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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Europe
: 1998
Air France Strike
Unions desperate to secure a deal in Air France strike
By Richard Tyler
6 June 1998
The strike by Air France pilots entered its fifth day on Friday.
The expected agreement between pilots unions and Air France management
failed to materialise on Thursday evening, despite a third round
of late-night talks.
Earlier on Thursday Jean Claude Corbet, president of the pilots'
union SNPL, spoke of an "advance" in the negotiations
with management. "The SNPL is looking for an end to the conflict
in the not too distant future," he said, "our points
of view have converged." But later, SNPL spokesman Christian
Paris said "I am afraid to say 'that we have gone back to
square one', but that is almost the case."
Reports of the negotiations only raise what appear to be minor
differences between the two sides. The trade-off under discussion
involves the pilots accepting a 15 percent cut in pay, in exchange
for shares in a privatised Air France. This is modelled on a scheme
introduced by United Airlines in the United States in 1992.
The unions have signalled their acceptance of this in principle,
provided that original wage rates are then restored over a period
of time. Initially the union had also called for the scheme to
be voluntary but the SNPL leaders have now accepted that it is
compulsory. A union spokesman said that pilots were ready to buy
shares in the company in order to express their confidence in
the business, but refused to pay an "exorbitant" price.
The difficulties for the unions are not in the detail but in
convincing pilots to accept the equivalent of a two-month loss
in pay. During Thursday's negotiations, 800 Air France pilots
attended a general meeting called by the unions. Air France President
Jean-Cyril Spinetta's address to the pilots was greeted with stony
silence.
All the unions in France fear that their influence is being
undermined among broader layers of workers. Whilst most Air France
flights were grounded, 50,000 workers from France's electric and
gas companies took part in a demonstration in Paris on Thursday
afternoon. At the same time, in Toulon 20,000 supported a demonstration
against privatisation. On Friday ticket inspectors on the state
railway system struck, hitting the high-speed links between Paris
and north and south France. Only one in three trains ran between
Paris and the provinces.
The support offered to management by the Socialist-led government
is already creating problems for the coalition parties. Divisions
have emerged within the French Communist Party (PCF) between the
advocates of an overtly pro-business agenda and those who fear
that this will provoke a backlash from workers.
Earlier this week the government's Transport Minister Jean-Claude
Gayssot, a member of the PCF, openly supported Air France management.
By the end of the week Robert Hue, PCF national secretary, was
forced to declare , referring to the strike, "I am not one
of those who thinks that such a movement inspires shame."
At a meeting of the national committee of the Stalinist party
he warned Socialist Prime Minister Jospin against "Blairism
of the left." His statement came in response to criticisms
within his own party that by supporting Jospin, the PCF was adapting
itself to the economic laws of the market and the policy of privatisation,
following the model of British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
The French press commented that the strike at Air France has
provoked "turbulence on the left." The French AP newswire
noted that the pilots' strike, together with demonstrations by
the unemployed earlier in the year, had put the PCF and its trade
union wing, the CGT, "on their guard." "The Jospin
government faces a new disintegration in the social climate, threatening
the cohesion of the majority, " the article stated.
Enormous pressure will be placed on the pilots to accept a
deal this weekend, before the World Cup begins in France on Wednesday,
June 10.
See Also:
Jospin government threatens to use military
to break Air France pilots' strike
[5 June 1998]
Unions signal readiness to settle in Air
France strike
[4 June 1998]
Strike by Air France pilots disrupts preparations
for World Cup
[3 June 1998]
Workers struggles around the world -- 6
June 1998
[Weekly WSWS Feature]
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