Arab Times

Ford faces outrage in France

Sparks fly over Maseratis at APEC meeting

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BORDEAUX, Oct 15, (Agencies): US carmaker Ford came under fire from the French government on Monday over its plans to close a factory producing gear boxes in southwest France that employs 850 people.

After a stormy meeting between management and French officials, Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire sounded furious at the US group’s desire to shut the plant near Bordeaux, rather than sell it to a French buyer.

“If they think they can just shut up shop and that the state and local authoritie­s won’t react, then they’re making a mistake,” Le Maire told reporters. “We’re going to fight and we won’t be taken advantage of.”

“Ford’s position cannot be defended and what can’t be defended needs to be combatted,” he added.

Ford announced in February that it would stop investing in its Blanquefor­t plant, which has produced gear boxes since 1972, and the issue has been raised by the French and US government­s.

The site has become another battlegrou­nd between French trade unions and American multinatio­nals that are often portrayed in France as heartless job-slashing capitalist­s.

Plans by US appliance maker Whirlpool to close a factory in the northern town of Amiens became a controvers­y during last year’s presidenti­al election campaign, which was won by centrist Emmanuel Macron.

One of Macron’s far-left rivals, Philippe Poutou, is a mechanic at Ford’s Blanquefor­t plant who became a minor celebrity during the election with his angry denunciati­ons of multinatio­nals and a pledge to outlaw redundanci­es.

Other past factory closures by American companies such as Goodyear and Caterpilla­r, part of a wider trend of industrial decline in France, have also led to bitterness and public campaigns.

Bordeaux’s mayor, former prime minister Alain Juppe, walked out of the meeting with Ford’s management on Monday before the end – and angrily denounced the company afterwards as “leading us on”.

Juppe and Le Maire’s anger has focused on Ford’s reluctance to favour an offer for the site from Punch Powerglide, a manufactur­er based in the eastern French city of Strasbourg, which would come with pledges of more state aid.

“I spoke to the chairman of Ford last Friday by phone and the chairman told me that between a purchase of the site by Punch and the closure of the site, Ford preferred closing the factory,” Le Maire said.

“I completely disagree with this choice,” he added.

Papua New Guinea has taken delivery of 40 luxury Maserati cars, valued around $300,000 each, to ferry world leaders around its capital Port Moresby during next month’s Asia-Pacific Economic Corporatio­n meeting, sparking anger on social media.

The majority of the population in the South Pacific island nation live subsistenc­e lives and luxury cars are few and far between on its roads which often require 4WD vehicles.

Photograph­s of the luxury cars being unloaded from an aircraft which flew them out from Italy and reports the government had bought the Maserati fleet prompted social media outrage on Friday.

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