Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links

Visit this group

Ponzi Capitalism and the Deepening Moral Crisis

The Roller Coaster: The Communist Party in the 1940s

Rebuilding the Labor Movement in the 21st Century, an Interview with Scott Marshall

Police Escalate Attacks on First Amendment Rights

Public Option: Worth the Fight

Our Socialist Inheritance and Future

Past, Present and Future: The Politics of Reform in the Era of Obama

Needed: Constitutional Amendment for the Right to a Earn a Living Wage

Why Should Grassroots Liberals Consider Marxism?

Is That Specter Really Collapsing?

Carlo Tresca: The Dilemma of an Anti-Communist Radical

The Brief, Revolutionary Life of Joe Hill

Movie Review: Giải phóng Sài Gòn

Review: Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth

Poetry, November 2009

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2008 – online /March – April 2008 /Mar. 10 – Mar. 16 Print | Send to friend

Japan: Communist Lawmaker Questions Canon, Inc.'s Unfair Labor Practices



click here for related stories: labor movement
3-12-08, 9:29 am

Original source: Akahata

The questioning by Japanese Communist Party Chair Shii Kazuo in the Diet took leading optical maker Canon Inc. management by surprise.

Additional coverage:
Podcast #61 - Struggle for a Cesar Chavez Holiday

At the House of Representatives Budget Committee meeting on February 8, the JCP chair demanded that Canon President Mitarai Fujio be summoned to answer questions at the committee meeting about the company’s inappropriate practice of replacing full-time employees with temporary workers.

“The company is nervous,” said a Canon employee. He is one of the Canon employees in a managerial positions who was ordered by the company to watch the video of the Shii questioning distributed on the Internet by YouTube.

The Shii questioning focused on a 100-percent Canon-owned subsidiary, Nagahama Canon Inc., a maker of photocopier toner cartridges in Nagahama City, Shiga Prefecture.

Pointing out that only 4 out of 19 workers per assembly line are regular workers at this plant, Shii denounced Canon for constantly using temps in place of full-time workers even though the use of temporary workers is allowed only for contingent purposes.

Shii demanded that Canon President Mitarai, who has extensively promoted such replacements, be summoned to testify before the Diet.

Shortly after the Shii questioning, Nagahama Canon began recruiting a number of regular workers with much better working conditions than those of temporary workers.

A man who worked as a temporary worker at Nagahama Canon said, “Workers, who used to be without public insurance programs, are delighted to now be enrolled in the social insurance programs.”

In the wake of the Shii’s questioning, parent company Canon also issued a directive to reduce the number of temporary workers and directly employ 5,000 workers from among temporary workers at Canon group companies in Japan by the end of this year, including many full-time workers.

From Akahata


| | | | | Save Page to del.icio.us


» Home » Online Edition February-March 2008 Print Edition » Subscribe





blog comments powered by Disqus
Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org