Five hundred
food processing workers strike in Leicester
19 June Yesterday, 500 workers at RF Brookes factory in Leicester took their
third day of concerted strike action to oppose the unjust
policies imposed on them by their profit hungry management.

Attacks on the workers at this food processing factory in South
Wigston typify capitalist attempts to squeeze every last drop of
profit from otherwise successful businesses by punishing their
employees.
Until late last year the Leicester factory had been owned by
chilled food behemoth, Premier Foods, a company that in its bid
to increase short-term profits for shareholders, readily
disposed of 200 workers in September 2011.
After a successful takeover bid by Ranjit "Chicken King" Boparan,
the factory is now in the process of being ransacked by Boparan
and his wife's Birmingham-based company, 2 Sisters Food Group. A
destructive course of action that is no anomaly for the Boparans,
as they acted similarly when they took a controlling stake in
Northern Foods last year.
At present a further 193 staff at RF Brookes are being coerced
into redundancy. But this time round, thanks to the Boparans'
entrepreneurial wizardry, redundancy payoffs are less than half
what they were under Premier Foods' regime.
This was the straw that broke the proverbial camel's back, and
has seen Boparan's hardworking employees now threatening to
break the Chicken King's back: letting him know that his much
touted efforts to create a £3.5 billion global food empire will
not be built upon the devastation of their communities.
With a strong, enthusiastic picket line made up of hundreds of
workers - many having spent decades at the factory and never
before considered it necessary to take strike action - the
fightback against the job-slashing Chicken King is now in full
force.
Tony Lewis, from the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union (BFAWU),
which was called on by its members to support this strike, said:
"Basically this is about stopping the race to the bottom by food
manufacturers, who in their quest to maximise profits, are
driving workers' pay and conditions down.
"We need all socialists and progressives to continue with the
campaign nationally to fight this trend."
Tony added that the workers will continue striking for two days
every week until mid-July, by when they hope to have obtained
support from other workers.

BFAWU national president, Ian Hodson, speaking to
picketers at RF Brookes bakery
Indeed, union representatives at their sister plant in
Rogerstone Park, in south Wales, are currently having
discussions with their management which could lead to further
industrial action against the 2 Sisters Food Group.
2 Sisters is not alone in this race to the bottom; Marks &
Spencer, that currently serves as the sole recipient of RF
Brookes' food produce, is likewise cutting production costs by
locating cheaper suppliers.
This of course equates to a search for food suppliers with a
low-paid, non-unionised workforce, be they domestic or foreign.
Evidently Boparan and his family's food conglomerate have set
their goals high, and aim to become the main supplier for the
British chilled food industry. But to do this they have
determined that they must continue their attacks against the
very source of their profits, their workers.
The solution to this steadfast attack on workers is therefore,
as Tony Lewis clearly states, for workers to unite! And along
these lines, workers and union officials from across the country
have already sent messages of support to their RF Brookes'
comrades.
For instance, from Mark Serwotka, the general secretary of the
Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union:
"PCS stands fully behind BFAWU members in their dispute over
redundancy pay. These workers are the real wealth creators and
the action of RF Brookes' management is disrespectful to their
workforce.
"At a time of high unemployment and economic stagnation, it is
vital that employers are deterred from laying off staff, and
that those who are made redundant are compensated fairly".
Both national and international solidarity are essential in this
time of open class warfare, waged fiercely upon the poor by the
rich.
With renewed energy, workers are defending their class
interests, and they are demanding that their unions support
them.
(By Michael Barker, reposted from
http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/articles/14719/18-06-2012/five-hundred-food-processing-workers-strike-in-leicester)