Tag Archives: Strike

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Transport chaos threatens Midsummer

A public transport strike appears likely to kick off on Wednesday night after unions and state-transport heads failed to agree on workers’ pay and conditions after three days of discussions. Read More

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Portuguese teacher’s strike hits exams

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The start of end-of-year exams in Portugal was disrupted on Monday as teachers went on strike
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The education ministry says around a third of students sitting exams were affected, while teachers’ unions claimed 90% of their members had stopped work to protest at austerity measures slashing jobs and lengthening the working week.

“We’re very anxious. We don’t know when we can come back to sit our exams. The country wants to go forward, but a strike is being held on the day of a national exam,” said one student.

The education ministry says any student who was unable to sit the exam will be able to on July 2.

“I agree with the teachers’ strike. Although the Ministry says that the strike affects students, I think that the rules that are imposed on teachers have also been undermining the students throughout the year,” said another student in Lisbon.

The strike followed demonstrations at the weekend. Portugal’s two union federations have called for a general strike on June 27 in an atmosphere of hardening resistance to the cuts.

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Shock and disbelief at Greek shutdown of ERT

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The Greek government’s decision to pull the plug on the country’s public broadcaster is one of its most drastic measures yet to pare down Greek public institutions as part of austerity measures.

It is a move which has angered journalists, politicians and unions alike.

“It is an incomprehensible act. I don’t believe it is happening in a democratic country, as I don’t believe that that something like that has happened in any democratic country,” said journalist Stella Papapopoulou.

Yiorgos Savvides, of the Greek Journalists’ Union Cnfederation believed the government had a wider agenda:

“They want to shut down ERT in order to manipulate the media as it suits them. They want to take full control all the mass media.”

With two parties within the government’s three party coalition opposing the move this could be a major test for Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.

Our correspondent Stamatis Giannisis who was in Athens said:

“The government’s decision to close down the public broadcaster has caused the most serious split so far in the in three party coalition government. But the closing down of ERT is only the tip of the iceberg as there are also plans to shut down or to amalgamate a large number of so called public sector companies.”

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Air traffic control strike hits French airports

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French air traffic controllers began a three-day strike on Tuesday, forcing hundreds of flight cancellations across the country in a protest against plans to liberalise civil airspace. Workers are concerned that European Union plans for a “Single European Sky” will have negative effects on their working conditions.

The European Commission estimates that inefficiencies in air traffic management add 42km to the average flight. It wants to centralise air traffic controls, merging national systems into nine Functional Airspace Blocks. However, France’s main controllers’ union says the plans constitute “a direct attack on the public service nature of this sector” and are the beginning of privatisation.

Around 1,800 flights were cancelled out of about 7,650 scheduled for Tuesday, France’s DGAC aviation authority said. However, fewer flights were affected than its initial estimate of 50 percent.

Marseille airport in the south of France said on its website that it was less affected than others, with 100 flights or about a third cancelled. More than 70 flights were grounded out of Nice airport. Britain’s easyJet has said it was cancelling 35 flights to Paris, 11 to Toulouse and others to Marseille, Bordeaux and Nice.

Preparations for the first flight of Europe’s newest passenger jet, the Airbus A350, were also affected by the strike.

Eurocontrol map displaying the delayed flights at 12:30pm GMT. Delays over 45 minutes are shown in red.

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‘US support for human rights merely a show’ – relatives of Yemeni Gitmo detainee

Follow RT’s day-by-day timeline of the Gitmo hunger strike. Although President Barack Obama said last month that he was determined to close the facility, where over 100 inmates have been on hunger strike since early February, the recent vote upheld a law blocking the use of taxpayer funds to build or renovate facilities in the US to house suspected terrorists and other prisoners from Guantanamo Bay. Obama first promised to shut down Guantanamo in 2008. Since then, relatives of detainees have held out hope they would be reunited with their husbands, brothers and sons. One family of a Yemeni inmate told RT’s sister channel Russia Al Youm it is unlikely they would ever see their loved ones ever again. Obama’s recent promise to lift restrictions on Yemeni Gitmo detainees was greeted with sneers in the country. “America’s support for human rights is merely a show! It only cares about its own people, while it destroys the rights of all others. We’ve been suffering for 13 years now,” the mother of Abdurrakhman ash-Shbaty, a Yemeni terror suspect kept at the controversial detention center since 2002, told Abdelaziz Al Khayajim. And after ash-Shbaty was arrested, his entire family was accused of terror links. “We’re tired of these nonstop lies. Obama remembers about Guantanamo only during election campaigns and on holidays. He promised to shut it down several times and to forward their cases to their home countries. These are all lies,” ash-Shbaty’s brother said. In May, President Obama announced he was lifting his self-imposed ban on transferring Guantanamo detainees to Yemen, despite reports that detainees returned to Yemen have joined terrorist fighters in the Arab nation. These security concerns prompted Obama to suspend transfers to Yemen in 2010 after a Nigerian man attempted to blow up a US-bound flight on Christmas Day 2009 with explosives hidden in his underwear on instructions from Al-Qaeda operatives in Yemen. According to Yemen experts in the US, security in the country has improved since last year’s ouster of authoritarian leader Ali Abdullah Saleh. In an effort to combat terror, his successor Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi has restored cooperation with the US. Yemen is also demanding $20 million from Washington to build a rehab center for former Guantanamo detainees extradited to the country. The facility’s program would ostensibly discourage them from returning to militant activities. Last month, Amnesty International listed the indefinite detention of 166 prisoners at Guantanamo as America’s primary human rights concern in the US chapter of its annual report for 2012. The human rights group has also kept count of the death toll at Guantanamo: “Adnan Farhan Abdul Latif, a Yemeni national who repeatedly expressed distress at his indefinite detention without charge or trial, died during the year, bringing to nine the number of detainees known to have died at Guantanamo since January 2002,” the report said. Latif, one of the first Gitmo prisoners, was taken into US custody in 2001. His release was ordered by the US District Court in Washington in July 2010, but the decision was overruled a year later on the grounds that Latif was an Al-Qaeda combatant. Less than a week ago, the protesting Guantanamo detainees issued a plea urging the US Military to appoint a new team of physicians to oversee their care during the hunger strike, which currently involves 8 of every 10 prisoners. A letter dated May 30 and signed by nine Gitmo detainees and the attorneys for several others was “respectfully requesting that independent medical professionals be allowed into Guantanamo” to treat the detainees, and that they be given full access to their medical records in order to determine the best treatment. Nearly 40 of the hunger strikers are reportedly being force-fed, which they claim is a form of torture. “They are close enough to death that the military sees the need to force-feed them, but none of them enjoy being force-fed, I can tell you that. And they’ve described being force-fed as having a knife run down their throat,” human rights lawyer David Remes said. While Gitmo prisoners say they cannot describe how painful force-feeding is, the detention facility’s staff maintain that the “detainees in the hospital do not currently have any life-threatening conditions.” “We have a detainee population of 166, and we currently have 103 detainees tracked as hunger strikers, with 37 receiving enteral feeds. Two detainees receiving enteral feeds are being observed in the detainee hospital,” according to the latest report from Guantanamo Bay officials. Read More

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Gitmo staff treat detainees ‘worse than animals’ – prisoner’s lawyer

Anne Richardson’s client was among the first inmates to go on hunger strike, she told RT, adding he is now “skin and bones.” RT: When did you last see your client? What can you say about his health? Anne Richardson: I met with my client in early May and it was shocking to see how thin he was and how impossible it was for him to focus. He’s been hunger striking since February 6 and it’s just getting increasingly desperate. He has lost so much weight, he is just skin and bones. It was just terrifying to see him in this condition and not to know what was going to happen to him. RT: How is he describing his daily routine at Guantanamo? Is he complaining about what’s going on at the prison? AR: My client has been kept in solitary confinement; many of his items are taken away from him, including attorney-client mail. He was not allowed to have a toothbrush, toothpaste or soap in his cell for many weeks. I don’t know even if he’s gotten them to this day. They have made conditions at times freezing cold for them in the cells. They are requiring that they submit to very humiliating searches of their genital area in order to meet with their attorneys or talk with them on the telephone. It is just humiliating. It’s been difficult for them to sleep at night. They are sometimes taken to their showers in the middle of the night, so they have to decide between sleep and getting a little bit of cleanliness. It’s just been very punitive. RT: What are the detainees’ sentiments as their hunger strike has been going on for four months? AR: The detainees are really attempting to have treatment be restored to them as human beings, rather than being punished and treated like animals. I have had my client tell me many times: “They treat animals better than they treat detainees.” They want to be heard, they want to be treated with respect again, and those of them who have been force-fed do not want to have that treatment continue. The detainees are very united in their concern that Obama not forget his promise to close Guantanamo and to treat them fairly. It has been more than five years now that Obama first said that he was going to close the prison and it is still not going anywhere since that time. I don’t think until detainees start being transferred will we see the hunger strike end. RT: Do you think the hunger strike might turn deadly in the end? AR: Most of the men there really are not suicidal. But they have been driven to this sign of desperation by the fact that there is nobody listening to them, nobody is forcing the administration to follow up on its promise. RT: What effort do you undertake to help the inmates at Guantanamo? When do you think the hunger strike might end? AR: The government has refused to speak with those of us who represent the prisoners, they have refused to loosen any of their tight restrictions on the prisoners and, as you know from Obama’s speech, he has made very pretty promises, but he has yet to follow up with any action. We know that if the government would simply speak with the men, treat them fairly, would turn their policies to the way they had been operating before this recent crackdown, and if they started to transfer those men who have been cleared, they could end this hunger strike right now. At this point we are trying to get the word to the rest of the world, so that they understand that all of the people who are still in Guantanamo are human beings. Many of them have been cleared by the United States government of any misconduct and the rest deserve a trial or to be released. Read More

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Portugal protests against austerity

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Related

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Lisbon’s commuters hit by stoppage 14/11/2012 14:03 CET
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A day of anti-austerity protests and union action has taken place across Portugal.

The metro system in Lisbon closed as workers staged a 24-hour strike in protest over the proposed merger of the city’s transport system and planned pay cuts.

Portugal is in the third year of recession, with the economy expected to shrink by 2.3 percent in 2013.

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