News of a possible general strike did not reach the ears of some of the employees of the Central Headquarters of the Romanian Commercial Bank. Some of them had told us that they had not even heard about last week"s Japanese strike.
What"s more, at BCR Sebastian, some of the bank clerks said they were happy with the working conditions and their pay.
Thus, a significant number of the employees of BCR keep working, even though the disagreements between unionists and the management of the institution seem to have escalated last week. The Federation of Independent Unions (FSI) of BCR announced it has begun the conflict of interest, after the bank declined to solve the wage-related requests of the unionists.
Some of the sources in the bank were also unhappy with the protests of the unionists, according to Agerpres: "The protest of the unionists of BCR is more a protest of the union leaders, which stand to gain from it". The sources in question said: "During the protest of February 25th, we only counted 40 unionists. The union leaders were the only ones there. They claimed there were a hundred people. Furthermore, at the Japanese strike, unionists said that there were 6,000 people who participated in the Japanese strike. Can they prove there were that many? Did they collect signatures? I haven"t seen too many people wearing armbands. There were some, indeed, but not too many".
According to the quoted sources, union leaders have the most to gain from these protests, and most employees don"t even support these actions.
Some BCR employees preferred to leave comments to union leaders, whereas other opted not to comment.
* New threats of a general strike
The FSI announced that it would register the conflict of interest with the Territorial Labor Inspectorate of Bucharest and would request reconciliation, as the only mandatory stage for s