Japan Confederation of Railway Workers' Unions explained

Japan Confederation of Railway Workers' Unions (JRU)
Native Name:Zen-nihon tetsudō-rōdō-kumiai
Founded:February 2, 1987
Members:22,561 (as of 2020)
Location Country:Japan
Affiliation:RENGO

The is a Japanese trade union, which is usually referred to as in Japanese.

History

The union was founded on 2 February 1987, with the merger of the National Railway Locomotive Engineers' Union (Doro) and the Japan Railway Workers' Union (Tetsuro). The merger was in response to the privatisation of Japanese National Railways, of which both unions were broadly supportive. It affiliated to the Japanese Trade Union Confederation.[1] In 1992, many former Tetsuro members split away, in protest at the union considering the possibility of strikes, and formed the rival Japan Railway Trade Unions Confederation.[2] In 1996, the union had 70,710 members,[3] but by 2020, this had fallen to only 22,561.[4]

In 2010, a complaint was lodged in the Diet that JR-Soren was being financially controlled by the Japan Revolutionary Communist League (Revolutionary Marxist Faction). JR-Soren denied the charges. The charge was repeated by Kansei Nakano and confirmed by several weekly magazines.

Composition

JR-Soren consists of 11 unions and has 62,300 members.[5]

Overseas activities

JR-Soren has assisted with construction of elementary schools in China, and in 2002, established an office in Kabul to support the people of Afghanistan.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Report in which the committee requests to be kept informed of development - Report No 323, November 2000 . International Labour Organization . 22 December 2021.
  2. Restructuring of the Japan National Railways . International Labour Review . 1994 . 133.
  3. Web site: List of RENGO affiliated union members . Cross Currents . 18 November 2021.
  4. Web site: RENGO 2020-2021 . RENGO . 18 November 2021.
  5. JR Soren website "What is JRU?" Retrieved on August 11, 2012