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Siemens Gamesa summons the unions to a meeting on Tuesday after the announcement of adjustments

CCOO says that the layoffs are not "justified" and believes that they will mainly affect offices.

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Siemens Gamesa summons the unions to a meeting on Tuesday after the announcement of adjustments

CCOO says that the layoffs are not "justified" and believes that they will mainly affect offices

BILBAO, 3 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS) -

Siemens Gamesa has convened this Tuesday the union sections of the CCOO, UGT and ELA throughout the country after the announcement of adjustments in the workforce, which in Spain will affect 475 positions, according to sources from the CCOO to Europa Press.

The company announced last week its intention to cut a total of 2,900 jobs worldwide, within the framework of its strategic program 'Mistral'.

The general secretary of the CCOO at Siemens Gamesa and president of one of Zamudio's seven company committees, Clara Fernández, has confirmed that the company has telematically summoned the union sections of the CCOO, UGT and ELA throughout the country to a meeting this Tuesday. the state.

The representative of CCOO has stated that at that meeting the union will express the "frontal" rejection of the dismissals and will demand something that has been demanded "for a long time", and is "an industrial and future plan" for the company in Spain, in addition of "shielding employment".

The union official has indicated that, for now, they do not have details of how this adjustment could affect the different areas of the company or zones, but they do believe that it could be more aimed at offices, for which the CEO previously informed them of the announcement Jochen Eickholt.

In his opinion, this adjustment "is not justified" and he has indicated that the rest of the companies in the sector also have "disadvantages" such as those raised by Siemens Gamesa. The CCOO representative believes that "part of the blame" lies with the company's management, where there have been "permanent changes of CEO", and has assured that Gamesa was "a profitable company" but "since Siemens arrived it has not been ". "We racked up billions of losses and it's not the staff's fault," she said.