Communist
3rd February 2010, 03:07
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Workers march in Brussels against job-cutting firms (http://www.forexyard.com/en/news/Workers-march-in-Brussels-against-job-cutting-firms-2010-01-29T143350Z)
* Workers protest cuts by Opel, AB InBev, DHL
* Police say 27,000 join Brussels march
By Antonia van de Velde
January 31, 2010, Reuters News
BRUSSELS, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Thousands of people marched in
Brussels on Friday in protest against the job-cutting plans
of companies such as General Motors' unit Opel and beermaker
Anheuser-Busch InBev.
Belgian workers from Opel Antwerp, which is set to close in
June, the world's largest brewer AB InBev, DHL and
Volkswagen's Audi carried banners which read "People first,
not profit" and "We should not pay for the crisis".
Police estimated the number of protesters at 27,000.
Unions expressed anger that hundreds of billions of euros
were being spent worldwide to bail out banks, rather than
saving jobs in industry.
"The banks, which received billions in aid, are dropping the
companies. The banks must be at the service of the economy
and not the other way around," said Rudy De Leeuw, who heads
the ABVV trade union.
A delegation from Opel Antwerp led the march from the
European Commission's headquarters to central Brussels,
setting off pink smoke flares and shouting "We are Opel" and
"We want work".
"It cannot be that factories in one EU state are closed with
the help of taxpayers' money in other EU countries, and that
production is then moved to Korea," Opel's European deputy
labour leader Rudi Kennes told Reuters.
GM last week announced the planned closure of its Opel car
assembly plant in Antwerp, northern Belgium, where 2,600
people work. Unions fear 5,000 jobs could be lost, including
at suppliers. GM now plans to have the group's subcompact SUV
produced not in Antwerp, as originally planned, but in South
Korea by Daewoo.
Unions have argued that GM's decision was not driven by
economic reasons but rather by the state aid which Germany
offered the ailing company. Opel's four plants there will
remain open, although jobs will be cut.
Belgium's central bank has forecast economic expansion this
year of 1.0 percent, but has warned that this return to
growth will not stem the rise of unemployment.
AB InBev has announced 299 job cuts among its 2,700 Belgian
workforce, sparking a two-week blockade of its breweries.
"If you look at the lack of respect AB Inbev has for its
workers, even though the company makes an annual profit of 3
billion euros a year, then it is high time workers say 'we do
not wanted to be treated as merchandise'," Flemish Socialist
politician Caroline Gennez told Reuters. DHL, the express
mail and logistics arm of Deutsch Post DHL has said it will
move almost 800 positions to Germany and the Czech Republic.
_____________________________________________
Workers march in Brussels against job-cutting firms (http://www.forexyard.com/en/news/Workers-march-in-Brussels-against-job-cutting-firms-2010-01-29T143350Z)
* Workers protest cuts by Opel, AB InBev, DHL
* Police say 27,000 join Brussels march
By Antonia van de Velde
January 31, 2010, Reuters News
BRUSSELS, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Thousands of people marched in
Brussels on Friday in protest against the job-cutting plans
of companies such as General Motors' unit Opel and beermaker
Anheuser-Busch InBev.
Belgian workers from Opel Antwerp, which is set to close in
June, the world's largest brewer AB InBev, DHL and
Volkswagen's Audi carried banners which read "People first,
not profit" and "We should not pay for the crisis".
Police estimated the number of protesters at 27,000.
Unions expressed anger that hundreds of billions of euros
were being spent worldwide to bail out banks, rather than
saving jobs in industry.
"The banks, which received billions in aid, are dropping the
companies. The banks must be at the service of the economy
and not the other way around," said Rudy De Leeuw, who heads
the ABVV trade union.
A delegation from Opel Antwerp led the march from the
European Commission's headquarters to central Brussels,
setting off pink smoke flares and shouting "We are Opel" and
"We want work".
"It cannot be that factories in one EU state are closed with
the help of taxpayers' money in other EU countries, and that
production is then moved to Korea," Opel's European deputy
labour leader Rudi Kennes told Reuters.
GM last week announced the planned closure of its Opel car
assembly plant in Antwerp, northern Belgium, where 2,600
people work. Unions fear 5,000 jobs could be lost, including
at suppliers. GM now plans to have the group's subcompact SUV
produced not in Antwerp, as originally planned, but in South
Korea by Daewoo.
Unions have argued that GM's decision was not driven by
economic reasons but rather by the state aid which Germany
offered the ailing company. Opel's four plants there will
remain open, although jobs will be cut.
Belgium's central bank has forecast economic expansion this
year of 1.0 percent, but has warned that this return to
growth will not stem the rise of unemployment.
AB InBev has announced 299 job cuts among its 2,700 Belgian
workforce, sparking a two-week blockade of its breweries.
"If you look at the lack of respect AB Inbev has for its
workers, even though the company makes an annual profit of 3
billion euros a year, then it is high time workers say 'we do
not wanted to be treated as merchandise'," Flemish Socialist
politician Caroline Gennez told Reuters. DHL, the express
mail and logistics arm of Deutsch Post DHL has said it will
move almost 800 positions to Germany and the Czech Republic.
_____________________________________________