Miners' International Federation | |
Location Country: | International |
Affiliation: | ICFTU |
Members: | 4.2 million (1994) |
Founded: | 1890 |
Dissolved: | 1995 |
Merged: | International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions |
Headquarters: | Russell Square, London (1890 - 1984) Belgium (1985 - 1995) |
The Miners' International Federation (MIF), sometimes known as the International Federation of Miners, was a global union federation of trade unions.
The federation was established in 1890 at a meeting in Brussels by unions from Austria, Belgium, France, Germany and the United Kingdom. It was initially one of the largest union federations, with membership reaching 1.2 million in 1913, and this grew slightly to 1.5 million in 1931.[1]
From the 1950s, the MIF began to campaign for common international minimum working conditions. However, with reductions in the number of miners in its heartland of Western Europe, its overall membership began to fall, and was below one million by 1976.
The union was based in London for many years, with the British National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) as its largest affiliate. In 1983, Arthur Scargill, leader of the NUM, proposed dissolving the federation and forming a new one with the World Federation of Trade Unions-affiliated Trade Unions International of Miners. This was opposed by a majority of members, but the NUM nevertheless withdrew, leaving the federation to relocate its headquarters to Brussels and struggle with a shortage of funds.[2]
The MIF began recruiting unions in other parts of the world, and by 1994 consisted of 58 unions with 4.2 million members. In 1995, it merged with the International Federation of Chemical and General Workers' Unions to form the International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions.
In 1960, the following unions were affiliated to the federation:[3]
Union | Country | Affiliated membership | |
---|---|---|---|
Japan | 57,000 | ||
Associated Mineworkers of Southern Rhodesia | Southern Rhodesia | 1,000 | |
Confederation of Copper Workers | Chile | 24,000 | |
Cyprus Federation of Free Miners | Cyprus | 1,530 | |
Federation of Miners of Greece | Greece | 30,000 | |
Federation of Mine Workers | Tunisia | 6,125 | |
Free Italian Federation of Workers in Mining Industries | Italy | 12,656 | |
Netherlands | 3,000 | ||
General Union of Spanish Workers | Spain | Unknown | |
Ghana | 40,000 | ||
India | 150,000 | ||
Japan | 200,441 | ||
Korean Mine Workers' Federation | South Korea | 28,246 | |
Luxembourg Workers' Federation | Luxembourg | 2,000 | |
Manpower Citizens' Association | British Guiana | 2,000 | |
France | 21,000 | ||
National Coal Mine Workers' Union | Japan | 75,000 | |
National Mines and Allied Workers' Union | Philippines | 3,000 | |
National Union of Mine and Quarry Workers | Italy | 14,610 | |
United Kingdom | 675,000 | ||
Nigerian Mineworkers' Federation | Nigeria | 10,000 | |
Northern Rhodesia | 36,000 | ||
Northern Rhodesia | 4,500 | ||
Norway | 6,000 | ||
Suriname Mine Workers' Union | Suriname | 80 | |
Sweden | 14,000 | ||
Tanganyika Mine Workers' Union | Tanganyika | 1,000 | |
Austria | 25,000 | ||
Belgium | 36,000 | ||
United States | 600,000 | ||
United Mineworkers of New Zealand | New Zealand | 3,320 | |
United Mineworkers of Sierra Leone | Sierra Leone | 5,500 | |
West Germany | 461,674 | ||
Yugoslavia | 95,000 |
1890: Thomas Ashton
1921: Frank Hodges
1927: Achille Delattre
1934: Ebby Edwards
1947: Will Lawther
1957: Ernest Jones
1960: Ted Jones
1963: Dennis Edwards
1976: Peter Tait
1984: Jan Olyslaegers
1989: Peter Michalzik
1910s: Robert Smillie
1921: Herbert Smith
1929: Joseph Dejardin
1932: Fritz Husemann
1934: Pierre Vigne
1945: Achille Delattre
1954: Heinrich Imig
1956: Nicolas Dethier
1963: Heinrich Gutermuth
1967: Walter Arendt
1969:
1971: Adolf Schmidt
1984: Anders Stendalen