Tag Archives: Amazon

Coronavirus diary day 65 – Now they order a billion masks!

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The French government is to order one billion masks from local manufacturers. To which the only possible reaction is, what took you so long?

Having told the general public that we didn’t need masks when the epidemic first hit, the government now declares itself worried that France is dependent on international suppliers.

There are four medium-sized companies producing 10 million masks a week locally at the moment but they are working at near full capacity.

The government wants production to rise to 50 million a week by the end of the year and says that will mean the country will be able to supply health professionals and patients who have Covid-19, although not the general public despite the fact that we are now urged to wear them to avoid the spread of the disease.

So the Finance Ministry has finally got round to requisitioning companies that have the capacity to produce this vital product – four of them. One, Brocéliande, which is owned by supermarket chain Intermarché, actually manufactured masks in the past but presumably stopped doing so when previous governments ran down the programmes launched during the bird flu epidemic.

Macron yesterday told BFMTV that the country never ran out of masks and people only thought that was the case because of “an error of communication”.

There were shortages, he admitted, but “Let’s collectively be honest enough to admit that in March, and even more so in February or January, nobody was talking about masks and we would never have thought we would have been forced to restrict their distribution to healthworkers.”

Which isn’t the way everybody remembers it.

In a victory for trade unions, Amazon has given up fighting court orders to tighten up anti-virus measures in consultation with workers’ representatives and reopened its warehouses in France.

With Europe’s car industry hard-hit by anti-virus lockdowns, Renault has announced a plan to save two billion euros, which will involve closing three small factories and “restructuring” or closing Flins, which employs 2,600 workers, according to Le Canard Enchaîné.

There’s a lot of talk about not returning to pre-virus levels of pollution, which would mean keeping the demand for new cars down, not to mention reducing air travel and other super-polluters.

To avoid an anti-green backlash, it’s vital to guarantee income to laid-off workers and plan centrally to provide jobs in ecologically friendly industry.

France now has nine different political groups in parliament. A two-party system it ain’t.

The new group has been formed by 17 MPs who have left Macron’s LREM, having apparently just realised that the millionaire former banker and budget-balancing economy minister lacks a certain commitment when it comes to social and ecological matters.

Macron’s 2017 presidential bid put an end to the dominance of the centrist Socialists and mainstream right in its successive incarnations. But even before that the country had a proliferation of small parties, largely because of the electoral system.

Most members of the smaller parties would have found a home in larger bodies in the UK or the US but leading a small party can be a politically profitable affair. You can usually bag a ministry or two when a government of your general political persuasion is formed (not to mention the considerable wealth the Le Pen family has accrued by establishing dominance in the hate market).

The latest mini-split deprives LREM of its absolute majority in parliament but Macron will be able to rely on the support of François Bayrou’s Modem and other liberal flotsam and jetsam. On top of which, the new group is not actually declaring itself to be part of the opposition but rather “independent”, so no big problems for the president there.

Encouraging signs in the statistics since lockdown ended, with the death toll, admissions to hospitals and numbers in intensive care all down. But experts say it is too early to judge whether the trend will continue.

Green = Hospital discharges, Yellow = In hospital, Red = deaths, Orange = In intensive care
Source: Mapthenews

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 28,022, 217 in the last 24 hours. 18,486 patients are in hospital, down 547, with 1,894 in intensive care, down 104. 62,563 people have been discharged from hospital, 835 of them yesterday.

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Coronavirus diary day 31 – Amazon France’s closure shows why you need unions

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Amazon has closed its warehouses in France for at least five days after a court ordered it to limit its trade to strict essentials because of Coronavirus safety fears. The case was brought by a militant union that said the company was failing to protect its workers from the virus.

The company appealed against the court’s ruling but then took even more drastic action – total closure. At first it announced closure for five days to review anti-virus measures, which it earlier insisted were adequate. But on Thursday French CEO Frédéric Duval told RTL radio he did not know when the sites would reopen.

The announcements have been accompanied by petulant complaints about the “major consequences” of “the union action that led to this result” on customers and employees, while delicately refraining to mention its effect on the company’s profits.

Amazon’s employees – there are almost 10,000 in France – will remain on full pay during the closure.

The case was taken to court by the Sud trade union, which accused the company of “carrying on as normal” despite the virus.

By contrast, in the US Amazon has fired at least three employees who have spoken out on employee safety during the epidemic.

Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa were dismissed on the grounds that they had previously broken the company’s internal regulations with public criticism of its stance on climate change.

“We support every employee’s right to criticize their employer’s working conditions, but that does not come with blanket immunity against any and all internal policies,” an Amazon spokesperson told Fox News via email in a magnificent example of doublespeak.

Earlier, Christian Smalls was shown the door for violating “several terms of his employment”.

The French case also shows the value of France’s labour law, a regular target of free-market fanatics.

The French government has announced supplementary payments worth a total of a billion euros for the country’s four million poorest households.

Healthworkers in the worst-hit départements are to receive a bonus of 1,500 euros and the rest will be paid an extra 500 euros.

Public-sector employees who are still working are to receive a bonus of up to 1,000 euros.

It’s a shame the government didn’t listen to healthworkers when they were protesting and taking strike action over low pay and difficult working conditions last year.

Hospital admissions have gone down for the first time since the start of the epidemic. The number of people in intensive care has been falling for several days. The death toll continues to rise, however.

France’s Covid-19 death toll is now officially 17,167, up 1,438 in 24 hours. 31,779 people are in hospital, down 513, and 6,457 are in intensive care, down 273. 30,995 people have been discharged from hospital, 2,190 yesterday.

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