Railway strike on vacation in Turkey, the UK Trade Union Leaders

Railway Trade Union Leaders Strike in Turkey on vacation in Britain: the longest in the UK in the last 50 years, while rail strike, union leaders has led to criticism in the press Island to holiday in Turkey.
British newspaper the Daily Mail, the news on the subject, "People jobs due to go to war, while the railway strike, the union leaders were tanned and relaxed upload photos to Facebook in Turkey." used the title.
SHARED IN SOCIAL MEDIA
The newspaper said, "When thousands of passengers were devastated by the strike, the bosses of the railway union publishing the frames they took while enjoying the holiday drew great reaction." used the expression.
Sean Hoyle, president of the Union of Railroad, Seaway and Transport, and Steve Hedley, deputy secretary-general, shared the squares on social media on Monday, when the week-end strike struck Friday.
The Daily Mail stated that Hoyle and Hedley were on vacation in Didim.
HARD LANGUAGE CHARGED
Speaking to The Sun, former minister Eric Pickles sharply criticized the two trade union leaders for not showing solidarity with the strike workers.
Pickles said it was unfair for the "rich union barons" to enjoy while the passengers suffer.
The Sun reported that 47-year-old Hedley earned an annual income of 76 pounds (613 thousand TL). The newspaper stated that 295-year-old Hoyle earned 51 thousand 47 pounds (483 thousand TL).
KINAMIŞTI UK PRIME MINISTER
The strike, which British Prime Minister Theresa May strongly condemned, will end at 23.59 local time on Friday night. The longest rail strike in Britain was in 1968.
Employees of the Southern railway company, which runs trains between the southern cities of England and the capital London, went on a five-day strike to protest the new plans that will cause the dismissal of the platform officials.
Due to the strike, there are disruptions in transportation from the cities in the south of the country and Gatwick Airport in the south of London to London.
In the statement made by the Southern company regarding the strike, it was stated that efforts were made to minimize the impact of the strike to the passengers, and it was announced that 60 percent of scheduled flights would serve during the five-day work stoppage and that there would be no train service on some lines.
Southern employees oppose the plans of the train gates to be operated by the conductors using the camera system, arguing that the number of platform employees who control the opening and closing of the train doors in the current state will be reduced in the framework of the new implementation.
The organizer of the strike, Secretary General of the RMT Mick Cash, said in a statement about the developments that they want to draw attention to security concerns by means of strike decision, and that their priorities are more than railway security.

Be the first to comment

Leave a response

Your email address will not be published.


*