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Issue 395

Front Page

News Headlines

Hargeysa University Graduation Ceremony Draws Somaliland Politicians Closer

Somaliland Opposition Rally

Edna Hospital Receives Donations

UAE Lifts Ban On Somali Cattle

Ethiopian Minister Of State For Foreign Affairs Arrives In Somaliland

Deep Concern At Prospect Of One-Party Race In Somaliland Presidential Vote, Says Progressio

Puntland Interior Minister Defends Pirates

Somalia Parliamentarians Challenge Sheikh Sharif’s Government

Local and Regional Affairs

Lord Avebury Writes To The British Government

IFJ Calls For Release Of Journalists In Somaliland

Harassment Of Journalists Continues In Somaliland With Two Arrested And One Beaten

Drought Fuelling Rural Exodus In Somaliland

Australia Lists Somalia's Al-Shabaab As Terrorists

Ethiopian Official Says Somali Militias Use Ethiopia To Attack Rebels

Second Somali-Canadian Stranded In Kenya Set To Return Home

Somalia's Street Children Fend For Themselves

IPDC Continues To Support East African Media

Somalia: Anniversary Of Abduction Of Canadian And Australian Journalists

Putnam Murder Trial: Jury Finds Osman Guilty

Drought Bites Horn Of Africa Ramadan

21 Killed As Somali Forces Attack Shabaab

Somali-Canadians Feel Harassed In Kenya: Activists

Boston FBI Reaching Out To Somali Communities

Mooove Over: Dromedary Dairy Could Be On Horizon

EGYPT: The Man Who Beat The Pirate

Compromise Sought On Prayer Dispute At US Plant

Editorial

Hillary Clinton’s Trip To Africa

Features & Commentary

Shattered Somalia

Somalia: Failing Nations

Somalia: Failing Nations
Somaliland: In The Memory Of Ali Gulaid

U.S. Policy Shift Needed In The Horn Of Africa

Free Resources For Somali Educators And Students

Somalia Illustrates The High Cost Of Failed States

Ethiopia Strongly Believes The Next Election, Must Be Peaceful For The Sake Of Somaliland, And Of Stability In The Sub-Region

A State Of Danger

Do-It-Yourself Foreign Aid

Piracy Problem Persists In Gulf Of Aden

Clinton Tone-Deaf During Africa Trip

Somalia: To Succeed We Have To Look Forward!

Somaliland: The Making Of A Dictator

International News

 

Karzai, Abdullah Claim Victory In Afghan Election

Muslim Boy Passes 8 A Levels
“I was Inspired by my grandfather”, says 8 A-level boy

President Jacob Zuma Wishes Muslim Community Well On Ramadan

President Mubarak Meets Obama At The White House

Too Many African Nations Fail Refugees

C.I.A. Said To Use Outsiders To Put Bombs On Drones

Opinion

Midnight Forever

Somaliland Will Not Be A Banana Republic

Time To Remake Somaliland’s Political Parties: Presidential Election Is Only One Small Step In This Direction

Interpeace Confusion Of Biometric Data In Somaliland

The Turmoil Of Somaliland Political Arena

Protest Letter To Mr. Rayaale And His Cronies

Somaliland Deserve Better Than This

Compromise Sought On Prayer Dispute At US Plant

OMAHA, Nebraska, August 22, 2009 – Officials at a Grand Island meatpacking plant say they're taking steps to prevent a repeat of last year when a Muslim prayer dispute set off protests that led to mass firings.
With the Muslim holy month of Ramadan beginning Aug. 22, JBS Swift & Co. officials, Muslim Somali advocates and union representatives say they're trying to accommodate workers who want to pray at sunset. The plan also is focused on minimizing disruption at the plant.
"We have come to a place where Somalians are better off," said Yasin Ali, who leads the recently organized Nebraska Somali Community Association, based in Grand Island.
Hundreds of Muslim workers walked off the job and picketed in protest last September, saying they wanted time to pray at sunset and break a daylong fast. Plant management responded the next day by adjusting the work schedule to accommodate them. That fueled a counterprotest in which other workers walked off the job, arguing Muslim workers were given preferential treatment. Management then ended the accommodations, which sent Muslim workers back to the picket lines.
The company fired 86 workers for walking off the job. It eventually hired back about a dozen.
"I think a lot of people went in last year sort of flying a little blind," said JBS spokesman Chandler Keys. "Everyone got their eyes opened."
Talks have been under way since last year to understand what the workers want and need, Keys said. The company remains committed to continuing that dialogue, he added.
He declined to discuss details of any arrangement.
Company officials have said they will try to make meeting rooms available for prayer and an end-of-Ramadan celebration, said Dan Hoppes, president of Local 22 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. Such a celebration would likely be similar to ones held at the plant for Cinco de Mayo and other cultural events, he added.
Hoppes said he hoped that the fact that Ramadan comes a few weeks earlier this year, meaning later sunsets, also will help. Sunset and a union-sanctioned evening break will fall within about 30 minutes of each other as opposed to the 60- to 90-minute gap seen last year, he said. Last year, Muslim workers asked to move the break closer to sunset to pray and break their fast.
During Ramadan, Muslims fast daily from sunrise to sunset.
Ali said he believes Muslim plant employees can work with that, or at least he's encouraging them to.
Prayer breaks are not included in the workers' contract. They stand to be among the points discussed when negotiations begin in January on the new contract, Hoppes said.
The tensions over prayer time have been building since 2007. That was when East Africans began filling the gaps left after a 2006 immigration raid cleared illegal Hispanic workers from the plant.
The need for accommodations in the workplace peaks during Ramadan, advocates say.
Not counting management, the plant employs about 2,700 workers, Hoppes said; about 250 of those are Muslim. Last fall, he estimated some 500 Muslim employees worked at the plant.
Seventy-one people filed complaints against JBS Swift following last year's dispute alleging discrimination, Hoppes said. The complaints are pending at the Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Source: AP, August 17, 2009
 



 



 

 







 

 


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