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TUMTIS Union wins UPS negotiation victory in Turkey

TUMTIS Union wins UPS negotiation victory in Turkey
Workers for UPS’ Turkish subsidiary have won the right to be represented collectively by the TÜMTIS trade union, fifteen months after the dismissals of 163 workers – all of whom had registered to join the union or were members of it. Non-stop picket lines, backed by an international campaign which many UNI Post & Logistics affiliates supported and by a UNI Europa mission, won the right to return to work and compensation. TÜMTIS has now triumphed again, after a majority of an estimated 3,000 direct-hire employees filed for union recognition. Now Turkey’s Ministry of Labour and Social Security has legally-certified the union as the workers’ representative.
This achievement is the culmination of the campaign by UPS workers and their union to improve job conditions at the workplaces of global delivery companies operating in Turkey.
Kenan Öztürk, TÜMTIS’ general President, commented: “This achievement is not only ours. It is the result of the collaboration of many trade unions under the umbrella of the Global Delivery Network of the International Transport Federation (ITF) and UNI Global Union, and especially the Teamsters union in America, which represents hundreds of thousands of UPS workers in the company’s home country. The European unions also played an integral role in this victory.”
He continued, “We will now continue toward negotiating a strong collective agreement for UPS workers and we will continue to apply our organisational efforts at MNG-Fed Ex, DHL and TNT in Turkey.”
TÜMTIS’ victory demonstrates to workers that, with determination, unions can still be victorious in a highly globalised and competitive market.
This latest development is a positive pointer to the future for all global delivery company workers who are thinking about joining a union, and who may be struggling for union recognition and good contracts. The UNI and ITF Global Delivery Network is working for union recognition and good working conditions across all the worldwide global delivery companies.