ArcelorMittal workers, cops clash at Belgian PM’s house

Update: 2013-01-26 23:08 GMT
Belgian police fired water cannon and pepper spray on Friday at ArcelorMittal steelworkers protesting outside Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo’s official residence ahead of crisis talks on a big wave of job cuts.
 
Several hundred workers, angered by the steel giant’s decision to close a string of Belgian plants and make 1,300 workers redundant, hurled firecrackers, rocks and bottles at officers struggling to keep barriers in place.

Federal and regional politicians were meeting with unions seeking solutions to save jobs, and union representative Egedio di Pansilo called for the facilities to be nationalised. ‘The authorities must take over Mittal’s interests here,’ he said. ‘If they don’t want to, we don’t care … Nationalisation is a word that scares them, but it’s what they must do.’

The head of the regional government where the plants lie, Socialist Rudy Demotte, said the authorities ‘could envisage anything that is within our financial and judicial means,’ talking of an ‘industrial (regeneration) plan’ initially. The global steel giant is shutting down six cold-processing facilities in the Liege region of eastern Belgium.

Earlier on Thursday, workers burned tyres and wooden palettes outside one of the plant headquarters, and unions called for a general strike at sites still open. ArcelorMittal, already embroiled in controversy in France over the closure of two blast furnaces, blamed weak demand for cars and cutbacks in auto plants for the fall in demand for steel.

France’s minister for industrial recovery Arnaud Montebourg on Thursday accused Mittal of ‘blackmail’ and ‘lies’, saying he had failed to ‘honour his commitments’.

Di Rupo conveyed his ‘incomprehension’ to the steel tycoon head of the global group, Lakshmi Mittal, during a meeting of world economic leaders in Davos, Switzerland. And after the talks, he insisted: ‘We do not accept the closure(s) and the the decision of ArcelorMittal, and we are all standing firm with the workers seeking an industrial plan to save their jobs.’

Di Rupo cancelled a trip to Chile on Thursday to deal with a crisis dominating Belgian news. Union official David Camerini kept up the pressure, saying that the closures amounted to a ‘social cataclysm for the region’. He cited 70,000 redundancies in Europe by the company as proof of his argument.

In Belgium, the numbers employed in the steel business — like coal or shipbuilding beforehand in other one-time powerhouse industries — have collapsed from some 34,000 in 1981 to under 10,000 this year, Belgian TV reported.

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