CHATELLERAULT, France, July 15, 2009

French Workers Threaten to Blow Up Factory

Laid-off Auto Workers Huddle around Gas Canisters Tied to Electrical Cable, Demanding Money

  • Symbolic crosses representing some 350 jobs lost, are placed outside the New Fabris car parts manufacturer factory in Chatellerault, central France, Wednesday July 15, 2009. Laid-off workers at this factory have threatened to blow up the facility, if car manufacturers Renault and PSA-Peugeot don't pay compensation. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere

    Symbolic crosses representing some 350 jobs lost, are placed outside the New Fabris car parts manufacturer factory in Chatellerault, central France, Wednesday July 15, 2009. Laid-off workers at this factory have threatened to blow up the facility, if car manufacturers Renault and PSA-Peugeot don't pay compensation. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere  (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

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(AP)  Laid-off auto-parts workers huddled Thursday around gas canisters tied to an electrical cable, threatening to blow up a factory in the latest example of extreme French resistance to cost-cutting in the economic downturn.

Other French workers have kidnapped their bosses, blocked ports and barricaded factories to try to save jobs in France's worst recession since the 1940s.

Some 200 workers at the New Fabris factory outside the southwest city of Chatellerault, are each demanding euro30,000 ($42,267) from Renault and PSA Peugeot-Citroen, accusing the carmakers of killing their livelihoods.

If they don't get it by July 31, they say they will blow up the factory, about 190 miles (300 kilometers) southwest of Paris. They are taking turns guarding 20 canisters of acetylene and butane, once used for gas-operated tractors and now spaced out on both sides of the plant and attached by a cable. Guy Eyermann of the CGT union said half of them are full, though that was impossible to verify.

"We are at the end of the line," Eyermann said. "A lot of people worked here for 25, 35 years. Many have given their lives to the company." He called on "all factories in Europe that are closing to protest and do what the workers are doing here."

New Fabris closed down June 16 and all its 366 workers are being gradually laid off. They blamed Peugeot-Citroen and Renault for canceling contracts that represented the bulk of the company's sales, and began their protest June 20.

On the gates out front, laid-off workers put up black cardboard cutouts in the shape of coffins noting workers' name, year of birth, and "2009" - the year they were let go. A workers' empty blue uniform hung from the gate. Enormous machines hauled from inside the factory stood in the courtyard, gutted and charred after employees torched them.

The shuttered factory still holds parts and costly machinery, and the workers are trying to keep Renault and Peugeot-Citroen from collecting any material.

The workers are meeting with officials at Renault headquarters on Thursday, and are asking for euro15,000 each from the company. The workers met with officials at Peugeot-Citroen last week, also asking for euro15,000 apiece.

PSA Peugeot Citroen spokesman Pierre-Olivier Salmon said the company rejected the demand.

"It's the world upside down," Salmon said. "It's not our job to replace the company's shareholders or the state. Why should PSA pay for this?"

Salmon said PSA had offered to buy New Fabris' remaining inventory for euro1.2 million, even though PSA had no need for the spare parts.

Renault spokeswoman Gita Roux said the possibility of buying the factory's remaining inventory is a possible topic of negotiations at Thursday's meeting. As for the workers' demand for compensation, Roux said, "It is not for us as clients to pay redundancy packages" for a supplier.

The workers on Thursday's "morning shift" guarding the gas canisters whiled away hours playing ping pong, petanque or simply chatting. No police were in sight, though local officials say police are monitoring the situation.

"I got a severance package of euro3,500, about two months of salary. With the economic downturn if I don't find another job this isn't going to get me very far," said Marc Pinardon, 41, a machine operator who worked at the factory for nine years.

Several car-related factories in the region are laying off workers - along with thousands of auto workers losing their jobs worldwide as the industry undergoes its worst slump in decades.

Pinardon and a colleague, Bruno Perre, a 50-year-old technician at the factory for 29 years, walked through the shutdown factory.

"They throw us a way like Kleenex," Perre said.

Their action prompted a copycat event at a factory of Canadian telecoms firm Nortel Networks. Workers at the factory in Chateaufort west of Paris briefly installed gas canisters at their plant before removing them Thursday.

Labor Minister Xavier Darcos said he "understood the anger" of the workers but warned against such "incredible violence."

The factory's outgoing director Pierre Reau walked briskly past workers Thursday without interacting with them.

"It worries everyone because some people are uncontrollable," he told The Associated Press.

Anne Frackowiak, top aide to the local governor in Chatellerault, said she thinks the workers' gas canisters are empty but that "we are watching."

"The biggest risk is a gigantic fire, but the fire department is on permanent alert," she said.




© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by GovernmentControl July 15, 2009 11:42 PM EDT
These are the same european socialists who applauded obama.
Reply to this comment
by gnimelf1968 July 16, 2009 12:09 AM EDT
That's because they wanted the US to go down the toliet so we can all be as miserable as they are. Every other country is jealous of what we have.
by david8603 July 15, 2009 10:38 PM EDT
Perhaps one should consider this nation's history of self reliance and its coming closure; that is, getting closer to France's history of euro-communism and economic socialism, the populace becoming dependent upon the social welfare systems, holding employers and their facilities hostage for cash ransom. Not unlike the multi-generational dependencies here on welfare, medicad and other handouts.

Let the French buy more of their own cars; just like the service industry here in the US. With most people seemingly working at one store to buy things (made overseas) at another store; how many strip malls do we need?

The current administration's push for social welfare, including Obama's push for health care for the non-working paid for by those working; let's not forget about the illegals - that is, those persons in this country illegally, without proper documentation - getting residency, driver's licenses and, oh yes, free medical paid for by those working and taxed individuals.

This country was founded on independency, self-reliance best captured in 1824, "I think, myself, that we have more machinery of government than is necessary, too many parasites living on the labor of the industrious." And, "[Some] seem to think that [civilization's] advance has brought on too complicated a state of society, and that we should gain in happiness by treading back our steps a little way. I think, myself, that we have more machinery of government than is necessary, too many parasites living on the labor of the industrious. I believe it might be much simplified to the relief of those who maintain it." --Thomas Jefferson to William Ludlow, 1824.

As a late and recently resurfacing bumper sticker reads, "Work Harder, Millions on Welfare Depend on You."

As to Yarabie's sleezy politicians, vote them out, find someone better, impose term limits to end career politicians. Don't vote? Don't whine.

As to stuart 2020, keep digging, you'll find those conspiracies everywhere. Again, refer to history and read how an uprising here in the colonies resulted in a new-won indepence from a Kingdom in a far away land.
Reply to this comment
by yarabie July 15, 2009 8:19 PM EDT
I have so much respect for you people. If we would protest in our country instead of just griping about it, we might get our sleezy politicians to do what is right for the people instead of themselves.
Reply to this comment
by gravyboat4000 July 15, 2009 7:22 PM EDT
SACRE BLEU! YOU HAVE TAKEN MY MANHOOD AWAY, NOW I MUST BOMB MY PREVIOUS PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT! TO MAKE A POINT, AND TO MAKE ME FEEL LIKE A FRENCHMAN, ONCE AGAIN!

(first, I will drink some wine, eat some cheese, and make love to the plant foreman's daughters)...
Reply to this comment
by james_in_texas July 15, 2009 5:06 PM EDT
These ex-workers need to be removed. Either they can walk away and face terrorism charges or the French police should neutralize them. Domestic terrorists are still terrorists! They seems fond of fake graves - how do they feel about real ones?
Reply to this comment

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