The Oklahoman

London security guards to strike for 10 days

1,400 airport workers demand better pay

- Sylvia Hui

LONDON – Security guards at London’s Heathrow Airport will walk off their jobs for 10 days over the Easter break, the latest in a wave of strike action to affect the U.K.

The union Unite said Friday more than 1,400 security guards employed by Heathrow Airport, one of Europe’s busiest, will strike from March 31 to Easter Sunday, April 9, to demand better pay.

Unite said those striking include guards who work at the airport’s Terminal Five, which is used exclusivel­y by British Airways, as well as those responsibl­e for checking all cargo that enters the airport.

The strikes will coincide with the two-week Easter school holidays, traditiona­lly a peak time for travel for many in Britain.

The union said workers are forced to take action because they cannot make ends meet as a cost-of-living crisis continues to affect millions of Britons. Heathrow has offered a 10% pay increase, but the union said that wasn’t enough amid soaring inflation and following years of pay freezes.

“Workers at Heathrow Airport are on poverty wages while the chief executive and senior managers enjoy huge salaries,” Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said.

Inflation in the U.K. climbed steeply last year to 11.1% in October, though it dropped to 10.1% in January. That’s still the highest in about 40 years, and a dramatic change after years of 2% inflation.

Heathrow said it has contingenc­y plans to keep the airport open and operationa­l.

“Threatenin­g to ruin people’s hardearned holidays with strike action will not improve the deal,” the airport said.

Tens of thousands of teachers, doctors, health care workers, train and bus drivers and civil servants have staged mass walkouts in recent months to demand higher wages.

Union leaders representi­ng nurses and ambulance crews have reached a pay deal with Britain’s government, raising hopes that disruption­s at the country’s state-funded hospitals will soon end, but many other industries remain locked in bitter pay disputes with authoritie­s.

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