Oman Daily Observer

Cyprus workers strike over stalled cost-of-living talks

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A general strike on Thursday paralysed Cyprus for three hours, affecting schools, hospitals, government services and the private sector, as labour unions demand wages be adjusted to decades-high inflation rates.

The rare strike was called following an impasse in talks with employers and the government over the reinstatem­ent of the inflation-linked Cost of Living Allowance (COLA), which trade unions say is necessary to protect employee salaries as prices soar.

The unions, representi­ng more than 70,000 employees in the public and private sector, declared a three-hour strike from midday and staged protests across Cyprus.

“The message today should be resounding through the mass participat­ion of workers, emphasisin­g the importance of collective bargaining rights,” said Sotiroula Charalambo­us, head of the PEO trade union federation.

Schools closed early, hospital emergency wards operated with skeleton staff, government department­s shut down and public transport stopped.

The strike also affected more than 20 flights and around 4,000 passengers at the island’s internatio­nal airports in Larnaca and Paphos.

Inflation rates in 2022 rose 8.1 per cent year-on-year when measured using the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) yardstick preferred by the European Central Bank, representi­ng a 40-year high.

Following a financial crisis in 2013, unions and employers agreed on COLA payment at 50 per cent of the rise in the consumer price index, in a transition­al agreement renewed until the end of 2022.

Trade unions want the restoratio­n of the allowance in full, which they argue is necessary to protect employee salaries.

Employers say the COLA system is antiquated, and after two years of a pandemic and a subsequent cost-of-living crisis, they are in no position to meet such pay demands.

Labour Minister Kyriakos Koushos said the dispute would have to be resolved by the next administra­tion, after the February 5 presidenti­al elections in Cyprus.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Workers shout slogans during a protest demanding for inflation-linked salary increases outside the Ministry of Finance in Nicosia.
— Reuters Workers shout slogans during a protest demanding for inflation-linked salary increases outside the Ministry of Finance in Nicosia.

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