GATS Resource Kit

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GATS Resource Kit GATS Resource Kit

description

GATS Resource Kit. Introduction. This kit has been prepared by unions in the New Zealand Council of Trade Unions who are concerned about the impact of GATS. How to Use this Kit. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of GATS Resource Kit

Page 1: GATS Resource Kit

GATS Resource KitGATS Resource Kit

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IntroductionIntroduction

•This kit has been prepared by unions in the New Zealand Council of Trade Unions who are concerned about the impact of GATS.

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How to Use this KitHow to Use this Kit

– Each of this kit’s five sections is a PowerPoint presentation that can be printed off to use as handouts, overhead transparencies or as a data show projection. There are more detailed notes below each PowerPoint providing further information to support a presenter. Some of the kit’s pages are hyperlinked so that presenters can move quickly to the parts of the kit that are relevant to them and ignore the other sections.

– Resources such as pamphlets and form letters are available.

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Resources in this KitResources in this Kit

1. This introduction2. How GATS works3. Examples of how GATS will affect

your service4. Campaign resources5. Contact details for further inform

ation6. The end

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GATSGATSThe General Agreement on Trade in The General Agreement on Trade in

ServicesServicesA quick introduction to how it worksA quick introduction to how it works

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The WTOThe WTO

• GATS is one of a number of agreements under the World Trade Organisation (WTO)

• The WTO and GATS were both established in 1995

• The WTO now has 144 member countries including Australia, Fiji, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu are all presently seeking to become members.

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The goals of the WTO and The goals of the WTO and GATSGATS

1. To establish global rules for trade between nations

2. To ensure trade flows freely and predictably

3. To remove any restrictions such as government regulations that are considered to be ‘barriers to trade’ in goods or services.

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The scope of GATSThe scope of GATS

GATS limits governments from taking measures that inhibit free trade in services

• What are services?• What is trade in services?• What are ‘measures’ taken by

governments?• Are any services exempted?

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What is a service?What is a service?1. Business Services (e.g.

accountants, midwives)2. Communications

Services (e.g. postal, telecomunications)

3. Construction and Engineering Services

4. Distribution Services (retail and wholesale shopping)

5. Education Services (incl. professional standards)

6. Environmental Services (e.g. water supply, sewage)

7. Financial Services (e.g. insurance, banking)

8. Health Related and Social Services

9. Tourism and Travel Services (e.g. restaurants, travel agents)

10.Recreational, Cultural and Sporting Services (e.g. libraries, museums, rugby)

11.Transport Services12.And other services not

included elsewhere

‘Service’ includes the production, distribution, marketing, sale and delivery

of that service.

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What is trade in services?What is trade in services?

• How to ‘trade’ in servicesServices can be delivered- across borders (e.g. internet, call

centres)- to consumers who travel abroad (e.g.

students, tourists)- by foreign companies establishing a

local presence (e.g. privatisation, takeover)

- by personnel from overseas (e.g. consultants, skilled labour contracts)

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What are ‘measures’ What are ‘measures’ taken by member taken by member

countries?countries?• Each country is restricted from

taking ‘measures’ which are considered barriers to trade of services. This includes measures taken by:– Central, regional and local governments

and authorities– Non-governmental bodies exercising

powers delegated by them (e.g. water companies, professional organisations)

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Are any services Are any services exempted from GATS?exempted from GATS?

• GATS does not cover ‘services supplied in the exercise of governmental authority’

• However a service supplied in the exercise of governmental authority is defined as any service which is supplied:– neither on a commercial basis,– nor in competition with one or more service

suppliers

• This does not exempt most public services such as post, schools, hospitals, water supply etc.

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GATS ObligationsGATS Obligations

• There are two types of obligations GATS member countries have:

1. The first set is top down or “general” obligations which apply to every service, whether a country has scheduled it or not.

2. Secondly, there are specific obligations which each country can choose to individually sign up to in their schedule.

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General (“top down”) General (“top down”) ObligationsObligations

These apply to all services – whether These apply to all services – whether scheduled or notscheduled or not

• Most Favoured Nation Treatment• Transparency• Increased Participation of Developi

ng Countries• Domestic Regulations• General Exceptions• Subsidies

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Most Favoured Nation Most Favoured Nation StatusStatus

• MFN means that each member country must treat all other member countries equally favourably. – E.g Tonga could not choose to have

free trade in health services with Samoa but not the USA. It must treat them both the same.

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TransparencyTransparency

• All members must publish all relevant measures that effect their trade in services and inform the WTO of any changes to laws, regulations or administrative guidelines that will affect trade in services

• They must respond promptly to requests for information from any other member country

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Increased participation of Increased participation of developing countriesdeveloping countries

• Developing countries will be ‘facilitated’ towards increased participation in trade of services by developing greater competition and effectiveness, improved access to distribution channels, and the liberalisation of market access in services of export interest to them

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Domestic RegulationsDomestic Regulations

• Each country will establish and maintain administrative tribunals or procedures which provide for prompt review and appropriate remedies at the request of an effected overseas service supplier.

• Each country will ensure that any measures it takes that affect foreign companies are ‘not more burdensome than necessary’ or act as ‘unnecessary barriers to trade’.

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General Exceptions to General Exceptions to GATSGATS

• GATS rules cannot be used to prevent measures:• Necessary to protect public morals or maintain

public order• Necessary to protect human, animal or plant life or

health• Necessary to prevent deceptive or fraudulent

services• To protect individual privacy and confidentiality• Relating to safety• To collect taxes on traded services or service

suppliers• To protect security interests

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SubsidiesSubsidies

• Subsidies are subject to GATS rules• WTO members recognise that sometimes

subsidies have ‘distortive effects’ on trade. Members shall enter into negotiations to avoid such distorting effects

• Any Member that considers it is adversely affected by a subsidy of another member can request consultations with that member and must be afforded sympathetic consideration

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Specific CommitmentsSpecific Commitments

• Each country draws up a schedule of services which they commit to open to trade

• They can also list limitations on their commitments

• If a particular service is specified in a schedule then it is subject to the following specific commitments:– Market Access– National Treatment– Additional Commitments

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Part of a typical schedulePart of a typical schedule

This column indicates sectors the country has committed to GATS

These columns indicate limitations on those commitmentsMARKET ACCESS NATIONAL TREATMENT

Limitations come in four modes:•Mode 1 -across borders

•Mode 2 – to consumers who travel

•Mode 3 – by foreign companies establishing a local presence

•Mode 4 – through mobile personnel

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Market AccessMarket Access• The following types of limitations are not allowed in

committed service sectors1. Limitations on the number of suppliers (e.g. number of

universities, landfill sites)2. Limitations on the total value of service transactions or

assets (e.g. size of a tourist hotel in a sensitive location)3. Limitations on the total number of service operations or on

the total quantity of service output (e.g. number or size of suburban malls)

4. Limitations on the total number of natural persons that may be employed in a particular service (e.g. limiting the number of foreign actors in a film being shot in New Zealand)

5. Measures which restrict or require specific types of legal entity or joint venture to supply a service (e.g. requirement for joint venture with locals or local representation on a board)

6. Limitations on the participation of foreign investment (e.g. maximum foreign shareholding in a news media company)

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National TreatmentNational Treatment

• Each country must treat foreign service suppliers no less favourably than it treats locally owned service suppliers

• Foreign service providers may be treated the same or better, but not worse

• The rules for foreign and local services do not have to be identical

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Additional CommitmentsAdditional Commitments

• Members can negotiate further specific commitments into their schedule if they wish!

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Progressive LiberalisationProgressive Liberalisation

• ‘Members shall enter into successive rounds of negotiations … with a view to achieving a progressively higher level of liberalisation’

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Modification of Modification of CommitmentsCommitments

• A member can modify any commitment in its schedule once it has been in place for three years

• First however it must negotiate a necessary compensatory adjustment to its other commitments that leaves all other members no less well off.

• Compensatory adjustments are made on a MFN basis – every country is entitled to them

• Any member that is not happy with this adjustment can refer the matter to arbitration to enforce its right

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Dispute Settlement and Dispute Settlement and Enforcement 1Enforcement 1

• A member that breaches GATS may be reported to the WTO’s Council for Trade in Services

• The council can refer the matter to binding arbitration

• The guilty member will be required to make adjustment in its schedule that compensates for any benefit that other members could reasonably have expected to accrue if it were not for the breach

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Dispute Settlement and Dispute Settlement and Enforcement 2Enforcement 2

• The case is heard in secret before a WTO panel of trade experts

• If the government is found in breach of GATS rules the WTO can order that the offending measure be withdrawn

• If the government refuses the WTO can authorise the complaining country to impose trade sanctions to the value of what that country’s services suppliers have lost or could reasonably have been expected to lose

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Current GATS negotiationsCurrent GATS negotiations•The promised assessment of the impact of GATS prior to new negotiations has not occurred•WTO argues that the assessment is technically not possible•GATS negotiations began in 2000 and include changes to the agreement as well as new commitments•A full new round of negotiations began in 2001 at Doha and are due to complete in 2005•Each country must make initial offers of further liberalisation by 31 March 2003

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Click on your sector Click on your sector for examples of how for examples of how GATS could affect itGATS could affect it

• Energy• Broadcasting• Post• Distribution• Education• Tertiary Education• Water• Environment

• Health• Tourism• Local Govt• Libraries and Museu

ms• Labour Rights• Public Services and P

rivatisation

And, how does GATS

affect Developing Countries?

Click Here

How could GATS affect

Maori?

Click Here

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EnergyEnergy

• Publicly owned or controlled energy providers could find the are in competition with foreign providers

• Renewable energy sources could be exposed to full completion with non-renewable or environmentally harmful energy sources

• Measures to limit energy consumption could be illegal

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BroadcastingBroadcasting

• Countries could lose the ability to have local content quotas on television, radio and movies.

• They will not be able to nurture local creativity and talent

• the public could be exposed to an increasingly homogenised and non-critical international media

• Attempts to establish Maori television and radio will be undermined

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PostPost

• Courier companies could lode challenges against postal monopolies on delivering basic letters– Or in New Zealand’s situation this pre

existing deregulation could be cemented in so that state owned postal services could not be reintroduced in the future

• Postal services engaged in international competition will not be able to protect rural delivery costs

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DistributionDistribution

• GATS could lead to local shops increasingly being replaced with internet and telephone shopping. Jobs will be lost overseas.

• Local towns could lose the ability to limit large mega stores moving in and driving out smaller local shops. It could limit the ability to restrict the supply and distribution of alcohol and tobacco.

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EducationEducation

a. GATS may allow foreign franchise early childhood centres the same access to government funding as local community operated centres

b. Curriculum Resources with local content and issues will not be able to be able to be favoured over mass produced foreign curriculum resources

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EducationEducation

c. Governments may not be able to decide which institutions can and cannot educate teachers or what standards they should be required to meet to register

d. Private schools may be entitled to funding on an equal basis to public schools

e. Policies that favour internationalisation over local culture and society will not be able to be repealed

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Tertiary EducationTertiary Education

• Foreign tertiary education providers are given the right to treatment at least as favourable as domestic private providers – but the distinction between private and public has been blurred by funding and other changes during the 1990s.

• Competition and privatisation will increase and be locked in, contrary to current Government policy.

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Tertiary EducationTertiary Education GATS could threaten:GATS could threaten:

– staff and community representation on councils;

– restrictions on the presence of foreign owned institutions or requirements on their ownership;

– limits on the number of particular types of institutions such as the number of universities, either nationally or regionally;

– limiting the number of PTEs;

– limits on the number of institutions that can teach a particular subject either nationally or regionally;

– limits on the number of students undertaking a particular qualification;

– preferential access of domestic tertiary institutions to research grants and funding;

– regulatory requirements re quality of provision and qualification requirements.

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WaterWater

• The European Union's leaked secret request calls for the opening up of trade in water for human consumption and waste water.

• For cities with private water supplies, such as Auckland, this could prevent them regaining public ownership of their water. Large foreign companies could control entire water supplies with the sole motive making a profit of a city’s people

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EnvironmentEnvironment

• GATS could lead to a inability to limit the number of landfills or oil drilling platforms for instance.

• It would inhibit government's ability to regulate environmental services so that people’s health, local jobs and the environment’s well-being is promoted ahead of short term profit.

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HealthHealth• GATS may force public health to compete on a

equal footing with private health care. This could lead to increased costs for patients and cost cutting by health care providers.

• Not for profit trusts and charity groups that provide services like aged care and ambulances will be in direct competition with foreign companies.

• Cultural safety training requirements in nursing may be considered illegal

• Many health care services (I.e. dentistry physiotherapy and midwifery) are not even included under the category health care but business

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Tourism and Travel Tourism and Travel

• Local communities could lose their ability to ensure tourism is planned and accords to their community values

• Foreign owned tourism companies may not be compelled to consider protecting local habitats and heritage.

• Companies with monopolies on resources, such as whale watching, may be exposed to unfettered competition

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Local GovernmentLocal Government

• GATS potentially undermines local government rights to prefer local businesses and use rates to generate local jobs and income.

• It could affect• Subsidising low income housing projects• Regulating casinos• Regulating pesticide spraying• Regulating public transport• Subsidising community economic development

initiatives that give preference to local hiring and purchasing

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Libraries, Museums and Libraries, Museums and SportsSports

• Government funding to important cultural and democratic institutions such as museums and libraries may be required to be shared with foreign for profit competition.

• Increased deregulation of sports could see local sport stars moving overseas in greater numbers

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Labour RightsLabour Rights

• GATS will make it easier for foreign companies to contract out services work overseas, deliver services across borders over the internet and telephone, and even to bring service workers across borders

• To the extent that GATS contributes to privatisation of government services, public sector unions are likely to be replaced with non-unionised workers with lower wages and fewer benefits

• The GATS, like other WTO agreements, does not include any reference to ILO labour standards on child labour, discrimination, and worker rights. This sanctions trade without standards

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Public Services and Public Services and PrivatisationPrivatisation

• GATS could mean governments lose their ability to – Limit the number of suppliers or reduce

competition to protect important monopolies– Regulate foreign competition requiring it to act in

a certain way– discriminate in favour of local ownership over

foreign ownership when privatising their services

• Once in competition, public services find it hard to maintain universal quality and free services for their people

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Maori and the TreatyMaori and the Treaty

• GATS rules treat everything as tradable commodity, undermining the treaty and core Maori values

• Despite the treaty Maori have no say in GATS treaty negotiation or ratification

• Maori commercial interests are currently protected from GATS but not non-commercial interests and concerns

• Maori community building enterprises could be placed in direct competition with foreign companies

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Developing CountriesDeveloping Countries

•The public service sectors of many countries in the Global South have already been gutted by the IMF and World Bank's structural adjustment policies which require severe reductions in public budgets and privatisation of public services and assets. This opens up opportunities for multinationals to provide these services on a for-profit basis. •Many people will be excluded from such essential services as health care, education, water and energy due to cost and lack of access. Under the GATS developing countries will not be able to turn back from the structural adjustment forced on them by the IMF and World Bank in sectors where they have made commitments.

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Campaign ResourcesCampaign Resources

This section of the kit contains resources to help

your union begin campaigning and educating on GATS

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ContentsContents

These resources are currently being prepared These resources are currently being prepared

and will soon be added to the presentation.and will soon be added to the presentation. • Pamphlets• Draft letter to local bodies• Draft letter to school boards/comm

unity groups/etc• Article for community newspapers/

union journals etc• Draft letter to MPs

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Contact for further Contact for further informationinformation

• Pro–GATS organisations• Anti-GATS organisations• Australian Unions• New Zealand Unions• Pasifika Unions• Global Unions

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Pro–GATS organisationsPro–GATS organisations• The World Trade Organisation (WTO)

– Centre William Rappard, Rue de Lausanne 154, CH-1211 Geneva 21, Switzerland.Tel 41 22 739 51 11, Fax: 41 22 731 42 06, email: [email protected]

• Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT)– R.G. Casey Building, John McEwen Crescent, Barton, ACT, 0221

Australia.Tel: 61 2 6261 1111, Fax: 61 2 6261 3111, email:

• New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT)– 195 Lambton Quay,Wellington - Private Bag 18 901, Wellington ,  New

Zealand  Ph: 64 4 439 8000,   Fax: 64 4 439 8511, e mail: [email protected]

• The Trade Liberalisation Network– PO Box 26 Wellington. Ph 64 4 9146320, Fax: 64 4 9146322

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Anti-GATS organisationsAnti-GATS organisations

• World Development Movement (Britain)• GATSwatch (Europe)• The Alliance for Democracy (USA)• AFTINET (Australia)

• Public Interest Advocacy Centre, Level 1, 46-48 York St, Sydney NSW 2000, Australia, email: [email protected]

• ARENA (New Zealand) • PO Box 2450, Christchurch, New Zealand, Tel 03-366-2803, email: [email protected] Return to

Contacts List

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Australian Service UnionsAustralian Service Unions

• ACTU• Level 2• 393 Swanston Street• Melbourne Vic 3000• Tel: (03) 9663 5266• Email:

[email protected]

Websites:– NTEU– AEU– CPSU– ASU

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New Zealand Service New Zealand Service UnionsUnions

• NZCTU• PO Box 6645 WellingtonPh 04 385 1334Email:

[email protected]

Websites:• NZNO• PSA• EMPU• SFWU• AUS• ASTE• PPTA• NZEI

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Pasifika UnionsPasifika Unions• SPOCTU South Pacific Oceania Council of Tr

ade Unions • PO Box 3817 Wellington NEW ZEALAND, Tel

64 4 9170333, Fax 64 4 9172051 Email: [email protected]

• CIWA Cook Islands Workers Association IncorporatedP O Box 403, Rarotonga, Cook IslandsPacifique du SudCOOK ISLANDSTel: (682) 24422, Fax: (682) 24423, E-mail: [email protected]

• FTUC Fiji Trades Union Congress32 Des Voeux Road, P O Box 1418, Suva, FIJITel: (679) 315 377/315, 402, 314 099/314 668, Fax: (679) 300 306, E-mail: [email protected]

• VCTU Vanuatu Council of Trade UnionsP O Box 089, Port Vila, VANUATU,

Tel: (678) 23679, Fax: (678) 26903, E-mail: [email protected]

• PNGTUC Papua New Guinea Trade Union CongressP O Box 4279, Boroko, National Capital District, PAPUA NEW GUINEATel: (675) 325 7642/325, 9656, Fax: (675) 325 6390/323 9657, E-mail: [email protected]

• STUC Samoa Trades Union CongressPSA House, Fugalei, P O Box 2260, Apia, SAMOATel/Fax: (685) 22049, E-mail: [email protected]

• FITA Friendly Islands Teachers' AssociationP O Box 859, Nuku'alofa, Tonga Islands, South Pacific, KINGDOM OF TONGATel/Fax: (676) 23972

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Global UnionsGlobal UnionsWebsitesWebsites

• Global Unions • International Confederati

on of Free Trade Unions• Education International• Public Services Internatio

nal• International Federation

of Building and Wood Workers

• Trade Union Advisory Committee (OECD)

• International Metalworkers' Federation

• International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers' Federation

• International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Association

• International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Union

• International Transport Workers Federation

• International Federation of Journalists

• Union Network International

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The EndThe End

Thanks for using this resourceGood luck with your campaign