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Conference turris::scandia

Title:All about Scandinavia
Moderator:TLE::SAVAGE
Created:Wed Dec 11 1985
Last Modified:Tue Jun 03 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:603
Total number of notes:4325

178.0. "Iceland: New Year's Day sailors strike" by TLE::SAVAGE (Neil, @Spit Brook) Wed Dec 31 1986 10:44

    Exerpted from United Press International, transmitted on the SISCOM
    IP:
    
    REYKJAVIK, Iceland.  Some 5000 Icelandic sailors planned to ring
    in the new year with a strike that would shut down Iceland's fishing
    industry.
    
    The Icelandic Seamen's Federation called the walkout for midnight
    Wednesday (New Year's Eve) to press demands for a 12% pay raise.
    The fishing fleet would remain in port on New Year's Day.
    
    Fish products provide 75% of Iceland's export earnings and are the
    predominant occupation for the nation's 250 vessels. The strike
    by 5000 seamen would idle 8000 workers in the onshore fish industry.
    
    Union officials complain fishing vessel owners have not negotiated
    a real raise with seamen for more than two years, having simply
    sent their wage claims to official arbitration.
    
    The center-right coalition of Prime Minister Steingrimur Hermannsson
    was not expected to step into the sailors' dispute unless it became
    a serious threat to the national economy.  New talks were scheduled
    for Friday between union and trawler officials.
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178.1Seaman's strike spreadsTLE::SAVAGENeil, @Spit BrookWed Jan 07 1987 09:3026
    United Press International 7-JAN-1987
    
    REYKJAVIK, Iceland.  Icelandic merchant shipping crews went on strike
    Tuesday, joining a six-day walkout in the fishing fleet that has
    idled the island nation's fishing industry.
    
    Some 1,000 members of the merchant seamen's union struck at midnight
    Monday after failing to gain a 20-percent wage increase in negotiations
    with shipowners. News reports said the talks, supervised by a
    government mediator, would continue Tuesday.
    
    The strike was expected to cripple Iceland's three major shipping lines
    in a week's time as the North Atlantic island nation's 50-odd
    commercial vessels sail into port one after another.  Also kept in port
    were an estimated 200 trawlers and large fishing vessels by a strike by
    some 5,000 crew members demanding a 12-percent pay raise. Wage talks
    broke down Monday between trawler owners and crews, whose strike
    began on New Years Day and subsequently idled 6,000 workers in the
    onshore fishing industry.
    
    The striking seamen's union said it would not resume the talks as
    long as some 50 trawlers remained at sea despite the walkout.  Trawler
    owners apparently hoped to sell their catches in British and German
    ports before heading home.  The seamen's federation was sending
    an official to Britian Tuesday to urge transport workers there not
    to unload Icelandic trawlers, news reports said.