Kuwait Times

Industrial strikes loom as talks with German union collapse

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BERLIN: Germany’s metalworke­rs’ union said yesterday that it will intensify its campaign for better pay and conditions, threatenin­g 24-hour “warning strikes” after talks with industry representa­tives fell apart. Production by the country’s crucial metal and electrical engineerin­g industries may be affected next week by the walkouts after the latest round of negotiatio­ns ended without a deal.

The main sticking point remains the powerful IG Metall union’s demands for workers to have the option of a 28-hour week, with employers making up some of the salary loss.

“Obviously employers do not understand any language other than pressure,” said Roman Zitzelsber­ger, the chief

negotiator for IG Metall, which represents more than 3.9 million workers. The union’s boss Joerg Hofmann said up to 50 companies would be affected between Wednesday and Friday by the 24-hour strikes in selected sites across the country. In a statement, the regional employers’ associatio­n Suedwestme­tall warned against solutions that would inflame the situation and denounced the “disproport­ionate demands” of the union.

The full-day walkouts are a recent addition to the union’s arsenal, which has never used them before. Europe’s biggest union has also raised the prospect of staging its first openended strike since 2003. It mobilized more than 600,000 workers in a series of short warning strikes earlier this month, including at Volkswagen, BMW, Bosch and Siemens. The biggest hurdle in the talks is IG Metall’s insistence that employers top up the salaries of some of the workers who choose to reduce their hours. Employers have slammed the demands as too costly and even discrimina­tory to staff already working part-time without additional compensati­on. They have also so far only offered a two-percent wage increase, rather than the six percent sought by the union. — AFP

 ?? STUTTGART: Roman Zitzelsber­ger (left), Baden-Wuerttembe­rg district manager of IG Metall metalworke­rs’ union, and Joerg Hofmann, First Chairman of IG Metall, speak during a press conference after the terminatio­n of the fifth round of negotiatio­ns in Stuttg ??
STUTTGART: Roman Zitzelsber­ger (left), Baden-Wuerttembe­rg district manager of IG Metall metalworke­rs’ union, and Joerg Hofmann, First Chairman of IG Metall, speak during a press conference after the terminatio­n of the fifth round of negotiatio­ns in Stuttg

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