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Four of Radio France International’s five trade unions are calling on
all employees to walk-off the job next Tuesday, demanding the scrapping of
a management plan which would see the international radio network lose
nearly a quarter of its workforce.
The “plan to save employment”, announced by the new management at RFI
in January, proposes laying off 206 out of just under 1,000 employees, in
an effort to “modernise” the station. The plan also mentions the
possibility of hiring 34 new people once the firings have been
completed.
The unions have already called four 24-hour strikes to protest the
plan. Several of them have also brought management to court to attempt to
have the plan thrown out for technical violations of labour law, so far
unsuccessfully. Management has called the unions’ latest move, which
dubs the plan discriminatory, “curious” and have called on them to “adopt
a constructive attitude”.
Six of RFI’s foreign-language services, German, Polish, Romanian,
Albanian, Laotian and Serbo-Croatian, will be shut down by the plan. Four
others, Persian, Chinese, Russian and Vietnamese will have their
broadcasts moved entirely online, a move unions object to, citing Internet
censorship in the destination countries. RFI currently broadcasts in 20
languages, with only one, Turkish, exclusively on the web. The English
service is the only service which is not threatened with job losses.
RFI management says that the language services are outdated and were
part of a Cold War effort to bring uncensored voices beyond the Iron
Curtain in eastern Europe and south-east Asia. It has identified Africa as
its new target audience.
The journalists in the foreign-language services have circulated a
petition pointing out the continued importance of their broadcasts. The
petitions have received more than 2,000 signatures, including several
French and European intellectuals and politicians such as film-maker Roman
Polanski, French writer Michel Tournier and Socialist European MP Vincent
Peillon.
One of the unions, CFDT, has broken from the others and called on
workers to negotiate individual voluntary departures to reduce the number
of firings.
Tuesday’s strike is planned to be indefinite.
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