Amey offices entered as campaign for sacked colombian cleaners grows
Campaign Against Immigration Controls | 01.12.2008 14:18 | Migration | Workers' Movements
Since then the number of cleaners has been reduced from thirty-six to fifteen as Amey looks to cut costs as much as possible. The dismissal of the five was a direct result of the remaining workers’ attempts to protest against this trend after they wrote a leaflet to tell other staff at the NPL what was going on in the cleaning department. They were quickly sacked for bringing the company into disrepute.
Amey, which posted a net annual profit of a tidy £75 million, is well versed in these tactics. It is a majority shareholder in Tubelines, which cleans parts of the Underground. Tube cleaners who went on strike for a living wage this summer were faced with a corporate response consisting of paper checks, immigration raids and deportations to Sierra Leone and the Congo.
The protest was called by the Latin American Workers Association, the Campaign Against Immigration Controls and the Schroeders Bank Cleaners, with activists from groups including the Colombia Solidarity Campaign, Hands Off Venezuela, London Coalition Against Poverty, and the Solidarity Federation.
There are further actions in the next week including a protest at Amey's national HQ in Oxford, at 11am on Monday December 8th. Details to follow. Transport from Bristol and possibly elsewhere.
Campaign Against Immigration Controls
e-mail:
contact@caic.org
Homepage:
http://www.caic.org.uk
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