2020 Ukrainian miner protests

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The 2020 Ukrainian miner protests were spontaneous and sporadic nationwide rallies and general strikes organised between summer-autumn 2020 led by miners underground, protesting deteriorating conditions and demanding pension preferences due to the conditions, better working conditions and wage increase in Ukraine.

The miner strikes would be the biggest in Ukraine since the 1996 miner protests, when a massive strike movement hit the nation. Coal miners, steel workers protested for 11 days in July 2020 in western and eastern Ukraine, demanding the cease of coal imports to Russia and better wage increase. After 11 days of peaceful marches, miners won the protests and coal operations restarted, as if one of their main demands.

A spontaneous protest movement took place in the fall of 2020, when miners/protesters waved the Ukrainian flag and demonstrated difficult working conditions and demanded improvement of conditions and wage increase affairs. After 43 days of protests, the miners suspended their strikes and paused their demands.[1][2][3]

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, working conditions in Ukrainian mines have deteriorated. Contracts in the mining industry are frequently violated, leaving workers without pay for several months. By December 2020, the Independent Trade Union of Ukrainian Miners (NGPU) claimed that miners at state-owned miners were owed $60 million in unpaid wages.[3]

Of the 148 mines in Ukraine, 102 are at least partly managed by the government. The privatization of the Ukrainian mining industry accelerated in 2019 following the election of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The Ministry of Energy stated that the government planned to privatize or close all unprofitable, publicly owned mines by 2030. The government further reported that only four of the 33 publicly owned coal mines in the country were profitable. The effort to privatize the Ukrainian mining industry has been met with resistance from Ukrainian miners.[3]

67 Ukrainian mines are located in the Donetsk Oblast, which has been occupied in the Russo-Ukrainian War since 2014. While Ukraine is one of the largest producers of coal in the world, the occupation prompted the government to start importing coal from elsewhere in order to meet demand.[3]

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