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Metal workers stage massive
protest in Rome and walkout at Fiat plants
channelnewsasia.com.
07 November 2003.
ROME : More than 200,000 metal workers took to the streets of Rome
as they pressed their demands for a new contract, union officials
said.
The leftist Italian Federation of Metal Workers (FIOM) said between
40 and 50 percent of the workers at carmaker Fiat's main plant in
Turin heeded a call for an eight-hour strike. But Fiat management
said only about 17 percent of the company's workers joined the stoppage.
"We are more than 200,000," the federation said referring
to the protest in Rome, which brought workers from all over the
country.
The federation, which is affiliated with the powerful Italian General
Labor Confederation, represents about half the workers in the metal
and mechanical sectors.
It opposes earlier agreements signed by two smaller labor organizations,
the Catholic-inspired Federation of Mechanical Industries, and the
moderate Italian Union of Metal-Mechanical Workers.
Those union organizations, which opposed Friday's protest movement,
agreed on a 4.5 percent pay increase.
The FIOM, which is in a strong position because of nearly full
employment in the Bologna region, has already opened a breach in
the accord signed by the rival unions by reaching individual deals
at some 2,000 companies pending a global agreement for the entire
sector.
"We demand an 8.5 percent increase," said Leonardo Mazzotto,
secretary general of the FIOM branch in the northern city of Padua.
He said this would include a real increase of 1.5 percent plus compensation
for inflation in 2001 and 2002, for a total of 135 euros a month.
Gianni Rinaldini, overall secretary general of the FIOM, said the
federation would keep up the pressure.
"Let no one make any illusions that we have finished with
the demonstration today," he said. "We have decided on
another eight-hour strike to extend the conflict."
IMPRIMIR
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