Airbus staff set for industrial action
Airbus unions have said that workers in France, Germany and Spain would strike tomorrow to protest the aircraft makers plans to cut 10,000 jobs and spin off or close six European plants.
The European Metalworkers Federation said its member unions at all of Airbus French and German plants would stop work, while in Spain 9,000 workers at Airbus three factories and other sites owned by its parent company EADS would walk off the job for an hour. It said there would be a mass demonstration in front of EADS headquarters in Paris and some 20,000 people were expected to join a large protest in the German port city of Hamburg, with smaller demonstrations outside Spanish production sites. Trade unions in supplier companies based in Belgium and the Netherlands would support Airbus workers by traveling to the protests in neighboring countries, it said.
There are no plans for workers to demonstrate in Brussels. Socialist lawmakers at the European Parliament called on Airbus employees to stay firm in the face of restructuring plans, saying they would ask EADS unions to talk to them in Brussels on March 28 and 29 and had not ruled out meeting Airbus co-Chief Executive Louis Gallois at a later date. Management errors lie behind Airbus difficulties, said Martin Schulz, the leader of the Parliaments pan-European Socialist group. It is all the more shocking to see today that its the workers who pay the price and not the shareholders.
Gallois last week urged politicians not to interfere in how the company managed its business.
Ahead of Frances April 22-May 6 two-round presidential election, most candidates have pushed for state intervention to help rescue the company from its troubles, largely caused by a weaker US dollar and a $6.5 billion profit shortfall due to the A380 super-jumbos two-year delay.
Besides the job cuts of which 4,300 would be made in France Airbus plans to sell or close three plants and find industrial partners to take over and upgrade three more facilities producing fuselage and wing parts. Two of the six affected sites are in France, three in Germany and one in Britain.
Posted by: Steve White 2007-03-15 |