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  • business/global/18explode

    Damn those cheese-eating surrender monkeys. . .

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/18/bu...18explode.html

    July 18, 2009
    French Workers Use Threat to Obtain Severance Pay

    By REUTERS
    BORDEAUX, France (Reuters) — A group of French workers facing layoffs obtained extra money after threatening to blow up industrial equipment at their plant, labor union representatives said on Friday.
    The workers, at JLG, a manufacturing company, were the third in France to make similar threats this month, after workers from Nortel, the telecommunications equipment maker, and New Fabris, a car parts maker.
    JLG workers at three plants in southwestern France had been on strike for three weeks over a management plan to lay off 53 of them. After hearing news of the threats made at Nortel and New Fabris, they followed suit.
    On Wednesday, the JLG workers placed four of the company’s products — large platform cranes with a total value estimated at $352,400 — in a car park and surrounded them with gas cylinders and kindling.
    After talks that lasted well into Thursday night, management met their demand that laid-off workers receive 30,000 euros, or about $42,300, in compensation, and the strikers removed the gas cylinders and returned the cranes to the factory, said Christian Amadio, a JLG worker representative.
    At Nortel, talks with management resumed, while workers at New Fabris are still threatening to blow up their factory.
    Such threats signal a new escalation in tactics used by disgruntled French workers after episodes in which managers were detained by employees on company premises.
    Authorities have used tough language to denounce such actions but have refrained from sending in the police to break up protests. France has a history of labor unrest, and the government wants to avoid an escalation of violence.

  • #2
    Re: business/global/18explode

    See also:
    Grim Siege at South Korean Auto Plant

    SEOUL -- South Korean riot police entered Ssangyong Motor Co.'s only factory Monday where hundreds of fired workers, some armed with slingshots, have been occupying part of the facility for two months.

    Production at Ssangyong Motor, South Korea's fifth-largest auto maker, has been paralyzed since May 22 because of a strike by workers opposed to major job cuts under a restructuring plan.
    Ed.

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