The Scotsman

P&O Ferries chief ‘should be behind bars’

- By REBECCA MCCURDY newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The chief executive of P&O Ferries should be “behind bars” after sacking 800 seafarers, a trade union president has said.

Peter Hebblethwa­ite replaced the workers with cheaper staff to protect the company, he said.

However, Pat Rafferty, Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) president, said sacking the seafarers via Zoom last month was “gutter” and “inhumane”.

Speaking at the annual conference in Aberdeen, Mr Rafferty said the P&O Ferries chief executive should be put in jail to send a clear message to employers.

It came as with P&O planning to resume operating between Dover and Calais in coming days amid accusation­s that it attempted to further reduce the wages of its seafarers.

Mr Hebblethwa­ite rejected a request from transport secretary Grant Shapps to reverse the decision.

He also admitted his company broke the law by failing to consult unions about the redundanci­es.

It is understood the business needed to cut costs to avoid collapse as it was losing money at a rate of £100 million per year.

Mr Hebblethwa­ite said reemployin­g the sacked staff on their previous wages would “deliberate­ly cause the company’s collapse, resulting in the irreversib­le loss of an additional 2,000 jobs”.

Mr Rafferty said: “There is something seriously wrong with our society when a company CEO like P&O can swan into a Westminste­r parliament­ary committee and openly state that he broke the law – and worse still, he’d do it again.

“What that clearly demonstrat­es is how useless the law is. There is no deterrent to companies like P&O who are

getting away with destroying people’s lives.

“The law needs to change. Peter Hebblethwa­ite should be struck off the directors register and put behind bars.

“That would send a clear message to employers, act irresponsi­bly towards workers and face the possibilit­y that you will be jailed.”

Mr Hebblethwa­ite was also accused of “corporate terrorism” last month as he faced MSPS in Holyrood’s net zero, energy and transport committee.

Mr Rafferty, who is also Scottish Secretary of Unite the Union, urged trade union members to boycott P&O Ferries until the dispute had been resolved.

His plea came with P&O

expected to restart sailings for freight customers by Wednesday, although it is not anticipate­d that tourists will be carried until early next week.

On Monday morning the firm’s website began selling passenger tickets for crosschann­el sailings on its ship Spirit Of Britain from Wednesday.

The website later said there were “no sailings available for your selected dates”.

P&O Ferries has not operated between Dover and Calais since March 17.

Spiritofbr­itainwasde­tained by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency on April 12 after safety issues were found, but was cleared to sail on Friday.

 ?? ?? 0 A worker stands on one of the three suspended ferries anchored at the Port of Dover.
0 A worker stands on one of the three suspended ferries anchored at the Port of Dover.

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