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Amazon to be hit by strikes in Germany

bezos hand
Amazon chief Jeff Bezos strongly opposes unionisation.

The trade union Verdi has called for workers at six Amazon sites in Germany to go on strike from Sunday evening for four days in the latest attempt to try to force the U.S. e-commerce group to recognise collective bargaining agreements.

Verdi said the strikes at Amazon’s sites in Rheinberg, Werne, Koblenz, Leipzig and at two locations in Bad Hersfeld signalled an “unofficial start” to wage talks for the retail and mail order industry, which are due to begin in the next few weeks.

“Amazon is making a mint in the coronavirus crisis. For this reason alone, wage evasion must be stopped there,” said Verdi representative Orhan Akman.

Verdi is demanding a pay increase of 4.5 per cent for workers in the retail and mail order industry.

“This must also be possible at Amazon this year,” Akman said.

Amazon has faced a long-running battle with unions in Germany over better pay and conditions for logistics workers, who have frequently staged strikes since 2013.

Germany is Amazon’s biggest market after the United States.

Amazon says it offers excellent pay and benefits. It has said during past calls for strikes over 90 per cent of employees in the logistic centres worked as normal.

Amazon has been unwilling to sit down with workers and negotiate pay and conditions, which makes it an “outlier” for Europe, Christy Hoffman, general secretary of the UNI Global Union, which represents roughly 20 million service sector workers worldwide, told the Washington Post.

“Their attitude is, ‘We’re not going to do anything unless we’re forced to,’” Hoffman said.

Major corporations have typically been willing to negotiate with unions and form company-specific agreements that go above and beyond those minimum requirements. That’s not the case with Amazon, Hoffman said. Legally, the e-commerce giant isn’t obligated to do so: Countries such as Germany and Italy don’t require companies to enter companywide collective bargaining agreements because “that’s just what employers do.”

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