistant in a restaurant due to its closure. She paid out 50,000 Won as commission to a paid temporary agency in Karibong-dong and she worked at construction sites.

Jobs were supposed to be placed twice a week by the agency. But, one day, she had to return because it despatched 4 workers rather than the 2 workers actually required by the construction company. The agency just made up the numbers.

In particular, middle-aged women usually worked for domestic help work through paid temporary agencies which require an extra 25,000 Won to be paid in addition to the 50,000 Won basic fee to receive job placement twice a week. However, they have to pay grudgingly because of the shortage of labor demand in the market.

Careful consideration is needed.

There has been an increase in the number of job seekers who are victimized and cheated. Among the many various job advertisements publicized, many falsely advertise very different working conditions. So careful consideration is required.

Compared to other jobs, women must think first if the company is registered. They also have to consider many aspects such as if offered wages are reasonable compared to other jobs, if regular payments are made, if continuous employment is guaranteed and additional commission is needed for job registration,

when you try to apply for jobs through advertisements. The authorities should strengthen their executive powers and take pro-active steps on behalf of job seekers, in order to prevent them from being victimized any more.



Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
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KWWAU's News




  • Publishing a white action paper from the Action Center for Women's Unemployment

    KWWAU published a white action paper from the Action Centers for Women's Unemployment(ACWU) for the last six months (between June 9, 1998 and December 29, 1998). ACWUs aim to raise problems of female unemployment as social issues and to demand comprehensive and long-term unemployment policies.

    The publication contains various activities of ACWUs. The first chapter is about its major activities, the second chapter includes an action photo report, the third chapter reports on the situation and tasks of ACWUs and the fourth chapter is a collection of materials and articles related to ACWUs' action.

    It covers various fields of activities such as counseling, education, research, organization, medical support, job training, livelihood support,self-sustainability and computeri- zation, which shows activities of ACWUs across the nation.

  • Organizing a workshop on the direction of the women workers' movement

    KWWAU, KCTU, FKTU and Women's Link jointly held a "workshop on the direction of the women workers' movement" (in a main hall of FKTU on January 11, 1999). It was designed to reckon on issues and activities of trade unions and women workers which are the main pillar in the women workers' movement, and to develop and promote the women workers' movement.

    The four organizers presented their action plans and tasks. And then, Professor Cho, Soon-kyong presented tasks in the women workers' movement. This was valuable to exchange one anothers' situations and share our opinions.

  • The seventh general assembly was organized

    KWWAU organized the seventh general assembly in the main hall of SWWA on January 10, 1999. Representatives from eight(8) branches across the nation were present to evaluate activities of KWWAU in 1998 and approve its action plans for 1999. Maria Rhie was re-appointed as its representative. Discussions on its development direction were held.

  • Carrying out educational training for counselors of the "Equal Rights Counseling Center"

    KWWAU carried out educational training of counselors of the "Equal Rights Counseling Center", targeting activists of Women Workers Associations and female executives of KCTU and FKTU on February 5 and 6, 1999.

    The training provided classes on enacted laws Banning Gender Discrimination and Redemption, and the Employment Equality Law amended last January. The training was effective on the form of lecture and workshop.

  • Opening Counseling Centers Against Discriminatory Employment Restructuring, Indirect Discrimination and Sexual Harassment in the Workplace

    KWWAU, KCTU, FKTU and Women's Link jointly opened a "Counseling Center Against Discriminatory Employment Restructuring, Indirect Discrimination and Sexual Harassment in the Workplace" to address discriminatory dismissals, indirect discrimination and sexual harassment in the workplace, wich have worsened amidst the current economic crisis.

    The four organizations will receive counseling about these issues and at the same time they will carry out administrative and legal action in solidarity such as campaigning, waging rallies, making suits and accusations.

    Activities such as demanding adequate implementation of the law and practice in the workplace are expected to be shields for preventing and stopping women from being discriminated against in regard to discriminatory employment restructuring.

  • Holding a Korean Women Workers' Rally in commemoration of the 91st International Women's Day

    On March 6, 1999 a "Korean Women Workers' Rally" was jointly held with KWWAU, FKTU, KCTU and Women's Link. During the rally, presidents of the four organizations cited current issues such as discriminatory employment and increasing number of irregular women workers, other employment issues, reduction of working hours in their opening addresses.

    They emphasized obtaining employment security and expanding structures through women workers' unity and solidarity. A video about women workers was shown, looking back on the women worker's movement in 1998, and a drama criticized the reality in which women workers experience severe dismissals and unemployment, and showed our hope to overcome this reality.

    Performers and audiences became one. It was also a site for making a resolution to wage stronger struggles. Seven regional Women Workers Associations held their local women workers' rallies- the Kwangju Women Workers Association on March 9, Masan & Changwon on March 10, Inchon on March 11, Jinju on March 12, Pusan on March 13, Ansan on March 14, and North Cholla Province March 20. A total number of about 2,000 women workers took part in the rallies to show their solidarity and fighting spirits.



    Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
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[vol.18] Resolution

WORKING WOMAN 2008. 3. 21. 10:57
Resolution

Today, we came together in the 'Korean Women Workers Rally' in commemoration of the international women's day, to succeed to the struggling will of women workers in US in 1908, who demanded on their rights to work and freedom of association, to over come the current crisis and to construct our new future.

Under the pretext of the current economic crisis, Korean women workers have become unemployed, due to the social practices that illegal retrenchment is prevalent and women are the first targeted for lay-offs.

Their livelihoods have deteriorated more severly by the forced replacement by irregular workers, lowered wages, and worsened working conditions. In addition, under the excuse of economic crisis, even minimum levels of maternity protection are not practiced and supports for child-care deteriorate dramatically. Life-long and equal rights to work which women workers have improved, are now trampped on. Our lives are in extreme crisis.

We are now forced to be victimized no longer. We will carry out strong struggles against all oppressions and discrimination in the current economic crisis, in order to realize job security and equal employment of women workers. We make the following resolution to consolidate our struggling will;

  • Immediately stop the current restructuring focusing on personnel reduction and discriminatory employment restructuring!
  • Stop the expansion of irregular women workers and eliminate discriminations against irrgular women workers!
  • Stop unfair labor practices and pay withhold back wages!
  • Make comprehensive provision of labor laws and social security law to irregular workers.
  • Reduce working hours and implement active policies for job creation!
  • Establish the immediate policies for securing livelihood of unemployed women and for creating jobs.
  • Provide funds through reducing military budgets, reforming taxation, and redeeming properties of Chaebols' properties, and implement social reform immediately!
  • Immediately stop retreats of maternity protections under the excuse of economic crisis!

We resolve to carry out much stronger struggles in solidarity, to realize our demands. In addition, we resolve to take affirmative action for the increase in women workers' participation in major executive committees in trade unions and to try our best to organize irregular workers, workers in small-size firms, and unemployed women and to establish industry-based trade unions.


Written on March 6, 1999
by participants in the Korean Women Workers' Rally for job Security and Structural Expansion
Resolution




Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
|
Organizational strategies of irregular women workers

Summarized by Moh, Yoonsook(head of Education Dept. IWWA)


It is very urgent and necessary to organize irregular women workers in the women workers' movement. KWWAU jointly carried out research and organized a workshop of organizational strategies of irregular women workers with the Korean Women Studies Institute (KWSI) and Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) on November 10, 1998. We summarize research results.

Under the current economic crisis where irregular workers have rapidly increased, trade union and/or irregular workers seldom take organized action against their situation. In particular, the present enterprise-based trade union system centered on regular workers is restricted in its possibilities to represent and defend irregular workers' interests and demands. Hence, the issue of organizing irregular workers who can be found throughout society is an unavoidable and urgent task in the trade union movement and the women workers' movement.

  • Employment trends of irregular women workers

    Under the current economic crisis, many companies have discriminated against women and forced regular female workers to become irregular workers under the pretense of necessary restructuring. In particular, married women have been illegally targeted for irregular employment. In the process of restructuring, women are targets of this practice.

    Regular women workers are dismissed and/or victims of the closure of their women-concentrated departments and then re-employed through temporary employment agencies. In addition, companies usually terminate female workers who attempt to resist these unfair labor practices. Since companies target female workers first and concentrate on women for unfair labor practices, the irregular employment of women workers has rapidly increased.

  • Employment situation by type

    1. part-time Employment

      1. employment situation

        In the Korean IMF era, the number of workers working under 36 hours (they are usually classified as part-time workers) has been on the increase, but 36, or more, hours on the decrease. This means that job security has become worsened. Research conducted by the Ministry of Labor shows that about 80% of part-time workers are women.

        In the 1990s, while the number of part-timers has decreased dramatically in the agricultural and fishery industries, the number has increased rapidly in the finance and insurance industries, wholesale and retail industries and the food and hotel industries. In 1994 part-time workers accounted for 22.4% in the manufacturing industry, 16.8% in the wholesale and retail industries, and 39.3% in the food and hotel industries. This implies that part-time employment has spread in the service sector in particular.

        In terms of marriage status of part-time workers by industry, the distribution industry mostly employs married women workers, and the bank and hospital industries unmarried women workers. Married women are employed in the form of 'housewife part-timers' in department stores or they are contracted out as 'housewife tellers' after their retirement. In the case of unmarried women, they are employed as 'part-time nurses' and their contracts are renewed in the form of part-time employment.

        There has been an the increase of part-time workers in the 20s and 30s age groups. They made up 23.9% amongst the age group of 20-29, and 26.5% in the age group of 30-39 in the 1980s, and increased to 31.0% and 31.0% in 1994. Among male part-timers, the age group of 20- 29 accounted for 72.9% and others merely 10%.

        According to their gender and age, part-time male workers made up 29.3%, but female 70.7%. This implies that part-time employment is not only a form of employment allowing women to work while also performing housework and caring for their children, but instead it is used to replace unmarried female workers by married female workers.

        The most outstanding characteristic of this form of employment is that a very large proportion of part-timer workers are women. In fact, the entire married and unmarried female labor force is now irregular, whereas before part-timers were generally married women. This is due to the fact, first, work opportunities are very limited to married women and no social supports for house-work or child caring, are available to them. And second, unmarried women are now vulnerable in the labor market since they are hired under nominal part-time contracts.

      2. Condition of labor

        A survey on irregular workers in the distribution industry conducted by the Korean Federation of Commercial Workers' Union (KFCWU) in 1997, found that the average hours worked per week by part-timers were 45.76 hours.

        However, part-time workers have received lower wages (they are not paid allowances, overtime pay, and receive no vocation), compared to regular workers. The average monthly wages of part-time workers are much lower than the first payment of regular workers performing similar work in the bank, retail and hospital industries.

        Part-time workers are discriminated in terms of all allowances as well as in terms of wages. Bonus accounted for 4.3%, retirement allowance 13.0% out of all allowances received by part-time workers, overtime pay 37.5%, and payment for work on holiday 29.2%. Regular workers obtained almost 95% of every allowance, but part-time workers were severely discriminated. In addition, they seldom receive monthly leaves, yearly leaves or menstruation leaves.

    2. Dispatched workers

      According to a report issued in 1992, there were 120 manpower agencies, and 74 recruiters, but there are today 2,699 manpower agencies, 3,164 recruiters with over 100 workers, and 100,000 dispatched workers.

      If adding an already illegal form of dispatched employment such as cleaners and care-takers, manpower agencies are projected to grow to 3,573, recruiters to 3,954 (more than 30 workers) and dispatched workers to 225,000. Dispatched workers account for 3.75% of the total number of 6 million Korean workers, which is much higher than figures in some other developed countries. However, since dispatched employment has so far been considered as illegal, there probably is a much higher number of dispatched workers in reality.

      1. The reality of employment

        The manufacturing industry employed 59.3% the dispatched workers surveyed representing the highest percentage. This shows that the claim made by the government and industry that dispatched employment occurs in specialized and skillful areas, is false. In addition, the service industry makes up 18.5% of non-manufacturing sector.

        In addition, dispatched employment has a clear gender segregation. In the manufacturing sector, men account for 64.6% of production workers, 88.5% of assisting production workers, and 98.2% of technical plumbers. Women made up 84.8% of clerical assistants, and 90.9% of service related work.

        The current trends in the employment of regular workers have been decreasing while the number of dispatched workers have been increasing. The highest increase in the number of dispatched workers is in production jobs in the manufacturing sector. In particular, the number of dispatched workers has sharply increased in large-size companies. The service sector has also seen large increase in the number employed.

        In terms of age distribution, 57.6% of women are between the ages of 10-29, but also that men have a relatively even distribution between all age groups. This shows that women have more difficulties in finding regular jobs and have to turn to dispatched jobs.

      2. Working conditions

        Dispatched workers have less working days a month and/or working hours a week of regular workers. However, they have longer working hours per day. The different wage levels between regular workers and dispatched workers. Dispatched workers earned 67.7% of the average wages of regular workers. In addition, men earned 74.3% of regular workers' wages and women only 50.9%.

        Dispatched workers are discriminated against in terms of wages and all additional monetary benefits. While regular workers received almost all benefits, dispatched workers received no more than 50% of the benefits. In particular, dispatched workers obtained 29.7% of maternity leaves, which means women's pregnancy and child-caring often caused unemployment. Hence, women face more severe job insecurity.

        Only 9.1% companies employed dispatched workers because of a shortage of labor as claimed by the government and industry, but 86.7% employed them regularly to carry out particular tasks. This means that using dispatched workers is in fact a replacement of regular workers and a way to obtain cheap labor.

        The regular employment of dispatched workers when surveying the duration of employment of dispatch workers. The companies employing dispatched workers in the long term such as over 3 years, made up the highest percentage (28.1%). Amongst dispatched workers 56.9% are employed for more than 1 year. No differences cannot be found by industry and size of company. Hence, the employment of dispatched workers in large size companies has been consolidated and expanded.

      3. A majority of dispatched workers are unorganized

        Members of trade unions constituted 4.6% amongst dispatched workers. Many workers answered 'trade union are not set up yet,' or 'there is a trade union, but I don't join a trade union', which shows a situation in which trade unions target dispatched workers. The membership of dispatched workers can also be co-related to the level of activism by the trade unions of the recruiting companies.

    3. Temporary/day employment

      In Korea, since different definitions are used by the Ministry of Labor and the National Statistical Office, and even definitions used by the National Statistical Office vary yearly, classification drawing a difference between temporary workers and day workers is difficult.

      1. Employment situation

        Employment trends of temporary workers since 1990. About 30% of workers were employed on a temporary basis. Male temporary workers made up about 29%, and women over 40%, which shows that women's employment has become temporary. Compared to 1990, temporary employment has slightly increased overall.

        However, the percentage of male workers has been decreased, but that of women increased from 39.6% in 1990 to 43.2% in 1996. This shows that a higher number of women have entered the labor market as temporary workers rather than regular workers, and along with the number of temporary workers has been on increase.

        The ratio of female temporary workers reached 60%, similar to that 1997. In particular, the wholesale, food and hotel industries employed the largest number female temporary workers, and the ratio of female temporary workers was high in the finance, insurance and service industries.

      2. Working condition

        Temporary and day workers have shorter average working days per month and average working hours per week, than regular workers. However, they receive only half the vacations of regular workers. Temporary and day workers obtained 67.7% of the wages of regular workers.

        The great majority of regular workers receive almost all of the additional benefits available. Temporary and day workers received only 62.7% of regular workers' overtime pay, even if they also do over-time work. They seldom receive employment insurance, pension and so on, so that they face more financial difficulties as well as job insecurity.

        51.1% of temporary and day workers replied that they made 1 year contracts. However, this includes cases of renewed year contracts, so that they were essentially the same as regular workers. In addition, 25.5% of temporary and day workers were treated differently from regular workers in terms of wages and other working conditions because they had no specific terms of contracts.

      3. Their relation with trade unions

        Although 98.1% of regular workers are organized into trade unions, membership of temporary and day workers is just 11.1%. In item of trade unions' attempt to organize irregular workers, as many as 26.1% of temporary and day workers surveyed responded that 'I do not know of any union activism,' which shows their indifference to enterprise-based trade unions. However, this means not only their indifference to trade unions but also trade unions' lacking efforts in organizing temporary and day workers.

        Irregular forms of employment such as part-time employment, dispatched employment and temporary and day employment has expanded because of the demand of industry, especially under the current economic turmoil. As a consequence, the replacement of regular workers by irregular workers, worsening working conditions and lower wages, their job insecurity has seriously worsened, and trade unions have been dismantled. Hence, the issue of organizing irregular workers is an urgent task in the trade union movement and the women workers' movement.


Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
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Demanding the government for the people
- voices of four women workers to the present government-

On October 30, 1998, "the fourth rally for come workers' job security and women's unemployment prevention" was held in front of the headquarters of the ruling party. In the rally, 'Free platform of 20 women speaking up to the present government' was formed to convey needs of various groups of women workers. The following was abstracted from their presentations.

  1. Abolish the system of military service-adding points to "provide equal opportunity for women"

    Please pardon me for not mentioning my name and student number. Several months ago, I took an examination to be government officer at the 9th level. It was very competitive and so the passing mark was the high score of 95. My average score was only 92, only even though I worked hard. Of course, I failed the examination.

    Since men usually have an additional five points for completing the military service, it is almost impossible for women to keep up with them. I understand the government's position giving extra benefits to men who complete the service. However, it is extremely difficult to find a job at the moment. In particular, as a woman, I have been looking for a job for two years since graduating from university.

    I suggest the following; the government can give extra benefits to those who do their military services, but this should not stop women from being benefited from equal job opportunities. That is to say, economic benefits at higher salary classes can be given to those men who pass exams, but the system of military service-adding points should be abolished to guarantee equal opportunities to women. I strongly believe that this current practice deprives women of equal opportunities.

    I called newspapers, broadcasting stations and even the Blue House to let them know of my opinion, but I realized that the Korean society is male dominant. None of these authorities paid any attention to me.

    I have decided to discuss my situations with my university. I feel ashamed although already an alumni of the university, I am looking for help rather than contributing to it as I should do. I strongly request the abolishment of the system of military service-adding points. Abstract from a woman's letter about the military service-adding points system which is a factor preventing women from finding work.

  2. Factory disappearing with sewing machines after withheld back wages

    My husband is unemployed, and I have two children aged 24 and 25. I have worked in garment factories for about five years. During this period, I suffered from withheld back wages twice and so, I sued them at a local labor office.

    Early last March, I started working at a garment factory called 'Chongsol' through an advertisement in a community newsletter. My wage was set as 800,000 WON a month. For the first three months, I was paid regularly, but later, my wages were continuously delayed. They were delayed one month, two months and so on...

    The company promised to pay my wages by the date of September 17, 1998, but the promise was not kept. I then waited for the company's promise to sell the sewing machines to pay their workers. On the day when the company was to pay me back, I went to the company one hour earlier than my appointment. I found some people putting the sewing machines into a truck.

    I could not find anybody from the company but a truck driver, so I thought the owner may have been in the office. But, the office was empty. The truck left. I waited and waited for the owner, but he did not came. Now, I do not know how to get back my wages. I am really very upset whenever I recall my hard work, doing overnight hours and skipping dinner. I dislike advertisements for seamstresses in community newspapers.

    - by Mrs. Park with the age of 52, living in Kuro 6-dong, Seoul

  3. Woman householder excluded from the government's public work project

    Female householder participating in the 4th rally for calling for women worker's job security and demanding the government to establishment women's unemployment prevention

    I am a 43 year-old householder living in Inchon. I have a son going to middle school. I have been the breadwinner for my family, even when I had an irresponsible husband at home. However, at the moment most restaurants don't hire, and the job of a domestic helper is not in demand. I look at community newsletters almost everyday.

    Whenever I call upon them, my age becomes a problem. They usually hang up after I answered "I am 43 years old." I am registered as a single mother. Although the government announced that we, temporary pensioners are able to work in public works projects, and that we are eligible for government to support for our livelihoods, what the government has done for me who is a single mother as well as a woman householder, has been to give me 20,400 WON per month as support.

    It also gave me work for 20 days. However, the government did not let me work any larger. I went to several district offices to beg them to give me some work. They responded that single mothers can only participate in projects specially designed for them, while destitute and temporarily unemployable people may join general public work projects. All support existing for single mothers who want economic independence is 20,400 WON a month, which is less than for destitute and temporarily unemployable people.

    I joined a job training program for women householders to become a cook. I asked officers if I could be employed as cook several times, but they gave negative replies. One day, when I heard that the government was implement-ing meals project in secondary high and high schools, I went to the Education Office and visited officers related to school projects to ask about the project.

    However, they answered that the project would be subcontracted to private companies, and so that the cooks would be employed by these subcontracting companies. This means that my employment as a cook is not guaranteed. Therefore, I would like to make some suggestions.

    I request that women householders be allowed to join job training programs and public works in accordance with their training. I desperately request the government to employ women householders as cooks in secondary high and high schools. In addition, I suggest that women householders be able to manage direct 'women householders' subcontracting operation system's in meals projects that are subcontracted to private companies.

    - by Mrs. Kwon living in Inchon

  4. One-side company restructuring to victimize workers

    The Chohung System Co., a 100% subsidiary of the Chohung Bank was established in 1990 with 70 workers. It aims at systemizing and computerizing the bank and its subsidiaries.

    Unemployment workers demand the government to establish women's! Unemployment coutermeasures! To guarantee women workers' job security & to abolish the military service-adding-point system!

    Initially, workers from the Chohung System Co. were dispatched to the Computing Dept. of the bank under the pretext that they had to learn banking jobs. but, we are still dispatched workers. Finally, the company has asked a manpower agency to fill their needs for labor force from the Chohung bank. In addition, the bank has discouraged the company from developing, by appointing its retired directors, who know little about computers as major ones in the company.

    In August 1995, workers in the Chohung System Co. working under poor working conditions established a trade union under the slogan of 'our future in our hands' and we were affiliated with an industry trade union of the KCTU. In the beginning of establishing the union, the management delayed making collective agreements demanded by the trade unions and, punished its members, it also made false accusations against union executives. Twenty members left the union at that time.

    Nevertheless, the remaining union members united to fight for their trade union. In November 1996, collective bargaining was authorized by the federation of trade unions and we went on strike to defend our collective agreement. The major issues were 1. obtaining the right to collective action 2. limiting dispatched employment. A collective agreement was reached after a three day strike.

    In retaliation, the company and the bank punished the union members with accusations of 'leaving the workplace without permission', and forced them to be dispatched to the Computing Dept. of the bank. To resist this decision, the union refused the dispatchment on the ground that its collective agreement guarantees 'banning workers from being re-dispatched for three months' and went on a legal struggle.

    The company refused paying back-wages out January, 1997, claiming that the workers had refused their jobs. The union's struggle against non-payment of back wages developed into a strike for retiring the company's president. As a result of a three month-long intense struggles involving out rallies in front of the headquarters of the bank and the president's home, the union eventually managed to achieve its demands for payment of back wages, retirement of the president, and development of programs for the company.

    On July 25, 1998, the bank announced that it was closing down the company, which was against the negotiation agreed upon during the previous month. That day the union set up an urgent action committee to carry out struggles against the company's decision and for guarantees of job security, and it held rallies in front of bank's headquarters. On August 1, 1998, the company fired all workers and prevented us from entering the office. In reaction to this, the union went on a struggle and set up tents at the well-known Myongdong Cathedral on August 10, 1998.

    The union saw the closure as nominal restructuring by the bank. While it carried out various kinds of rallies, it suggested practical alternatives which included the demands and interests of all 41 members.

    The committee prepared to take over the company in solidarity with a center assisting workers to take over the management and the finances of their ailing companies, aims to set up independently-managed companies as alternatives for maintaining job security. Then, on October 14, 1998, the union openly suggested taking over the company and demanded that the bank actively negotiated with us.

    On November 1, 1996, as a result of 100 days of united struggles the company expressed it willing to solve the dispute through several channels. The trade union was inspired by this to carry out firm struggles until obtaining victory.

    - by enraged women workers of the Chohung System Co., a company that closed without any concern for its workers.


Korea Working Women's Network 1999
Posted by KWWA
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