Since 2013, unions have staged repeated strikes at Amazon's
facilities in Germany - Amazon's second-largest market after the
United States - hoping to force the e-commerce company to
recognize collective bargaining agreements that apply to other
retail employees.
Verdi said more than 400 Amazon workers in Leipzig had been on
strike every day since Monday.
Verdi had said on Tuesday that around 1,200 workers were taking
part in a strike that started during the Sunday to Monday night
shift at warehouses in Bad Hersfeld, Koblenz and Leipzig. The
strike was due to last until Dec. 21, the union said.
But it said on Friday that the strike in Leipzig would continue
until Dec. 24. Spokespeople for the union in Bad Hersfeld and
Koblenz could not be reached.
"Particularly during Advent, we want to show that employees
don't expect gifts but rather demand fair working conditions and
collectively agreed wages," strike leader Thomas Schneider said
in a statement.
"It's business as usual for Amazon today with our well-paid,
dedicated and highly respected teams across Germany doing what
they do every day – delivering for their customers," a spokesman
for Amazon said.
Amazon employs 20,000 people at 35 sites in Germany and adds
thousands of temporary workers to help cover the Christmas rush.
(Reporting by Michelle Martin and Elke Ahlswede, editing by
Larry King)
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