Reprint of an article in the June 1995 issue of the Multinational Monitor that discusses the role of unions and multinational corporations in the struggle for democracy in Nigeria. The article mentions General Sani Abacha, Thomas Medley, the AFL-CIO, the African American Labor Center, violence against strikers, imprisonment of labor leaders, General National Gas Workers (NUPENG), PENGASSAN, the National Labor Congress (NLC), the Senior Staff Consultative Association of Nigeria (SASCAN), Folabi Olagbaju, Mobil Oil, Frank Kokori, ICEF (International Federation of Chemical, Energy and General Workers Union), Wariebi K. Agamene, F.A. Addo, F. Aidelomo, the judiciary, Amnesty International, the...
Reprint of an article in the June 1995 issue of the Multinational Monitor that discusses the role of unions and multinational corporations in the struggle for democracy in Nigeria. The article mentions General Sani Abacha, Thomas Medley, the AFL-CIO, the African American Labor Center, violence against strikers, imprisonment of labor leaders, General National Gas Workers (NUPENG), PENGASSAN, the National Labor Congress (NLC), the Senior Staff Consultative Association of Nigeria (SASCAN), Folabi Olagbaju, Mobil Oil, Frank Kokori, ICEF (International Federation of Chemical, Energy and General Workers Union), Wariebi K. Agamene, F.A. Addo, F. Aidelomo, the judiciary, Amnesty International, the International Labor Organization (ILO), a National Constitutional Conference (CONFAB), the Brussels-based International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), scabs, Michael Fleshman, the Nigerian Democratic Movement, the Communications Workers of America (CWA), (il, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union (OCAW), Robert Wages, Michael Fleshman, TransAfrica, Randall Robinson, African-American politicians, the General Accounting Office (GAO), and a unilateral embargo on Nigerian oil.