Federación Sindical de Trabajadores Mineros de Bolivia

Federación Sindical de Trabajadores Mineros de Bolivia

Infobox Union
name= FSTMB
country= Bolivia
affiliation=
members=
full_name= Union Federation of Bolivian Mine Workers
native_name= Federación Sindical de Trabajadores Mineros de Bolivia


founded= June 11, 1944
current=
head=
dissolved_date=
dissolved_state=
merged_into=
office=
people= Miguel Zubieta Miranda, executive secretary
website= [http://es.geocities.com/fstmb2003 es.geocities.com/fstmb2003]
footnotes=

The Union Federation of Bolivian Mine Workers (Spanish: "Federación Sindical de Trabajadores Mineros de Bolivia", FSTMB) is a labor union in Bolivia that represents miners. Bolivia's miners are commonly regarded as the country's most class-conscious workers. The FSTMB has played an important role in Bolivia's recent history.

The union emerged in the wake of a violent clash between government troops and striking tin miners in Oruro and Potosí in 1942. The FSTMB was founded in June 11, 1944 at a congress held in Huanuni, Oruro. The Huanuni Congress included delegates from 25 local unions, the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR), and the Revolutionary Workers' Party (POR, a Trotskyist group). The newly formed union had a membership of 60,000 miners. Juan Lechín, the leader of the miners' movement and POR member, was chosen as the union's Executive Secretary.

Divisions emerged in the union's leadership over how to relate to the new government of Major Gualberto Villarroel. MNR members wanted the FSTMB to support Major Villarroel, but the Lechín and the other members of the POR wanted the union to remain independent of the government. The MNR's position was defeated in 1946 when the FSTMB adopted the "Pulacayo Thesis," which called for a workers' revolution and other radical goals. In 1947, POR members formed a caucus in the union, the "Bloque Parlamentario Minero", to represent their interests. The FSTMB faced renewed government suppression following a series of strikes in 1949, forcing Lechín and other union leaders into exile.

New elections were held in 1951 that gave the MNR a plurality, leading the military to nulify the elections. The FSTMB and POR formed militias of workers that fought on the side of the MNR. These militias fought government forces and stormed army bases. These struggles culminated in the "Bolivian National Revolution" in April 1952, which placed the MNR in control of the government. Following the revolution, the FSTMB became the main component of the Bolivian Workers' Center (COB), a new umbrella organization for all labor unions. Most of the large-scale tin mines were nationalized and placed under the control of a new government agency, the "Corporación Minera de Bolivia" (COMIBOL). COMIBOL was managed jointly by the government and the FSTMB.

From 1964 to 1982, a series of military dictators ruled Bolivia. The FSTMB and the COB often faced harsh government repression, most notably under the regimes of Colonel Hugo Banzer (1971-78) and General Luis García Meza (1980-81). Many of the union's leaders were jailed or forced into exile during these years. The FSTMB became a leading force in Bolivian politics once again with the restoration of democracy in 1982.

most of the state-controlled tin mines. Between 1985 to 1987, the workforce of the state mining company fell from 30,000 to just 7,000. This devastated the membership of the FSTMB.

Despite its setbacks, the FSTMB remained active in the labor movement and politics. The union was at the forefront of the movement against water privatization in 2000, and has campaigned for nationalization of Bolivia's natural gas reserves. The FSTMB was also involved in the protests that brought the resignations of President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada in 1997 and President Carlos Mesa in June 2005. They have also pressured the government to re-nationalize the country's mines.

The current Executive Secretary of the FSTMB is Miguel Zubieta Miranda, who previously led the union's local in Huanuni.

External links

* [http://es.geocities.com/fstmb2003/ Unofficial website] (in Spanish)
* [http://venezuela.elmilitante.org/index.asp?id=muestra&id_art=1751 Interview with Miguel Zubieta Miranda] (in Spanish)
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2158797.stm Bolivian miners reject foreign investors] (BBC News, 2002)

Further reading

*Herbert Klein, "A Concise History of Bolivia" (Cambridge University Press, 2003). ISBN 0521807824
*June Nash, "I Spent My Life in the Mines: The Story of Juan Rojas, Bolivian Tin Miner" (Columbia University Press, 1992). ISBN 0231079370


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