Italian flight attendants strip off to protest working conditions
Italy's new national airline, ITA Airways, took to the skies
last week, but all is not well on the ground of Italian aviation.
Former Alitalia flight attendants protested this week
against job losses and pay cuts in a particularly Italian way by taking
their clothes off.
At the Campidoglio the center of power in Rome for around
2,000 years and whose main square was redesigned by Michelangelo -- about 50
female former flight attendants turned up in their Alitalia uniforms, then
removed them to stand in their underwear, chanting "We are Alitalia."
Theirs was a demonstration to protest not only against their
job losses, but also against the contracts awarded to those who have been
retained by ITA Airways.
Union complaints: Pay cuts, loss of seniority
Trade unions say that those who have stayed are being paid
less.
One ITA Airways flight attendant told CNN that as well as
taking a pay cut, they have lost seniority, and are no longer told far in
advance where and when they will be working.
ITA President Alfredo Altavilla has called previously called
threats of strike action "a thing of national shame."
He says that airline staff agreed to the current working
conditions and has reportedly compared their complaints to a driver looking in
the rear view mirror.
"Bargaining over contracts is more than finished. They
are all on board, and they have signed the contract that we sent them,"
Altavilla told Il Fatto Quotidiano earlier this month.
Source CNN
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