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Strike at Renault in Brazil demands more jobs

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Strike at Renault in Brazil demands more jobs

Some 5,000 Renault workers at the Ayrton Senna Industrial Complex (CAS) in São José dos Pinhais, in the metropolitan region of Curitiba, in the southern Brazilian state of Paraná, are continuing their struggle in defiance of the union’s attempts to end the movement with a defeat.

Striking Renault workers at the Ayrton Senna Industrial Complex (CAS) in São José dos Pinhais [Photo: simec.com.br]

Workers voted for a new 24-hour strike on June 11, just a week after the Metalworkers Union of Greater Curitiba (SMC) ended a 29-day strike.

At the time, SMC president Sérgio Butka said that the end of the strike was “a vote of confidence by the workers in the company,” which “committed itself to presenting a new proposal within 72 hours.”

The workers’ primary demand is the hiring of 300 workers to keep up with the intense pace of the production line. Throughout the strike, the company offered to hire 50 workers, and now, after the suspension of the strike, it offered 70, but this was again rejected by a mass assembly, resulting in a new walkout at the factory.

The workers had demonstrated dissatisfaction and anger with conditions at the company during the strike. They rejected the company’s proposal three times in a row. In addition to hiring, the movement is also demanding R$30,000 (US$5,600) in profit sharing (PS) and a 6.8 percent pay rise, compared to the R$25,000 (US$4,700) PS and just over a 4 percent pay rise offered by Renault.

Being overworked on the production line has caused workers to fall ill systematically. According to union data published on the Legislative Assembly of Paraná website, a thousand workers are currently on leave from the factory due to repetitive strain injuries.

Also, according to the SMC itself, evidence of the current intensity of work “is the worker engagement rate on the production line, which is at 95 percent, that is, within the work process, the worker has only 5 percent time to take a ‘breath.’”

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