The Socialist

The Socialist 2 June 2005

Say no to the bosses' profit system

Say no to the bosses' profit system

EU constitution defeated

Why French workers voted 'no' to EU referendum

Defend adult education

ID cards: £300 for a snooper's card!

The campaign for Socialism 2005 begins now

Capitalism can't solve AIDS crisis

"Struggle or death" - Pakistan telecoms workers fight privatisation

Germany: Political turmoil after the elections

Iraq: coalition plans floundering

Labour court awards Gama workers €8,000

Striking back at pay-cutting bosses

BBC offer must be rejected

It is privatisation and it is as we know it

Coventry single status dispute: the stakes are raised

FE lecturers fight for pay deal

Job losses expose Manchester's 'boom'

 
 
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Labour court awards Gama workers €8,000

THE IRISH Labour Court has awarded Gama workers €8,000 per annum for unpaid overtime - a stunning admission of how this construction multinational ripped off its workforce.

For four years GAMA operated a ruthless machine of exploitation of its Turkish workers in Ireland, until being exposed by Socialist Party councillor Mick Murphy and Socialist Party TD (MP) Joe Higgins.

GAMA workers were forced to work up to 84 hours a week, in all kinds of weather, for as little as €2.20 an hour (£1.50) - instead of the €8 claimed to have been paid by the company.

Faced with investigation after Joe used the Irish Parliament to raise the plight of these workers, Gama claimed it had deposited the rest of the workers' wages in accounts in a Dutch-based bank called Finansbank.

The workers knew nothing about these accounts, so Joe and Mick took four former Gama employees to Amsterdam and walked into Finansbank to demand the workers access to their accounts.

An estimated 30-40 million euros in workers' money is deposited in Finansbank.

With the backing of the Socialist Party the Gama workers overcame the climate of intimidation as migrant workers living on site and struck to demand their rights.

After eight weeks of work stoppage Gama workers have voted to accept the Labour Court proposal of €8,000 per year worked plus one month's wages.

However, the award falls far short of what workers should have been paid for the massive amount of overtime worked.

The Irish government now has a huge responsibility to force Gama to pay the settlement within days.

The trade union movement must now move immediately to a major organisation of all migrant workers to ensure this.


In this issue

Say no to the bosses' profit system

EU constitution defeated

Why French workers voted 'no' to EU referendum

Defend adult education

ID cards: £300 for a snooper's card!

The campaign for Socialism 2005 begins now

Capitalism can't solve AIDS crisis

"Struggle or death" - Pakistan telecoms workers fight privatisation

Germany: Political turmoil after the elections

Iraq: coalition plans floundering

Labour court awards Gama workers €8,000

Striking back at pay-cutting bosses

BBC offer must be rejected

It is privatisation and it is as we know it

Coventry single status dispute: the stakes are raised

FE lecturers fight for pay deal

Job losses expose Manchester's 'boom'


 

Home   |   The Socialist 2 June 2005   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Gama:

triangleThe GAMA struggle

triangleInspiring film of GAMA struggle

triangleBosses low pay racket exposed

Labour:

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleBuilding the electoral alternative in Brent

triangleWales TUC - Oppose all cuts!

Socialist Party:

triangleLiverpool Socialist Party: Marxist Economics

triangleLiverpool Socialist Party: A Marxist view of history

triangleBristol East Socialist Party: No Pasaran! Fighting the far right

Socialist:

triangleSolidarity with Greek workers

triangleGood result for Socialist Students candidates in NUS elections

triangleTurning anger into action

Migrant workers:

triangleImmigration Advice closure shows need for industrial struggle

triangleLondon: Defending migrant workers' rights

triangleUnity needed to fight exploitation