298 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
298 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
**Dita** is a [detergent factory](Factory "wikilink") in Tusla, [Bosnia
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and Herzegovina](Bosnia_and_Herzegovina "wikilink") which has been under
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[workers' control](Workers'_Self-Management "wikilink") since June of
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2015.
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In June 2015 workers at Dita detergent factory in Tusla, following
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bankrupcy, look over the factory to stop it becoming derelict.
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Following repairs, particularly to the roof and steamline, they have
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gone back into production as a workers' cooperative. The following is a
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short piece from the Sarajavo Times. Hope to have a fuller story soon.
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"After months of hard work and effort in the Tuzla detergent factory
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Dita, the production of powder detergent <em>Arix Tenzo</em> started
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yesterday.
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First packaging of Arix are already getting ready for the market and
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they will be soon on the shelves of Bingo, who financed the raw
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materials for 140 tons of this detergent, and later on the shelves of
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other shopping centers as well.
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We managed to repair the steam line, 70 % of the raw materials are
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imported, and Bingo has provided us with raw materials, same as for
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liquid products,” said President of the labor union of Dita Mehmedovic
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Dzevad.
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“This concluded program for Dita,” he said, adding that Dita returned to
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its original position, and that it can work as 10 years ago.
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Arix is returning on the market with 18 raw materials as high quality
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detergent. The export of Arix was also announced, primarily 25 tons for
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Kosovo. Employees in Dita are expecting to have a lot of work to do.
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Six new experts started to work in Dita, and they will need more
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manpower.
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Tatjana Paunoski, employee in the Office for public relations of company
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Bingo, recalled that Bingo supported Dita in the production of liquid
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detergent “3de” in June, emphasizing that Bingo financed 138 tons of raw
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materials for the production of powder detergent, and expressed
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satisfaction that <em>Arix Tenzo</em> will be present in homes of many
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citizens.
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# Reclaiming the factory: a story from Bosnia
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Privatisation processes in Bosnia and Herzegovina have gradually
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destroyed workers' rights and ownership. But there are stories of hope
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and resistance emerging from this battered country.
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# Read more\!
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Get our weekly email
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'' Workers on break in Tuzla, Bosnia. Flickr/Kingmoor Klickr. Some
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rights reserved.Privatisation processes in Bosnia and Herzegovina from
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the 1990s onwards have gradually transferred ownership and power from
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the socialist state to private entrepreneurs. As elsewhere in Europe and
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the rest of the world, this process, in most cases, was accompanied by a
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large number of lay-offs. Company assets floated in the market and were
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bought and sold at unusually low prices, dismantling large factories and
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industrial giants of former Yugoslavia.''
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Financialisation/globalisation became embedded in Bosnia especially in
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the wake of the Dayton Accords. The workers, who were once deemed to be
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the owners of the enterprise, overnight became proletarians, deprived of
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fundamental rights and any form of possession over the production
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process. This was pretty much the case across the entire East-Central
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Europe, although the case of Yugoslav socialism was different, as the
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workers, through the self-management system, had had a much more direct
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control of the means and objects of their production units than anywhere
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else in the so-called countries of “really-existing socialism”.
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Yugoslavia’s dissolution and transition to free market capitalism was
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also different in that it set in motion a bizarre process of primitive
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ethno-accumulation, i.e. primitive accumulation on the basis of
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ethnocratic-conflictual lines. Bosnia and Herzegovina is a typical
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example.
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Among the many examples of the negative effects of privatisation
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processes in Bosnia and Herzegovina, one that was under the media
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spotlight in the past two years, is the case of “Dita” detergents
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factory from Tuzla, an industrial city in the central part of North-East
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Bosnia. The factory was privatised in two rounds (2001 and 2005) and
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become part of retail chain, “Lora”, from Sarajevo, who owned the
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majority of shares. The privatisation of “Dita” resulted in more than 20
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million Euros in debt for the enterprise and over 20 wages being unpaid,
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affecting a four-year retirement plan, also due.
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In the end, this led to the official bankruptcy of the enterprise. A
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series of workers' strikes ensued in 2012, 2013 and 2014. The 2014
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February protests started as joint protests of workers from several
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factories and enterprises in Tuzla (Dita, Konjuh, Aida) requesting the
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government of the Tuzla Canton to resolve the outstanding issues and
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waive the blame attributed to workers. The workers claimed that the
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cause of the crisis was and is the privatisation process and
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irresponsible management. These protests turned out to be the trigger
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for wider social protests in several cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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In early 2015, the Tuzla Canton government decided to revise the
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privatisation process of several enterprises, including “Dita”, starting
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an orderly bankruptcy procedure in view of enabling the creditors to get
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their money back while creating possibilities for re-launching and
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reviving production. The problem with the bankruptcy procedure
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(according to the existing legal framework) is that the workers are the
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last in the list of priorities: the “investors” and bureaucratic
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agencies will have to be paid first, and whatever is left over would go
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to the unpaid wages, pensions etc.
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A sparkle of hope for the workers themselves is actually their own
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efforts for restarting production and trying to save what is possible to
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be saved in order to keep their jobs and eventually have their salaries
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paid. In June 2015, the Union of Workers of “Dita”, and the bankruptcy
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manager, reached an agreement to restart some of the production lines
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(since much of the production lines are in need of repairs for which
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there is no money available).
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The plan is to start with production of some famous (in former
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Yugoslavia) products and support for this initiative is enlisted by
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civil society actors and people across the country (mainly expressed
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through support on Facebook and calls for support for purchasing “Dita”
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products). Some of the supermarket chains have already decided to
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support the efforts of “Dita” workers by buying their products and
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making them available on their stores' shelves. However, this all is
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just a trial version of activities to be tested and any form of
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continuity has to be decided by the shareholders’ assembly to be held on
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30 June 2015.
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Will these efforts take root or quickly fade away? Does this mean that
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the spirit of the workers’ self-management is coming back in advanced
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and mature post-socialist colours, emblematically in Bosnia and
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Herzegovina, the most ethnically fragmented region of the former
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Yugoslavia in which primitive accumulation was criss-crossed with
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vicious ethnic war?
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After years of their voices being unheard, struggles to keep the factory
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under collective ownership seem to bear some fruits. These struggles
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exposed corrupt governments and managers and brought to the fore the
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class issue as opposed to the ethnic and religious division which, if
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anything, divert attention from the real social issues.
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Prior to 2014, there were numerous cases of workers’ rights violations
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that were only seen as a by-product of “transition“ and “post-war Bosnia
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and Herzegovina”, which were mostly related to ethnic, religious and
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political divisions. This is no longer the case after the protests of
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February 2014.
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The narrative begins to change and the story of workers is becoming more
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and more important. Class cleavages supersede religious and ethnic ones
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and the ethno-capitalism of primitive accumulation and privatisation, of
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political clientelism and corruption have shown their limits. No one can
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explain the spirit of this mini-revolution better than the words of a
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“Dita” worker: “Industry is alive as long as there are workers ready
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to fight for their basic right – the right to work”.
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Workers at the Tuzla's bankrupt Dita detergent company have restarted
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production on their own, following years of financial problems - and are
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winning cheers from the local community.
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The Dita Detergent factory in the north-eastern industrial town of Tuzla
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was once a leading brand in the former Yugoslavia.
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But after surviving the 1992-5 war it went bankrupt and stopped
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production as the global recession swept through the region from 2008
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onwards.
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These days Dita seems to be setting a new trend, however, one that could
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be followed by dozens of other companies struggling amidst the economic
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crisis.
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After a year of protests over unpaid wages, health care and pension
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contributions, its workers have organized to restart production
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themselves, and are winning strong support from the local community.
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“We started production again, but not fully, as we are still preparing
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the production drives for the powder products and liquid detergents,”
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Dzevad Mehmedovic, one of the workers who is also president of the trade
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union of Dita, told BIRN.
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Help started coming because many people remembered Dita as one of
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Bosnia’s leading brand names for decades.
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Dita was founded 38 years ago by the salt mine company Sodaso. It
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started production of an Italian licensed product, the powder detergent
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Ava, which was one of the most popular detergents on the Yugoslav market
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until the 1990s when the country broke up and war started.
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Despite the war, production in Dita continued and the company donated
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some 6,000 tons of detergent for people who lacked the most basic
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hygienic products.
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After the war, when the Italian partner did not extend the license for
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Ava, the company launched its own product, the powder detergent Arix
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Tenzo and a liquid dish washing detergent, 3D.
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Like many other Bosnian companies after the war, Dita was privatized,
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and like many similar cases it was not a successful endeavor.
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After encountering many problems, Dita stopped producing in February
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2013 and is now registered as a company in insolvency, which therefore
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could be liquidated.
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But Dita workers wanted their jobs back, as well as unpaid salaries and
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contributions for their health and pension funds. For years they staged
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protests and strikes, until recently opting to try a new approach.
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They restarted production without a new investor, working for free and
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using materials that still remained in the company’s storerooms.
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“We agreed to work for free, just to show that this company can work. We
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will bring back the quality, the old recipe,” Mehmedovic said.
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“After the war there were 760 workers, but now there are just 70 of us.
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We are open to investors, to partners, to young professionals that want
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to re-run this company.
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“We will start full production soon I hope. Now, any kind of help is
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more than welcome,” Mehmedovic told BIRN.
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Dita’s attempt to rise from the ashes quickly became the business news
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story of the month across Bosnia, generating interest in the media and
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support from the local community.
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Numerous journalists have visited the factory and written about the
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initiative of its workers. Social networks have brimmed with positive
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messages and also became a place where different actors from the local
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community discuss ways to help.
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Most of the local media have offered free marketing services while
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actors and producers have offered to make free advertisements for Dita
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products once they restart full production.
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Mehmedovic said some regional companies also offered help. One is an old
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partner company, TKI, from Hrastnik, Slovenia, which has promised to
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send some raw materials.
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“We used to work with them for 20 years and they will help now, even
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though we still own them around 250,000 euro\!” he added.
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Representatives of the company as well as Tuzla cantonal government also
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said they have already met representatives of several supermarket chains
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which have agreed to include Dita products among their offer.
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Many customers can’t wait. “I eagerly awaiting your products to appear
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so that now, as a grown-up, I can buy a gift package of your products
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for my mom,” one posts on social networks reads.
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Production of another recognizable detergent “Ida” have started in
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detergent factory Dita from Tuzla, after new machine from Germany was
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put into operation.
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This is the second powder detergent that is produced in this factory in
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bankruptcy, and its price will be lower than the detergent Arix Tenzo,
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which is also in production since recently.
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Member of the Council of creditors of Dita Emina Busuladzic said that
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Dita is returning to the market with its highly recognizable brand.
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“After 10 years, women, employees of Dita, are going to celebrate the
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International Women’s Day, the 8<sup>th</sup> of March, which is
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something huge for us,” said Emina.
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President of the Union of Workers of Dita Dzevad Mehmedovic said that
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all the facilities in the factory are in operation and producing top
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quality detergent, whose price is adjusted to the purchasing power of
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citizens.
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New-old Dita’s product “Ida” will be placed on the market of Tuzla
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Canton on Wednesday, after which will follow the delivery throughout
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BiH.
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Raw materials for the production of “Ida”, as well as the first raw
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material powder for production of detergent Arix Tenzo, were provided by
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the company Bingo.
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We, the workers of Tuzla-based detergent factory DITA, have been
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fighting a wave of corrupt privatisation, exploitation and asset
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stripping that is destroying the industry of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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For over two years now, we have guarded our factory around the clock to
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prevent the removal of machinery and assets.
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The process of privatisation of DITA was carried out in collaboration
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with corrupt politicians, judiciary and banks, which failed to carry out
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due diligence, and provided toxic loans to the new owners – money that
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never reached the factory.
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Our country is suffering from lack of rule of law: criminal elites have
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pushed through amendments to the criminal code that mean there is no
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court that can try financial and trade crimes.
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This legalised theft has denied us our basic human rights: we are over
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40 monthly salaries in arrears, all of which left us hungry and
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destitute; we have been forced to watch our family members die because
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we could not afford medical treatment.
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Now bankruptcy proceedings have begun. We are resolved to maintain the
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occupation of the factory and are refusing to recognise the authority of
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the trustee managing the bankruptcy unless the interests of the workers
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are protected, or new investment to reactivate the factory is found. |