Flights at Ben Gurion airport suspended due to strikes
JERUSALEM: Flights at Israel’s main airport were suspended yesterday as part of a strike against plans by pharmaceutical giant Teva to shed employees, airport sources said.
Air traffic at Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv came to a halt at 0600 GMT after the Jewish state’s powerful Histadrut trade union called for the strike which was set to last for four hours.
Many flights set to depart yesterday morning were rescheduled to leave earlier so only seven flights were cancelled due to the strike, the sources said.
Teva will make 1,750 employees redundant in Israel as part of plans to slash 14,000 jobs globally over two years, according to Histadrut head Avi Nissenkorn.
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, the world’s largest producer of generic drugs, has said its reductions would be across-theboard and in all its locations.
The cuts would amount to more than a quarter of the Israeli drugmaker’s global workforce of over 55,000, of which fewer than 7,000 work in Israel.
The “solidarity” strike was also set to include ports, banks, ministries, and other sectors, Histadrut said.
Protests were expected yesterday in front of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s offices in Jerusalem.
The premier is expected to meet Teva’s chief executive Kare Schultz next week to try to convince him to reduce the number of layoffs, his office has said.
Teva has been saddled with debt after its US$ 40 billion acquisition of the generics arm of rival Allergan last year. — AFP