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WSWS : News
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: France
French workers occupy chemical plant
By Guy LeBlanc
20 July 2000
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One hundred fifty-two workers from the Callatex chemical factory
in Givet, a city of 8,000 in the French Ardennes near the Belgium
border, have been occupying the plant since July 5, when it was
declared bankrupt by a judge. The judgment meant that workers
would lose severance pay and special state compensation that they
would have been entitled to had the plant simply closed down.
Since the beginning of the plant occupation, workers have threatened
to use the 46 tons of carbonic sulfur stocked in the plant to
explode the facility. The chemical is used in the production of
textiles such as rayon and viscose.
On Monday, July 17, following a meeting with Jean-Claude Vacher,
the new head of the Ardennes administrative department, angry
workers released several hundreds liters of red-tinted sulfuric
acid into a stream flowing into the Meuse River.
Workers are demanding that they be insured payments equivalent
to their actual wages for the next 24 months, in addition to a
150,000 franc ($30,000) severance payment. Vacher said they had
already been offered more than what is required by law by proposing
they receive 2,500 francs a month to supplement their income if
they find lower-paying jobs and a 50,000 to 60,000 franc one-time
severance payment. Vacher was expected to meet with workers' representatives
again on Wednesday, July 19.
Workers are seeking to use popular concerns about the environment
to pressure the French government and the Rhone-Poulenc company,
owners of the plant until 1991, to increase their severance package.
The workers' situation is compounded by the devastating economic
situation in the French Ardennes, which is suffering a 22 percent
unemployment rate as a result of European industrial restructuring.
Most of the Cellatex workers are unskilled and chances of finding
another job are bleak.
The workers' actions were condemned across the political spectrum
in France. Interior Minister Jean-Pierre Chevènement declared,
It is not acceptable, however difficult the situation may
be, that wage earners could take the neighboring population as
hostages, or the people living on the shores on the Meuse River,
whether in France, in Belgium or in Holland, by pouring acid into
it.
Robert Hue, head of the French Communist Party, declared that
his party understood the Cellatex workers' plight, but called
for them not to separate themselves from public opinion.
Greens national spokesman Denis Baupin declared that one
has to be shocked by such an action that constitutes
a worrying precedent for social conflicts.
Cellatex workers have been trying to negotiate the terms of
the plant closing for more than a year now. CGT union leader Christian
Larose is complaining that the government didn't heed his warning
that the situation was explosive in the plant. He
added that now the conflict is taking another twist because
Belgium and the Netherlands are asking Paris some questions and
pressing for a solution to the conflict.
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