Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi


Celebrity Who's New Photos Actor Director Popsinger Model Pageant Athlete
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : Beststar : Vladimir Putin : News


| Gallery | News | Websites | Bio | Career |



Russia's Avtovaz workers protest mass layoffs
2009-10-17

Category
Automakers
Protest
Layoffs
Nations
Russia
Category
Regions
Regions
Europe
Pacific Rim
People
Vladimir Putin
Source
(AFP)

TOLYATTI, Russia (AFP) - Hundreds on Saturday took to the streets of Tolyatti, home to Russia's largest carmaker Avtovaz, to protest mass layoffs at the ailing manufacturer and demand that its management steps down.

Saturday's officially sanctioned demonstration is the latest in a series of protests to shake the bleak company town of 700,000 people on the Volga River in central Russia and comes as the struggling carmaker is gearing up to lay off thousands.

"A social catastrophe will happen in the city if the plant is shut down," Alexander Rasskazov, an Avtovaz worker, said at the protest.

At the end of the two-hour demonstration organized by the carmaker's independent trade union Yedinstvo (Unity), the protesters adopted a resolution calling for the resignation of the company's management as well as a pay hike.

The demonstrators carried red flags and placards with slogans such as "No to Avtovaz bankruptcy" and "Those who will shut down Avtovaz will not be loved by us."

Trade unionists put the turnout at 1,500 people, while police told reporters about 700 people showed up. Russia's state-controlled television largely ignored the demonstration.

While officials have said the country's economy is slowly recovering from the crisis, the government remains on tenterhooks as mass layoffs and protests could yet spill into wider social unrest.

Tolyatti is one potential flashpoint, where life has revolved around Avtovaz for the past 40 years.

Analysts have said Avtovaz, with its bloated workforce, focus on manual labour and equipment dating back to the 1970s, is dying a slow death, despite all attempts by the government to shield it from foreign competition.

In 2005, the Kremlin handed officials at state arms trader Rosoboronexport led by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's powerful ally Sergei Chemezov, the task of turning the carmaker around.

When it became clear the maker of the Communist-era staple Lada car would not make it on its own, the state sold a quarter of the company for over a billion dollars to France's Renault in 2007.

Last month, Avtovaz announced it would shed 27,600 jobs from its workforce of over 100,000 in a bid to cope with the slumping demand caused by the economic crisis.

The protesters said the crisis had hit them hard.

"We don't know how to go on living like that," said Nadezhda Ulyanova, whose Avtovaz worker husband has seen his pay-check cut to 4,000 rubles (140 dollars) from 25,000 rubles (852 dollars).

The carmaker's workers now receive an average of 6,000 rubles (204 dollars) per month.

A recent internal government memo authored by deputy industry and trade minister Andrei Dementyev, said that current output levels were such that the workforce should stand at only 55,000, meaning job cuts of almost 50,000 should be required.

An Avtovaz spokesman Alexander Shmygov, who saw a copy of the memo, said the carmaker wouldn't comment on Dementyev's letter.

In early October, Putin warned Renault its 25 percent stake could be diluted unless the French auto giant and its ally Nissan provided help for the crisis-ridden firm.

On Friday, Avtovaz officials said that the carmaker together with Renault and Nissan planned to invest 240 million euros in several new models over the next few years.

  • Putin tells EU of risk to gas supply via Ukraine: reports (2009-11-01)
  • Finland may OK Nord Stream pipeline: PM (2009-10-25)
  • Russia's Avtovaz workers protest mass layoffs (2009-10-17)
  • Moscow Mayor Promises a Winter Without Snow (2009-10-17)
  • Clinton urges Russia to do more on rights (2009-10-14)


  • Personal Tools

    view eStar | MyMuzi | membership
    Communities

    view club

    Star Search

    - Category -
    Actor
    Director
    Popsinger
    Model
    Beauty
    TV Personnel
    Athlete

    - Nationality -
    China
    Taiwan
    Hongkong
    Singapore
    Japan
    South_Korea
    U.S.
    U.K.
    France
    Germany
    Italy

    - Scoreboard -
    One Day
    One Week
    One Month
    One Quarter


    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.