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| Monday, 9 December, 2002, 11:18 GMT Fiat redundancies begin ![]() Unions doubt that the redundancies are temporary The first wave of redundancies has hit Fiat workers in Italy as the crisis-hit carmaker begins its huge layoff. Up to 5,600 employees are expected to receive temporary redundancy letters on Monday, as the first part of Fiat's plans to cut over 8,000 posts.
But unions have disputed the claim and angry protests throughout Italy continued on Monday, with walkouts at a number of factories. In Sicily, workers at the soon-to-be closed Termini Imerese factory blocked the road between Palermo and Catania. Near Milan, sacked workers blocked a main road, while in Turin strikers closed down the main car assembly line at Mirafiori. 'Unofficial' solution? Fiat is proposing to axe up to 8,100 jobs as part of a controversial restructuring plan aimed at stemming its huge losses and returning the group to profitability. Crisis-talks last week between unions and the Italian government failed to reach an agreement to avert the cuts, prompting thousands of frustrated workers to block roads and railways throughout Italy.
Unions called for further strikes on Monday at Fiat factories, including at the group's Maranello plant which makes Ferraris. There was also a bitter reaction to the country's prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, who suggested on Saturday that workers threatened by unemployment should seek "unofficial" jobs in the black economy. "What can you say about a prime minister who incites (workers) to break the law. It's amazing," said Massimo d'Alema, the country's former prime minister and head of the Social Democrats party. GM option The Italian Undersecretary of Welfare, Maurizio Sacconi, has said it would now be "opportune" for Fiat to "speed up clarifications" of its deal with the US car maker General Motors. Fiat has the option to sell its Fiat Auto division - which includes the Lancia, Alfa Romeo and Fiat brands but not Ferrari - to GM in 2004. GM already has a 20% stake in the business, but Fiat's chief executive Gabrielle Galateri said on Friday that Fiat would "remain Italian". | See also: 06 Dec 02 | Business 07 Nov 02 | Business 15 Oct 02 | Business 11 Oct 02 | Business 09 Oct 02 | Business 04 Jul 02 | Business 27 Jun 02 | Business Top Business stories now: Links to more Business stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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