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1990s Donbas miners' strikes

Strikes by coal miners in the eastern Donbas region of Ukraine occurred throughout most of the 1990s. Beginning in 1989, coal miners went on strike against poor pay amidst poor economic conditions. Originally part of the 1989 Soviet miners' strikes [ru], the demands of miners in the Donbas also reflected sentiments in favour of Ukrainian nationalism, and they were supported publicly by pro-independence groups such as the People's Movement of Ukraine.

1990s Donbas miner strikes
Part of the 1989–1991 Ukrainian revolution (until 1991)
Miners protesting near the Ministry of Coal Industry building (Donetsk, 1990)
Date15 July 1989 – 19 June 1993 (1989-07-15 – 1993-06-19)
1 February 1996 – 1997
May–17 June 1998
Location
Caused by
1989–1993:
1996–1997, 1998:
    • Low wages
    • Non-payment of wages
    • End of coal industry subsidies
Goals
1989–1991:
1991–1993, 1996–1997, 1998:
    • Paying of wages
    • Raising of wages
MethodsStrike action, political demonstration, sit-in
Concessions
1989–1991:
1991–1993:
1996–1997, 1998:
    • Payment of wages
Parties
Lead figures
Number
  • 500,000–1.5 million (1993)
  • 800,000 (1996)
Casualties and losses
  • 1 dead (suicide)
  • 22 injured
  • 15 injured

Background and early strikes edit

By 1989, the Donbas region in the eastern part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic was in a state of severe economic decline. As part of the Era of Stagnation, the region's industrial economy had significantly declined. More broadly, the state response to the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, Russification, and the Revolutions of 1989 had generated increased distaste for First Secretary Volodymyr Shcherbytsky's government throughout Ukraine.[1] Additionally, in pursuit of Stakhanovite goals of increased productivity, safety requirements were neglected.[2] Outside Ukraine, broader Soviet policies and conditions encouraged the emergence of the strikes. The failures of Perestroika frustrated workers,[3] and widespread shortages for basic necessities like soap led to tensions reaching a boiling point.[4]

1989–1991 strikes edit

On 10 July 1989, coal miners in the Kuznetsk Basin region went on strike, citing poor pay. Word of the strikes soon spread to coal-mining regions throughout the Soviet Union, particularly the Donbas. Following the Kuzbass workers, miners at Yasynova-Hluboka mine in Makiivka went on strike on 15 July 1989.[5] The first strikes' demands were primarily higher wages and increased social protections. In addition to these economic demands, however, many miners were sympathetic to the cause of Ukrainian independence, viewing it as a means of achieving self-governance from the Soviet Union. Some mines outside the city of Donetsk initially refused to join the strikes out of fear of government retaliation, but were eventually convinced to join.[6]

The response from Shcherbytsky's government was largely negative. State media discredited the miners or avoided discussing the matter outright, and disrupted communications between the 28 mines that first went on strike. This hampered the ability of the strikers to successfully organise strikes at other mines, though they were joined by a pipe plant in Makiivka.[6] Facing increasingly-agitated rhetoric from miners and a Communist Party of the Soviet Union that sought to remove the last vestiges of Brezhnev's rule, Shcherbytsky chose to resign rather than continue governing Ukraine in September 1989. Chair of the Supreme Soviet Valentyna Shevchenko also resigned.[7]

The resignations were celebrated as a victory for the miners, but by that point demands had become more political,[7] demanding Ukraine's economic independendence and increased autonomy from the Soviet Union.[8] A two-hour strike on 1 November 1989 protested the rule of Mikhail Gorbachev, demanding an end to the Communist Party's one-party rule and direct elections to the office of President of the Soviet Union. A vote by the regional strike committee to go on strike in all of Donetsk Oblast ended in a 14–14 deadlock. Miners complained that shortages were still widespread, and additionally called for a parliamentary committee on government corruption.[9] Demands for Ukraine to decouple its economic management from the broader Soviet Union was met by the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in August 1990, with the Law on the Ukrainian SSR's Economic Independence.[7]

Among the most serious of the strikes began on 1 March 1991.[10] Supported by the pro-independence People's Movement of Ukraine (abbr. Rukh) organisation,[5] the strikes brought the conflict to a new level, calling for Gorbachev's resignation, the dissolution of the Council of People's Deputies, and recognition of the 1990 Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine. They were supported by miners from the Lviv-Volyn coal basin, who marched to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv. The leaders of Rukh met with miners in Donetsk, and in April 1991 miners occupied the main Khreshchatyk street in Kyiv.[10] Following the 1991 Soviet coup attempt and subsequent Declaration of Independence of Ukraine, strikes did not come to an end, although they decreased in strength and focused primarily on being paid unpaid wages.[11]

1993 strikes edit

In the face of the post-independence economic downturn experienced by Ukraine and the non-payment of miners' wages, Donetsk miners began a strike on 7 June 1993. The strikes quickly grew in scale, encompassing all of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and reaching into parts of Dnipropetrovsk and Kharkiv oblasts. Around 228 mines participated in the strikes, with the total number of participants being between 500,000[12] and 1.5 million. The latter number would make the 1993 strike the largest singular protest in Ukrainian history, surpassing the 2013–2014 Euromaidan.[8] Popular anger was directed at President Leonid Kravchuk's refusal to liberalise the economy, with a report by The New York Times describing strike leaders as sounding like "born-again capitalist[s]".

Contrary to the previous strikes, this strike also involved directors of mines, with director of the Donetsk-based October Mine Yuri Byelomestnov referring to the strikes as a "director's strike".[13] Miners called for their pay to be doubled and for economic connections with foreign countries (particularly Russia, a vital supplier of fuel to Ukraine) to be strengthened, as well as for a referendum on both the Verkhovna Rada and Kravchuk's presidency. The pay increases were criticised by Rukh parliamentarian Mykhailo Shvaika [uk], who noted that it would cause prices to increase by several times more than wages.[14]

Conceding to the demands of the strikes, Kravchuk's government first promoted Yukhym Zvyahilsky,[13] a member of the Donetsk Clan of oligarchs,[15] as First Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine.[13] Later, they also held presidential and parliamentary elections in 1994.[11] As a result of the elections, Kravchuk was replaced by former Prime Minister Leonid Kuchma.[16]

Autonomy debate edit

The political nature of the strikes, in particular calls for autonomy, has been subject to some dispute. The main rallying cry of the protests, that residents of the Donbas "can feed themselves", has been described as either based on opposition to Ukrainian independence and support for Russophilia[13] or as a broader call for decentralisation involving all of Ukraine.[8]

1996–1997 strikes edit

The miners' strikes returned on 1 February 1996, again citing unpaid wages. The strikes occurred simultaneously with coal miners' strikes in Russia, similarly based on low pay (though Russian strikes also included elements of opposition to the First Chechen War). The simultaneous strikes reached from the Donbas to the Russian Far East,[17] and were also supported by coal miners in western Ukraine.[11] Other issues included a proposal by the World Bank to shut down 114 of Ukraine's 227 active mines in order to restore profitability to the industry.[18] In an effort to increase pressure on the government, railway lines and highways were blocked by miners, with only food supplies and ambulances being let through.[8]

The total number of workers who went on strike in 1996 and 1997 was much lower than in 1989–1991 or 1993, numbering at 2,700 according to NATO research fellow Elena Kurilo.[18] In response to the strikes, the government took a hard line, arresting leaders and defaming striking workers on television. The disruption of the strikes caused by the arrests and court proceedings eventually brought an end to the strikes without concessions.[8] However, workers' resentment continued to grow, eventually peaking a year later.[11]

1998 strikes edit

Beginning in 1998, a convoy of about 5,000 miners from the western Donbas and Pavlohrad began to march towards the city of Dnipropetrovsk, seeking payment of 8–9 months' worth of wages. From there, a group of around 1,000 miners marched on to Kyiv. In an effort to counter government propaganda, an independent television channel led by former miners from Pavlohrad also travelled alongside the convoy, interviewing strikers.[11]

The convoy attracted widespread sympathy from the Ukrainian public, and the symbol of miners' orange helmets being pounded on pavement became a widespread symbol of discontent with Kuchma's government. Individuals donated food and water to the convoy, with so much being sent that two busloads of food were donated by the miners to orphanages. Ukrainian nationalist and left-wing parties also expressed support for the strikes, though workers emphasised their apolitical goals.[19] The convoy reached the capital on 29 May, and began blockading the Presidential Office Building, the Government Building, and the Verkhovna Rada building, camping on Trukhaniv Island.[20] Prime Minister Valeriy Pustovoitenko met with strike leader Mykhailo Volynets[21] and described payment of wages as a "priority",[22] but negotiations stalled[21] amidst parliamentary infighting[22] until an agreement to pay all wages was finally reached on 17 June 1998, and the convoy's participants returned home.[11]

Luhansk anti-Berkut clashes edit

Following the end of the convoy, local-level strikes continued. Among these was one in the city of Luhansk, in which three Krasnodon-based mines launched a picket at the offices of the Luhansk Oblast Council and the Governor of Luhansk Oblast. Beginning on 15 July 1998, the strike continued until 24 August, when members of the Berkut special police force attacked the miners.[11] The strikers retaliated violently, and in the ensuing clashes 22 workers, 12 Berkut officers, and three other law enforcement officers were injured. The incident has sometimes been incorrectly referred to as the first instance of law enforcement attacking a peaceful protest in Ukraine,[12] but it was preceded by the 1995 Funeral of Patriarch Volodymyr of Kyiv.[11]

Later, smaller-scale protests also took place in Luhansk Oblast during the remainder of 1998, including the self-immolation of miner Oleksandr Mykhailevych in December. The next year, strikes did not take place, owing to the payment of wages, the fatigue of workers, and disagreements among the leaders of independent trade unions.[12]

Legacy edit

The miners' strikes of 1989 were the largest in the Soviet Union.[5] They were also the origin of the 1989–1991 Ukrainian revolution, which eventually resulted in Ukrainian independence and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Later strikes have failed to replicate the success of the 1990s in terms of scale or public support.[8] In present-day Ukraine, the miners' strikes are regarded as particularly important as demonstrating the role of the Donbas in establishing Ukraine's independence from the Soviet Union.[7][5] The strikes' nature as a collective action to improve Ukrainians' status has also achieved importance since the beginning of the Russo-Ukrainian War,[11] and been compared by some, such as Euromaidan Press journalist Olena Makarenko, to the civil volunteer movement helping Ukrainian forces in the war in Donbas.[8] In the Donbas, the strikes are sometimes referred to as the "Miners' Revolution" (Ukrainian: Шахтарська революція, romanizedShakhtarska revoliutsia; Russian: Шахтёрская революция, romanizedShakhtyorskaya revolyutsiya).[23][24]

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ukraine under Shcherbytsky". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 17 December 2023.
  2. ^ Marples, David R. (1991). Ukraine under Perestroika: Ecology, Economics and the Workers' Revolt. University of Alberta Press. p. 176. ISBN 9780888642295.
  3. ^ Moskoff, William (18 September 1992). "Impoverishment and Protest in the Perestroika Years" (PDF). University of Pittsburgh Center for International Studies. p. 35. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  4. ^ Safire, William (20 July 1989). "A Cake of Soap". The Washington Post. from the original on 19 December 2017. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d Kurennaia, Daria; Demchenko, Oleksandr; Yakubovych, Tetiana; Noskov, Volodymyr; Stryzhova, Olha (25 August 2016). ""Донбасс'91": какую роль сыграл Донбасс в становлении Независимости Украины?" ["Donbas'91": what role did the Donbas play in establishing Ukraine's independence?]. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (in Russian). Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  6. ^ a b Walkowitz, Daniel J. "Interviews with the Strike Leaders". Seventeen Moments in Soviet History. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d ""Досить годувати Москву". Історик Каретніков про те, як Донецьк зустрічав незалежність України" ["Enough to feed Moscow": Historian Karetnikov on how Donetsk greeted Ukraine's independence]. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (in Ukrainian). 24 August 2021. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Makarenko, Olena (29 January 2016). "The Donbass protests you haven't heard of". Euromaidan Press. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  9. ^ Dobbs, Michael (2 November 1989). "Miners strike is 'warning' in Ukraine". The Washington Post. from the original on 27 August 2017. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  10. ^ a b Pyvovarov, Serhii (1 March 2019). "28 лет назад на Донбассе началась массовая забастовка шахтеров. Она ускорила распад СССР, лидеры протеста стали политиками Украины" [Mass miners' strikes in the Donbas began 28 years ago: caused collapse of the USSR, protest leaders became Ukrainian politicians]. Babel (in Russian). Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Azarov, Vlad; Chernova, Oleksandra; Stoliarova, Tetiana (16 October 2021). "Чуеш гуркіт касок?" [Do you hear the helmets clatter?]. Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  12. ^ a b c Kravchenko, Svitlana (23 April 2015). "Масштабних шахтарських страйків в Україні не було з кінця 90-их". The Ukrainian Week (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  13. ^ a b c d Perlez, Jane (17 June 1993). "Ukraine's Miners Bemoan The Cost of Independence". The New York Times. from the original on 25 June 2023. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  14. ^ Poletz, Lida (9 June 1993). "Ukrainian miners strike over price hikes". United Press International. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  15. ^ "Помер Юхим Звягільський: сірий кардинал Донбасу" [Yukhym Zvyahilsky dead: grey cardinal of the Donbas]. BBC (in Ukrainian). 6 November 2021. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  16. ^ "Выборы-1994: начало эпохи Кучмы, победа Гурвица и Боделана" [Elections 1994: Beginning of the Kuchma era, victories for Gurvits and Bodelan]. Ukrainian Information Service (in Russian). 26 March 2019. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  17. ^ Hoffman, David (1 February 1996). "1 million miners go on strike in Russia, Ukraine". The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  18. ^ a b Kurilo, Elena. "The Economic Factor in Ukrainian Ethnic Relations and its Impact Upon the National Security of the Ukraine" (PDF). NATO. p. 16. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  19. ^ "Miners strike vein of public sympathy". Kyiv Post. 12 June 1998. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  20. ^ Konko, Andrii (4 August 2021). "Баталії в парламенті і масові страйки шахтарів: що пережила Україна у 1998 році" [Battles in parliament and mass miners' strikes: what happened in Ukraine in 1998]. 24 Kanal (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  21. ^ a b Korshak, Stefan (9 May 1998). "Ukraine: Miners Continue Strike". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  22. ^ a b "Miners bring protest to Kuchma's doorstep". Kyiv Post. 29 May 1998. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  23. ^ "Шахтерская революция-89: доллары, Горбачев и КГБ" [Miners' Revolution-89: Dollars, Gorbachev, and the KGB]. Segodnya (in Russian). 2 July 2009. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  24. ^ "Шахтарська революція. Уривок з книги "Дикий схід" Максима Віхрова" [The Miners' Revolution: Excerpt from Maksym Vikhrov's book "The Wild East"]. My.City (in Ukrainian). 5 December 2018. Retrieved 29 February 2024.

1990s, donbas, miners, strikes, strikes, coal, miners, eastern, donbas, region, ukraine, occurred, throughout, most, 1990s, beginning, 1989, coal, miners, went, strike, against, poor, amidst, poor, economic, conditions, originally, part, 1989, soviet, miners, . Strikes by coal miners in the eastern Donbas region of Ukraine occurred throughout most of the 1990s Beginning in 1989 coal miners went on strike against poor pay amidst poor economic conditions Originally part of the 1989 Soviet miners strikes ru the demands of miners in the Donbas also reflected sentiments in favour of Ukrainian nationalism and they were supported publicly by pro independence groups such as the People s Movement of Ukraine 1990s Donbas miner strikesPart of the 1989 1991 Ukrainian revolution until 1991 Miners protesting near the Ministry of Coal Industry building Donetsk 1990 Date15 July 1989 19 June 1993 1989 07 15 1993 06 19 1 February 1996 1997May 17 June 1998LocationUkraine a Mainly Donbas Caused by1989 1993 Communist Party committees within businesses until 1991 Low wages Era of Stagnation High food prices Distrust of trade unions in the Soviet Union 1996 1997 1998 Low wages Non payment of wages End of coal industry subsidiesGoals1989 1991 Resignation of Volodymyr Shcherbytsky and Valentyna Shevchenko End of one party rule Raising of wages Economic independence of the Ukrainian SSR from the Soviet Union Adoption of the Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine End of Communist Party committees within businesses Resignation of Mikhail Gorbachev Volodymyr Shcherbytsky and Valentyna Shevchenko politician Trade union independence Direct elections 1991 1993 1996 1997 1998 Paying of wages Raising of wagesMethodsStrike action political demonstration sit inConcessions1989 1991 Resignation of Volodymyr Shcherbytsky as First Secretary of the Communist Party of Ukraine Economic independence of the Ukrainian SSR from the Soviet Union Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine adopted End of Communist Party committees within businesses 1991 1993 1994 parliamentary and presidential elections held early Resignation of the Krasnodon municipal government 1996 1997 1998 Payment of wagesPartiesMiners Independent Trade Union of Ukrainian Miners Supported by People s Movement of Ukraine Soviet Union until 1991 Government of Ukraine Donetsk Oblast Luhansk Oblast BerkutLead figuresVolodymyr Biletskyy Mykola Volynko uk Mykhailo Volynets uk Volodymyr Shcherbytsky Leonid Kravchuk Leonid Kuchma Donetsk Oblast Viktor Kurchenko Yuriy Smyrnov uk Viktor Yanukovych Luhansk Oblast Anatoliy Kasianov uk Eduard Khananov uk Hennadiy Fomenko uk Oleksandr Yefremov Viktor TikhonovNumber500 000 1 5 million 1993 800 000 1996 Casualties and losses1 dead suicide 22 injured 15 injured Contents 1 Background and early strikes 2 1989 1991 strikes 3 1993 strikes 3 1 Autonomy debate 4 1996 1997 strikes 5 1998 strikes 5 1 Luhansk anti Berkut clashes 6 Legacy 7 Notes 8 ReferencesBackground and early strikes editBy 1989 the Donbas region in the eastern part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic was in a state of severe economic decline As part of the Era of Stagnation the region s industrial economy had significantly declined More broadly the state response to the 1986 Chernobyl disaster Russification and the Revolutions of 1989 had generated increased distaste for First Secretary Volodymyr Shcherbytsky s government throughout Ukraine 1 Additionally in pursuit of Stakhanovite goals of increased productivity safety requirements were neglected 2 Outside Ukraine broader Soviet policies and conditions encouraged the emergence of the strikes The failures of Perestroika frustrated workers 3 and widespread shortages for basic necessities like soap led to tensions reaching a boiling point 4 1989 1991 strikes editOn 10 July 1989 coal miners in the Kuznetsk Basin region went on strike citing poor pay Word of the strikes soon spread to coal mining regions throughout the Soviet Union particularly the Donbas Following the Kuzbass workers miners at Yasynova Hluboka mine in Makiivka went on strike on 15 July 1989 5 The first strikes demands were primarily higher wages and increased social protections In addition to these economic demands however many miners were sympathetic to the cause of Ukrainian independence viewing it as a means of achieving self governance from the Soviet Union Some mines outside the city of Donetsk initially refused to join the strikes out of fear of government retaliation but were eventually convinced to join 6 The response from Shcherbytsky s government was largely negative State media discredited the miners or avoided discussing the matter outright and disrupted communications between the 28 mines that first went on strike This hampered the ability of the strikers to successfully organise strikes at other mines though they were joined by a pipe plant in Makiivka 6 Facing increasingly agitated rhetoric from miners and a Communist Party of the Soviet Union that sought to remove the last vestiges of Brezhnev s rule Shcherbytsky chose to resign rather than continue governing Ukraine in September 1989 Chair of the Supreme Soviet Valentyna Shevchenko also resigned 7 The resignations were celebrated as a victory for the miners but by that point demands had become more political 7 demanding Ukraine s economic independendence and increased autonomy from the Soviet Union 8 A two hour strike on 1 November 1989 protested the rule of Mikhail Gorbachev demanding an end to the Communist Party s one party rule and direct elections to the office of President of the Soviet Union A vote by the regional strike committee to go on strike in all of Donetsk Oblast ended in a 14 14 deadlock Miners complained that shortages were still widespread and additionally called for a parliamentary committee on government corruption 9 Demands for Ukraine to decouple its economic management from the broader Soviet Union was met by the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in August 1990 with the Law on the Ukrainian SSR s Economic Independence 7 Among the most serious of the strikes began on 1 March 1991 10 Supported by the pro independence People s Movement of Ukraine abbr Rukh organisation 5 the strikes brought the conflict to a new level calling for Gorbachev s resignation the dissolution of the Council of People s Deputies and recognition of the 1990 Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine They were supported by miners from the Lviv Volyn coal basin who marched to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv The leaders of Rukh met with miners in Donetsk and in April 1991 miners occupied the main Khreshchatyk street in Kyiv 10 Following the 1991 Soviet coup attempt and subsequent Declaration of Independence of Ukraine strikes did not come to an end although they decreased in strength and focused primarily on being paid unpaid wages 11 1993 strikes editIn the face of the post independence economic downturn experienced by Ukraine and the non payment of miners wages Donetsk miners began a strike on 7 June 1993 The strikes quickly grew in scale encompassing all of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and reaching into parts of Dnipropetrovsk and Kharkiv oblasts Around 228 mines participated in the strikes with the total number of participants being between 500 000 12 and 1 5 million The latter number would make the 1993 strike the largest singular protest in Ukrainian history surpassing the 2013 2014 Euromaidan 8 Popular anger was directed at President Leonid Kravchuk s refusal to liberalise the economy with a report by The New York Times describing strike leaders as sounding like born again capitalist s Contrary to the previous strikes this strike also involved directors of mines with director of the Donetsk based October Mine Yuri Byelomestnov referring to the strikes as a director s strike 13 Miners called for their pay to be doubled and for economic connections with foreign countries particularly Russia a vital supplier of fuel to Ukraine to be strengthened as well as for a referendum on both the Verkhovna Rada and Kravchuk s presidency The pay increases were criticised by Rukh parliamentarian Mykhailo Shvaika uk who noted that it would cause prices to increase by several times more than wages 14 Conceding to the demands of the strikes Kravchuk s government first promoted Yukhym Zvyahilsky 13 a member of the Donetsk Clan of oligarchs 15 as First Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine 13 Later they also held presidential and parliamentary elections in 1994 11 As a result of the elections Kravchuk was replaced by former Prime Minister Leonid Kuchma 16 Autonomy debate edit The political nature of the strikes in particular calls for autonomy has been subject to some dispute The main rallying cry of the protests that residents of the Donbas can feed themselves has been described as either based on opposition to Ukrainian independence and support for Russophilia 13 or as a broader call for decentralisation involving all of Ukraine 8 1996 1997 strikes editSee also 1996 Ukrainian miner protests The miners strikes returned on 1 February 1996 again citing unpaid wages The strikes occurred simultaneously with coal miners strikes in Russia similarly based on low pay though Russian strikes also included elements of opposition to the First Chechen War The simultaneous strikes reached from the Donbas to the Russian Far East 17 and were also supported by coal miners in western Ukraine 11 Other issues included a proposal by the World Bank to shut down 114 of Ukraine s 227 active mines in order to restore profitability to the industry 18 In an effort to increase pressure on the government railway lines and highways were blocked by miners with only food supplies and ambulances being let through 8 The total number of workers who went on strike in 1996 and 1997 was much lower than in 1989 1991 or 1993 numbering at 2 700 according to NATO research fellow Elena Kurilo 18 In response to the strikes the government took a hard line arresting leaders and defaming striking workers on television The disruption of the strikes caused by the arrests and court proceedings eventually brought an end to the strikes without concessions 8 However workers resentment continued to grow eventually peaking a year later 11 1998 strikes editBeginning in 1998 a convoy of about 5 000 miners from the western Donbas and Pavlohrad began to march towards the city of Dnipropetrovsk seeking payment of 8 9 months worth of wages From there a group of around 1 000 miners marched on to Kyiv In an effort to counter government propaganda an independent television channel led by former miners from Pavlohrad also travelled alongside the convoy interviewing strikers 11 The convoy attracted widespread sympathy from the Ukrainian public and the symbol of miners orange helmets being pounded on pavement became a widespread symbol of discontent with Kuchma s government Individuals donated food and water to the convoy with so much being sent that two busloads of food were donated by the miners to orphanages Ukrainian nationalist and left wing parties also expressed support for the strikes though workers emphasised their apolitical goals 19 The convoy reached the capital on 29 May and began blockading the Presidential Office Building the Government Building and the Verkhovna Rada building camping on Trukhaniv Island 20 Prime Minister Valeriy Pustovoitenko met with strike leader Mykhailo Volynets 21 and described payment of wages as a priority 22 but negotiations stalled 21 amidst parliamentary infighting 22 until an agreement to pay all wages was finally reached on 17 June 1998 and the convoy s participants returned home 11 Luhansk anti Berkut clashes edit Following the end of the convoy local level strikes continued Among these was one in the city of Luhansk in which three Krasnodon based mines launched a picket at the offices of the Luhansk Oblast Council and the Governor of Luhansk Oblast Beginning on 15 July 1998 the strike continued until 24 August when members of the Berkut special police force attacked the miners 11 The strikers retaliated violently and in the ensuing clashes 22 workers 12 Berkut officers and three other law enforcement officers were injured The incident has sometimes been incorrectly referred to as the first instance of law enforcement attacking a peaceful protest in Ukraine 12 but it was preceded by the 1995 Funeral of Patriarch Volodymyr of Kyiv 11 Later smaller scale protests also took place in Luhansk Oblast during the remainder of 1998 including the self immolation of miner Oleksandr Mykhailevych in December The next year strikes did not take place owing to the payment of wages the fatigue of workers and disagreements among the leaders of independent trade unions 12 Legacy editThe miners strikes of 1989 were the largest in the Soviet Union 5 They were also the origin of the 1989 1991 Ukrainian revolution which eventually resulted in Ukrainian independence and the dissolution of the Soviet Union Later strikes have failed to replicate the success of the 1990s in terms of scale or public support 8 In present day Ukraine the miners strikes are regarded as particularly important as demonstrating the role of the Donbas in establishing Ukraine s independence from the Soviet Union 7 5 The strikes nature as a collective action to improve Ukrainians status has also achieved importance since the beginning of the Russo Ukrainian War 11 and been compared by some such as Euromaidan Press journalist Olena Makarenko to the civil volunteer movement helping Ukrainian forces in the war in Donbas 8 In the Donbas the strikes are sometimes referred to as the Miners Revolution Ukrainian Shahtarska revolyuciya romanized Shakhtarska revoliutsia Russian Shahtyorskaya revolyuciya romanized Shakhtyorskaya revolyutsiya 23 24 Notes edit Ukrainian SSR Soviet Union until 1991References edit Ukraine under Shcherbytsky Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 17 December 2023 Marples David R 1991 Ukraine under Perestroika Ecology Economics and the Workers Revolt University of Alberta Press p 176 ISBN 9780888642295 Moskoff William 18 September 1992 Impoverishment and Protest in the Perestroika Years PDF University of Pittsburgh Center for International Studies p 35 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Safire William 20 July 1989 A Cake of Soap The Washington Post Archived from the original on 19 December 2017 Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c d Kurennaia Daria Demchenko Oleksandr Yakubovych Tetiana Noskov Volodymyr Stryzhova Olha 25 August 2016 Donbass 91 kakuyu rol sygral Donbass v stanovlenii Nezavisimosti Ukrainy Donbas 91 what role did the Donbas play in establishing Ukraine s independence Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty in Russian Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b Walkowitz Daniel J Interviews with the Strike Leaders Seventeen Moments in Soviet History Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c d Dosit goduvati Moskvu Istorik Karetnikov pro te yak Doneck zustrichav nezalezhnist Ukrayini Enough to feed Moscow Historian Karetnikov on how Donetsk greeted Ukraine s independence Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty in Ukrainian 24 August 2021 Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c d e f g Makarenko Olena 29 January 2016 The Donbass protests you haven t heard of Euromaidan Press Retrieved 29 February 2024 Dobbs Michael 2 November 1989 Miners strike is warning in Ukraine The Washington Post Archived from the original on 27 August 2017 Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b Pyvovarov Serhii 1 March 2019 28 let nazad na Donbasse nachalas massovaya zabastovka shahterov Ona uskorila raspad SSSR lidery protesta stali politikami Ukrainy Mass miners strikes in the Donbas began 28 years ago caused collapse of the USSR protest leaders became Ukrainian politicians Babel in Russian Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c d e f g h i Azarov Vlad Chernova Oleksandra Stoliarova Tetiana 16 October 2021 Chuesh gurkit kasok Do you hear the helmets clatter Ukrainska Pravda in Ukrainian Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c Kravchenko Svitlana 23 April 2015 Masshtabnih shahtarskih strajkiv v Ukrayini ne bulo z kincya 90 ih The Ukrainian Week in Ukrainian Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c d Perlez Jane 17 June 1993 Ukraine s Miners Bemoan The Cost of Independence The New York Times Archived from the original on 25 June 2023 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Poletz Lida 9 June 1993 Ukrainian miners strike over price hikes United Press International Retrieved 29 February 2024 Pomer Yuhim Zvyagilskij sirij kardinal Donbasu Yukhym Zvyahilsky dead grey cardinal of the Donbas BBC in Ukrainian 6 November 2021 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Vybory 1994 nachalo epohi Kuchmy pobeda Gurvica i Bodelana Elections 1994 Beginning of the Kuchma era victories for Gurvits and Bodelan Ukrainian Information Service in Russian 26 March 2019 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Hoffman David 1 February 1996 1 million miners go on strike in Russia Ukraine The Washington Post Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b Kurilo Elena The Economic Factor in Ukrainian Ethnic Relations and its Impact Upon the National Security of the Ukraine PDF NATO p 16 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Miners strike vein of public sympathy Kyiv Post 12 June 1998 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Konko Andrii 4 August 2021 Bataliyi v parlamenti i masovi strajki shahtariv sho perezhila Ukrayina u 1998 roci Battles in parliament and mass miners strikes what happened in Ukraine in 1998 24 Kanal in Ukrainian Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b Korshak Stefan 9 May 1998 Ukraine Miners Continue Strike Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b Miners bring protest to Kuchma s doorstep Kyiv Post 29 May 1998 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Shahterskaya revolyuciya 89 dollary Gorbachev i KGB Miners Revolution 89 Dollars Gorbachev and the KGB Segodnya in Russian 2 July 2009 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Shahtarska revolyuciya Urivok z knigi Dikij shid Maksima Vihrova The Miners Revolution Excerpt from Maksym Vikhrov s book The Wild East My City in Ukrainian 5 December 2018 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1990s Donbas miners 27 strikes amp oldid 1216383836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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