Amazon: EU workers stage strikes to 'Make Amazon Pay'

World Saturday 25/November/2023 10:51 AM
By: DW
Amazon: EU workers stage strikes to 'Make Amazon Pay'

Berlin: Over 2,000 workers took part in the Black Friday strike targeting multiple Amazon locations in Germany, according to the Verdi union. The walkouts are a part of an international "Make Amazon Pay" campaign, which organisers claim involves strikes and protests in over 30 countries, including the United States.

The campaign coincides with the Black Friday shopping event, an originally US custom for retailers to lower prices following the American Thanksgiving holiday and usher in the holiday sales season. But this practice has also taken root in Europe and other parts of the world with the rise of Amazon and similar online-based multinational retailers.

"Amazon employees have made Black Friday into a 'Make Amazon Pay' day,'" said one of the leaders of the German Verdi union, Silke Zimmer.

Parallel to the strikes, Amazon faced a  protest by the German Peng! collective, which included a demonstration outside the "Amazon Tower" building in Berlin, an online petition, a satirical Amazon-themed "circus" and an "Amazon Leaks" page for the employees to report abuse.

According to the Verdi union, the strike affected six Amazon fulfillment centers in Germany. In turn, an Amazon spokesperson said work continued "normally," and only a small number of workers were on strike. The company said Black Friday orders will be delivered reliably and on time.

Verdi and Amazon have been clashing over pay and working conditions for over a decade. The company insists it has been offering "fair wages and good benefits" to its employees.

In the UK, over 200 employees were on strike at the Amazon warehouse in Coventry. The workers demand to be paid 15 pounds ($18.69, €17.29) an hour. A spokesperson for Amazon UK said the company's minimum starting pay was between 11.80 and 13 pounds, depending on the location, and was scheduled to rise to 12.30 to 13 pounds from next spring. For reference, the UK minimum wage is also set to reach 11.44 pounds in April 2024.

Reports of strikes and protests also came from worker organisations in Spain, Italy, and France.

The "Make Amazon Pay" campaign is coordinated by the UNI Global Union, a Swiss-based organisation claiming to represent over 20 million workers from over 150  countries in the skills and services sector.

The organisation, along with scores of other groups taking part in the initiative, accuses Amazon of "squeezing workers, communities and the planet" by exploiting its personnel, avoiding taxes, and not meeting its environmental pledges.