Showing posts with label High Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label High Street. Show all posts
Monday, 3 November 2008
Saturday, 2 August 2008
Happy Pride, happy, happy pride
A little word to the wise for Iris Robinson - 'Bigots can be turned around. I know a lovely psychiatrist. I have met people who have turned around and become open-minded and tolerant so it does work. This is a long process. '
Thursday, 24 July 2008
Protecting our future
Tuesday, 10 June 2008
Water closet
Tuesday, 3 June 2008
Sacked Belfast Airport Workers
I noticed this morning as I passed Transport House that the tent had gone from the canopy and there was no sign of Gordon McNeill. Checking on their web site I found this post ....
Now there's a turn up for the books - the picketers are going to be picketed.
Gordon McNeill on the fourteenth day of his hunger strike was last night
taken to hospital after police intervened and summoned an ambulance to Transport
House.
Gordon continued to refuse food and fluids in hospital. However
when doctors prepared to go to the High Court to get an order to feed him,
Gordon ended his hunger strike rather than be force fed.
The sacked shop stewards are barred by an injunction got by Unite Regional
Secretary, Jimmy Kelly, from protesting at Transport House. They are now
planning a campaign to defend their democratic right to protest by defying the
injunction. more:
Now there's a turn up for the books - the picketers are going to be picketed.
Thursday, 29 May 2008
Support The Belfast Airport Workers
If you drive by Transport House - sound your horn to show your support.
Saturday, 17 May 2008
UNITE in shame
According to The World Socialist Web Site:
After six years and repeated hunger strikes by two former shop stewards, a group of workers sacked from Belfast’s International Airport have finally extracted compensation from the Amalgamated Transport and General Workers Union (ATGWU) for the legal fees expended in pursuance of their claims of wrongful dismissal. Still contested is the workers’ other demand for the ATGWU to mount an inquiry into its own role in setting up the workers to be sacked in the first place.
The ATGWU is known in the UK as the Transport and General Workers Union (TGWU) and operates in Britain, Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic. It has recently merged with the Amicus union to form Unite, an organisation with around 2.8 million members.
In May 2002, 114 security staff at Belfast International Airport took strike action in pursuit of a wage rise. The workers were earning £5.20 an hour, forcing many of them to work 60 or 70 hours a week to bring home a living wage. The strikes began after six months of negotiations between the ATGWU and International Consultants on Targeted Security (ICTS), which ended with a proposed 18-pence-an-hour pay rise. The workers were demanding £6.00 an hour.
Workers planned a series of four-hour stoppages, which would cause significant disruption to the main commercial airport in Northern Ireland. After the first of these, the company sacked 23 of those involved, including shop stewards Gordon McNeill and Madan Gupta.
The workers were sacked for taking unofficial strike action. They had been assured by regional ATGWU official Joe McCusker that their strike, supported by an official union ballot and a 97 percent majority of the staff, with the company warned in advance of the action, was officially backed by the union. But it soon emerged that the ATGWU had repudiated the strike.
Repudiation of an unofficial strike is required by the anti-union laws introduced by the Thatcher government. But the ATGWU went far beyond its draconian requirements. McCusker passed letters of repudiation, signed by then-TGWU leader Bill Morris, to ICTS, in a secret meeting in a pub near the airport. None of the workers were informed of the meeting between ICTS and the officials and of the repudiation of their dispute—until they were sacked. more:
An article on The Socialist web site: Belfast Airport workers win historic court victory - But struggle for justice continues
and indymedia ireland has a scathing report on Cops sent in to arrest protesting Belfast airport workers and an update here:
Alan in Belfast covered this on 8th April 2008 with his post about how Sacked ICTS airport security workers renew hunger strike action ... in protest at their union Unite (TGWU) rather than their former employer with what appears to be an anonymous comment from somebody at the TGWU (or UNITE as it is now known).
A statement from Sacked Belfast Airport Workers can be read here: which explains that:-
Last September a hunger strike and rooftop protest at Transport House was called off only after Tony Woodley, Unite General Secretary, agreed that the workers’ demands would be met within seven days.
He agreed that the union would pay the £200,000 in legal costs arising from the long court battle which the workers had to fight against ICTS without any support from their union. The workers won this battle, securing last August a landmark legal decision that found they had been sacked because of their trade union opinion and socialist political beliefs.
Tony Woodley also committed the union to pay the costs of defending this decision against any appeal by ICTS. He also promised that the union would pay damages to cover the financial and other hardship these workers have suffered. This was in recognition of the fact that, as was proven in court, senior union officials colluded with ICTS to have 24 of their members, including all their shop stewards sacked. Irish regional secretary, Jimmy Kelly, also made these commitments.
Not one of the commitments made last August has been met.
Frankly I find it very worrying, not to say despicable, that, as the airport workers state in one of their leaflets,
What is more despicable is the fact that the news media seems to be ignoring this story totally. A union that does not support its members and, by all accounts, actively colludes to have its members sacked beggars belief and should not be denied the bad press it so richly deserves.'Our union official, backed by the leadership of the union, colluded with our employer, ICTS, to have 24 of us sacked.'
Tuesday, 12 February 2008
Not so seasonal weather
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