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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Europe
: 1998
Air France Strike
Air France strike disrupts World Cup football match
By Richard Tyler
10 June 1998
The strike by Air France pilots, continuing into its second
week, will disrupt the opening of the World Cup football match
Wednesday. For a tenth day Air France has only been able to mount
about 25 percent of its flights, affecting all its short-, medium-
and long-haul routes.
A general meeting held on Tuesday was attended by 1,100 pilots
who "voted unanimously to continue the strike," according
to a spokesman for the main pilots' union, the SNPL (Syndicat
National des Pilotes de Ligne).
Air France is the official carrier for the football World Cup,
being hosted by France. The company has said that this will not
pose a problem for the sponsors. According to management non-striking
pilots will fly the 110 special flights needed to transport the
teams, their support staff and equipment between matches being
played at several venues throughout France. However football fans
may face problems travelling to matches. The extra 120,000 passengers
expected by Air France to be carried on domestic flights during
the month-long tournament will have to transfer to other airlines,
or use alternative means of transport.
The company turned down an offer made by striking pilots to
fly any fans stranded abroad to France before the start of the
World Cup. The pilots had offered their services for free, but
the company said the proposal was "impossible to put in place
for technical and legal reasons."
The pilots are on strike in opposition to company plans to
cut their annual salaries by 500 million francs. Talks between
Air France management and the unions broke down on the weekend.
No date for a resumption of negotiations has been set.
Air France president, Jean-Cyril Spinetta, indicated he would
convene a board of directors meeting this week to announce "significant
measures". It is likely that the directors will unilaterally
impose a new pay scale to implement the cuts without any offer
of shares in the airline when it is partially privatised. This
offering of shares had been part of earlier discussions with the
unions.
The largest pilots' union, SNPL, said that such a move would
provoke "an irrevocable break" and prolong the strike,
rejecting the calls for a "moratorium" made by several
of the minor unions.
The last time management acted unilaterally was in 1996 when
they imposed a two-tier pay scale on air stewards and stewardesses,
worsening conditions for staff with less seniority. Since 1993,
a series of cost-cutting measures have been imposed and productivity
increases pushed through with the acceptance of the unions.
The SNPL has indicated it would accept an external mediator,
which it had previously opposed, saying "we face a management,
which does not know how to, does not want to, and undoubtedly
cannot conclude an acceptable agreement."
A spokesman for minority union SNPL-Air Inter, Rene Philippeau,
said that he believed the board meeting might be put back until
Saturday as "ministers responsible were not in agreement."
According to Philippeau, the delay was necessary in order for
the two ministers concerned, Jean-Claude Gaysott (Transport) and
Dominique Stauss-Kahn (Finance), to "harmonise" the
government position. Answering questions in the National Assembly
(parliament), the transport minister, a member of the French Communist
Party, said he preferred to "convince" rather than use
"force" in reaching a settlement. "We will not
spare any effort to arrive at a rapid solution in the interests
of Air France and in the interests of France," he said. Gaysott
said he favoured a resumption of negotiations, and that cuts "should
not be made solely at the expense of wages."
Last week an advisor to Socialist Party Prime Minister Lionel
Jospin said that he was "ready for a clash" and a "trial
of strength" with striking Air France pilots, and Jean-Pierre
Chevènment, interior minister, bluntly announced that it
may be possible "for the air force to intervene" to
replace the pilots. Socialist Party senator, Michel Charasse,
branded the pilots "egoists who do not love their country,"
while Finance Minister Dominique Strauss-Kahn said that Air France
has the "entire support of the government."
Other unions representing pilots have indicated their readiness
to accept a pay cut in return for a cut in hours.
Nicole Notat, leader of the CFDT union which supports the Socialist
Party government, said, "one has to, at a certain point,
ask whether the pilots' demands ... justify this type of action,
justify forgetting other staff, and justify the risk to other
staff, not to mention the entire company." In what amounted
to a call for management to act unilaterally, Notat said that
a negotiated way out of the dispute was "no longer possible".
Furthermore, Notat called for a "new concept which preserved
the right to strike ... but was compatible with a truly public
service" modelled on Italy where unions agree not to strike
on certain days of the year.
The 10-day strike has impacted on companies providing related
services. Servair, the airline caterer, has reported that it no
longer expects to make a profit this year and may implement layoffs.
Regional airports in France, such as Biarritz, are asking their
staff to bring forward their summer holidays because of a lack
of work. Aéroports de Paris, which provides baggage handling
and other ground services, has lost one-third of its income due
to the strike.
Ernest-Antoine Seilliere, head of the French employers' confederation,
called the strike "a catastrophe for the national economy
at a time of fierce competition. In the name of all employers,
I must say I am outraged our country does not know how to manage
firms essential for its economic development," he told the
press.
See Also:
A note on the Air France struggle --
lessons of the 1989 Australian pilots strike
[10 June 1998]
Air France threatens to impose pay cuts
on striking pilots
[9 June 1998]
Marxism and the
Trade Unions - A lecture by David North
[January 1998]
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