French oil workers vote to continue strike
Striking
French oil workers have voted to continue their industrial action, which has
led to shortages at fuel stations across the country.
They
responded angrily after the government said it would use mandatory powers to
force some of them to go back to work.
The strike,
in its third week, has shut six of France's seven oil refineries.
With long
queues of cars now a regular sight at the pumps, the government wants to get
the fuel flowing again.
Nearly a
third of French petrol stations are now reported to be running short of at
least one kind of motor fuel.
Unions want
pay increases for their workers, which they say should take account of the huge
profits being made at the moment by the oil companies.
They are
seeking a 10% pay rise - 7% to cover inflation and 3% for what they call
"wealth-sharing".
The
government's latest move to head off the impact of the action is to requisition
key staff at a refinery in Normandy, threatening prosecution unless they allow
some lorry tankers to fill up.
French Prime
Minister Elisabeth Borne said that if no agreement could be reached between the
oil firms and the unions, the government would act to "unblock the
situation".
But the
hard-left unions behind the stoppages see this as a threat to their right to
strike and have toughened their position, calling the government's warning
"illegal" and a "choice of violence".
A spokesman
for the CGT union said it was waiting for the government's requisition
notifications and would challenge them in court.
On Friday,
French President Emmanuel Macron called on unions to end the strikes, but said
energy companies should listen to the workers' "legitimate salary
demands".
The strike
action has split opinion in France, with some commuters expressing exasperation
over the fuel shortages and pointing out that they need their cars for work.
But at a
time of growing anxiety about the cost of living and soaring profits for some
energy companies, others have expressed sympathy for the strikers.
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