The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Rail strike boss: There’s no shame in drug-dealing or defrauding the dole

Shocking admission by union baron causing families misery at Christmas

- By Glen Owen and Abul Taher

A UNION activist behind the rail strikes expected to cripple Britain at Christmas once defended drugdealin­g, petty crime and dolefiddli­ng, declaring he and his friends weren’t ashamed of ‘trying to get enough money together to look after our families’.

Eddie Dempsey, the assistant general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT), described his childhood on a council estate in South London, where he said the lack of ‘decent work’ meant ‘most of us’ turned to petty crime.

Mr Dempsey, 40, who has been accused of being an apologist for Vladimir Putin, told a meeting of Left-wing Brexiteers three years ago: ‘Most of us turned to selling drugs or whatever we could do, fiddling the dole, trying to get enough

‘Praised Kremlin-backed rebel as charismati­c’

money together to look after our families. I ain’t ashamed of it.’

He added: ‘It’s something that a lot of us have had to do.’

The remarks emerged as families across Britain were braced for a week of strike hell – with rail workers continuing their walkouts as part of the worst industrial unrest for decades.

While RMT leader Mick Lynch called for an urgent meeting with Rishi Sunak to discuss the long-running dispute over pay, jobs and conditions, Network Rail warned that services will be limited, overcrowde­d or cancelled until at least January 8. RMT members will strike for 11 days over the holiday season, with the first two 48-hour strikes on Tuesday and Friday.

In addition, an overtime ban for train operating staff, from December 18 until January 2, will result in thousands more cancellati­ons.

Mr Dempsey, who is paid £108,549 a year, was accused of being a Putin apologist after posing with a proRussian separatist commander during a visit to the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine in March 2015.

During his visit, a year after Putin invaded the region, Mr Dempsey was pictured with Aleksey Mozgovoy, a leader of the pro-Russian Ghost Brigade of rebels in the then self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic. Luhansk and neighbouri­ng Donetsk were annexed by Putin in September after sham referendum­s. Mozgovoy was assassinat­ed after meeting Mr Dempsey, who praised him as a ‘charismati­c’ Kremlin-backed insurgent and described the West’s actions in the region as a ‘US-orchestrat­ed coup’.

In his 2019 speech, Mr Dempsey said the union movement had offered him a ladder out of that world, saying: ‘It wasn’t until I joined the railway, just after my son was born, and I got my RMT membership card that things changed. For the first time I had dignity,’ he said.

Mr Lynch wrote to the Prime Minister to say that a meeting between the two men was now the best prospect of making any progress. Arguing that No10 was ‘directing the mandate for the rail companies and has torpedoed the talks’, Mr Lynch said: ‘There is no reason why this dispute could not be settled in the same way that RMT has resolved disputes in Scotland and Wales.’

A Government spokesman said: ‘It’s very disappoint­ing that, despite an improved deal offering job security and a fair pay rise, the RMT continues to hold Christmas hostage with more damaging strikes.’

THE arrival of the first Ukrainian train in Kherson last month, with its familiar blue paintwork, served as a powerful symbol of the city’s liberation from eight months of brutal Russian occupation.

There were waves to passengers from those standing alongside the tracks as the train thundered into the recaptured southern city, then joyful hugs and tears on the platform as families were reunited.

Some held flags, others flowers, as they cheered the staff who have performed heroically in Ukraine’s fightback against Vladimir Putin by keeping rail services running along 16,700 miles of track.

They reflect the determinat­ion of citizens to resist the Russian President’s attack on every possible front. ‘Our tanks go in first, followed by our trains,’ declared Oleksandr Kamyshin, chief executive of the sprawling rail system.

His defiant words underline the remarkable role of Ukraine’s ‘Iron People’, as they are hailed on social media. These are the train-drivers, engineers, attendants and managers working day and night to protect their vast nation’s backbone amid the horrors of war.

Almost 300 rail staff have been killed as they transport soldiers, weapons and supplies to the front line, help others escape Kremlin atrocities, and rapidly repair the damage from drones and missiles.

What a contrast these selfless workers offer to their better paid counterpar­ts in Britain, who cynically disrupt national wellbeing with strikes designed to cause maximum anguish at Christmas.

And how bitterly ironic that while Ukraine’s rail workers perform so bravely in Europe’s fight for democracy against a bloodstain­ed dictatorsh­ip, some of the hard-Left militants leading strikes here in Britain promote Putin’s cause – even posing for pictures with pro-Kremlin thugs and wearing symbols of Russia’s aggression.

Meanwhile, their union leader Mick Lynch uses the language of military conflict, speaking of his members’ dispute with management as ‘two sides in a war’ as they sabotage services with strikes and overtime bans. Mr Kamyshin, however, insists that ‘war is not an excuse’ for bad service, despite the hail of bombs and chronic power cuts in his country.

And I can testify to his success after criss-crossing Ukraine over the past year during 25 weeks of reporting on the conflict.

I was in Dnipro, in central Ukraine, in October when the Russians unleashed 84 cruise missiles and 24 drones in a bid to destroy Ukraine’s energy infrastruc­ture. Yet by 9pm the same day, Mr Kamyshin said only 14 trains were facing delays of more than one hour.

Even on the worst day of disruption in Ukraine last month, he said proudly that ‘we didn’t cancel any single train and all our passengers finally arrived safely’, thanks to the tireless efforts of his staff.

Dmytro Yaroshenko, who has worked on the railways for 18 years and headed the team on that first train back into freed Kherson, typically plays down any suggestion of personal heroism and insists he is just doing a job he loves.

The 36-year-old recalls packing terrified people into his train in the war’s early days, staff giving up their own spaces and keeping the lights out to deter Russian attacks.

He says that his train once passed a burning fuel depot in the town where his wife and two children were staying. ‘We were looking through the windows at the fire. It was very scary,’ he adds.

The 230,000 men and women working for Ukrzalizny­tsia – Ukraine’s rail system – have kept services running despite waves of attacks on electrical substation­s, fuel depots, stations and bridges. ‘We had eight days to establish a hospital train and 30 days for rebuilding a whole bridge – those are time schedules that are not typical for railways,’ said one official.

Incredibly, 85 per cent of trains run on schedule – significan­tly better than the 68 per cent of British trains stopping at stations on time, according to the most recent data.

Employees’ efforts have been rewarded with two pay rises, pushing a train-driver’s pay over £7,000 a year – about eight times less than British drivers, who are going on strike over an offered salary increase of eight per cent.

The median pay of all British rail workers is £44,000 – about nine times the wage of the engineers desperatel­y patching up Ukraine’s network in freezing weather.

The worst attack on Ukraine’s rail system was in April when a missile struck Kramatorsk station as it was filled with thousands fleeing Russia’s advance. Sixty people died.

The missile was fired from the nearby separatist enclave of Donetsk, seized by pro-Russian stooges in 2014. It created such carnage that I was told terrified people, even children, had to walk over human flesh to escape.

Yet consider this chilling fact: one of the most senior officials in the RMT union visited that enclave to hang out with a key paramilita­ry leader soon after Russia helped it break away from Ukraine.

Eddie Dempsey, the RMT’s senior assistant general secretary, who boasts of his desire to ‘overthrow capitalism’, even posed for pictures with Aleksander Mozgovny in 2015. He wrote a glowing obituary of the

Ukrainian tanks go in first, followed by our trains

We had eight days to establish a hospital train, 30 days to build a bridge

‘charismati­c’ rebel after his death a few weeks later.

Yet Mozgovny was a close ally of a key Russian operative called Igor Girkin, an ultra-nationalis­t who helped orchestrat­e events in Donetsk and the illegal annexation of Crimea that same year. Girkin was sentenced to life in prison by a Dutch court this month over the shooting down of a passenger plane as it flew over Ukraine. The death toll was 298.

Yet Lynch has defended his colleague. And Dempsey is the most graphic example of how, behind their PR facade, several senior RMT officials, including Communist president Alex Gordon, appear to parrot Putin’s propaganda.

Such men claim that Ukraine is riven with fascists and argue that Nato bears responsibi­lity for provoking Putin’s atrocities.

Significan­tly, Gordon has protested outside the Ukrainian embassy in London wearing the black-and-orange Ribbon of St George I saw on Putin’s militia during Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

They are, sadly, not alone among leading lights in the union movement whose anti-Americanis­m or Marxism tips them into doing the dirty work for Putin, a fascistic dictator pursuing a colonial war.

This does not negate their arguments over pay. Yet the repulsive views of some union leaders sabotaging our Christmas sits uneasily with the heroic efforts of Ukrainians daily risking their lives to keep trains running, their country alive and democracy on track.

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 ?? ?? RESOLVED: RMT workers protest in Glasgow. Left: Eddie Dempsey
RESOLVED: RMT workers protest in Glasgow. Left: Eddie Dempsey
 ?? ?? HARD GRAFT: Ukrainians fix a bent track near the Russian border last week
HARD GRAFT: Ukrainians fix a bent track near the Russian border last week

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