Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ambulance workers walk out in strike-hit UK

EUR -
AED 4.017868
AFN 74.935527
ALL 98.451123
AMD 423.405313
ANG 1.971688
AOA 993.811907
ARS 1066.289945
AUD 1.628314
AWG 1.971757
AZN 1.857649
BAM 1.951236
BBD 2.208933
BDT 130.734194
BGN 1.954637
BHD 0.412248
BIF 3164.109256
BMD 1.093901
BND 1.426763
BOB 7.559318
BRL 6.115128
BSD 1.093951
BTN 91.885068
BWP 14.566728
BYN 3.580325
BYR 21440.463754
BZD 2.205242
CAD 1.497824
CDF 3148.247917
CHF 0.941094
CLF 0.037011
CLP 1021.233127
CNY 7.747335
CNH 7.763395
COP 4630.057209
CRC 564.87867
CUC 1.093901
CUP 28.988382
CVE 110.757761
CZK 25.348043
DJF 194.408296
DKK 7.45859
DOP 65.989562
DZD 145.520781
EGP 53.048303
ERN 16.408518
ETB 133.292084
FJD 2.436885
FKP 0.83307
GBP 0.836998
GEL 2.975207
GGP 0.83307
GHS 17.414588
GIP 0.83307
GMD 74.385211
GNF 9440.367777
GTQ 8.461208
GYD 228.865821
HKD 8.501002
HNL 27.347216
HRK 7.437446
HTG 144.242596
HUF 398.961633
IDR 17128.141092
ILS 4.120808
IMP 0.83307
INR 91.841047
IQD 1433.010588
IRR 46053.240699
ISK 148.497381
JEP 0.83307
JMD 172.864066
JOD 0.775248
JPY 163.254924
KES 141.11332
KGS 93.202498
KHR 4452.177905
KMF 491.407776
KPW 984.510471
KRW 1474.196153
KWD 0.335412
KYD 0.911593
KZT 536.44518
LAK 24156.073786
LBP 97958.853763
LKR 320.437522
LRD 211.122949
LSL 19.208867
LTL 3.230006
LVL 0.66169
LYD 5.234282
MAD 10.728434
MDL 19.280314
MGA 5004.597825
MKD 61.543789
MMK 3552.948466
MNT 3717.076269
MOP 8.760907
MRU 43.498964
MUR 50.340966
MVR 16.796844
MWK 1897.918649
MXN 21.283341
MYR 4.684632
MZN 69.845436
NAD 19.20911
NGN 1756.203934
NIO 40.233245
NOK 11.793732
NPR 147.016109
NZD 1.805713
OMR 0.421139
PAB 1.094041
PEN 4.09448
PGK 4.346124
PHP 62.504971
PKR 303.777275
PLN 4.295136
PYG 8528.051693
QAR 3.98235
RON 4.975826
RSD 117.026607
RUB 106.107958
RWF 1461.452019
SAR 4.107596
SBD 9.078644
SCR 15.316815
SDG 657.983553
SEK 11.371305
SGD 1.429953
SHP 0.83307
SLE 24.992692
SLL 22938.555839
SOS 624.617722
SRD 34.779496
STD 22641.54651
SVC 9.572521
SYP 2748.459542
SZL 19.20915
THB 36.689991
TJS 11.66675
TMT 3.828654
TND 3.358556
TOP 2.562026
TRY 37.446311
TTD 7.416651
TWD 35.310587
TZS 2980.880381
UAH 45.058889
UGX 4020.595265
USD 1.093901
UYU 45.044223
UZS 14001.935175
VEF 3962714.607771
VES 40.505665
VND 27167.036599
VUV 129.87015
WST 3.060148
XAF 654.426206
XAG 0.035827
XAU 0.000419
XCD 2.956323
XDR 0.813896
XOF 651.411141
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.830838
ZAR 19.31025
ZMK 9846.421369
ZMW 28.909377
ZWL 352.235744
  • NGG

    -0.2700

    65.63

    -0.41%

  • GSK

    2.2200

    40.24

    +5.52%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    13.03

    +1.92%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    31.98

    -0.16%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    66.35

    -0.47%

  • BCC

    0.3700

    142.39

    +0.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    24.52

    -0.49%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    35.48

    +0.73%

  • AZN

    0.6350

    77.505

    +0.82%

  • RBGPF

    -1.4700

    59.33

    -2.48%

  • CMSD

    -0.1715

    24.68

    -0.69%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.22

    +0.45%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    9.73

    +0.72%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    46.71

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    33.31

    -0.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    6.9

    -1.01%

Ambulance workers walk out in strike-hit UK
Ambulance workers walk out in strike-hit UK / Photo: Niklas HALLE'N - AFP

Ambulance workers walk out in strike-hit UK

Striking ambulance workers in England and Wales manned picket lines on Wednesday, escalating a pay dispute with the government following walkouts by nurses and other public sector staff.

Text size:

The series of stoppages are causing misery Britain in the run-up to Christmas, with railway workers and passport control officers set to ruin festive holiday getaways as the government vows to resist the growing pay demands.

As paramedics and call handlers walked out Wednesday, the government and unions furiously traded blame over the possible loss of life.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay, writing in the Daily Telegraph newspaper, accused the unions of making a "conscious decision" to "inflict harm" on patients.

GMB union national secretary, Rachel Harrison, hit back calling his comments "insulting" to ambulance workers, who were "forced" to strike "because year after year the government has failed to listen to them".

Employees across the UK economy are demanding salary rises above decades-high inflation -- currently running at nearly 11 percent -- which is spurring the worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation.

On Tuesday, thousands of members of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland took to picket lines, five days after their first strike in its 106-year history.

Unions representing both nurses and ambulance workers in the state-run National Health Service (NHS) have threatened further stoppages in the new year if the government keeps refusing to discuss pay.

- 'Immense pressure' -

Around 40 staff formed a picket line outside West Midlands Ambulance Services' hub in Longford in central England, standing behind a banner reading "our NHS is under siege".

As passing ambulances sounded their horns in support, a Unite union representative, Steve Thompson, said the walkout was about trying to retain and improve services, as well as pay.

"This is about telling them (the government) that we are not going to allow it (a deterioration in services) to happen. We are not going to roll over," he said.

"We want the government to actually wake up and realise that this situation is serious."

Adrian Boyle, president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said the UK's emergency health system had been under "immense pressure" for the last three years.

He told Times Radio the last year had been "the worst we've ever seen it" when it came to delays in getting patients into hospital from ambulances due to a lack of beds.

And he said accident and emergency departments were expecting people to make their own way to hospital on Wednesday -- even those with strokes and heart attacks.

- 'Cold shoulder' -

The government insists it must stick to modest increases for public sector workers recommended by independent pay review bodies.

"The best way to help them and help everyone else in the country is for us to get a grip and reduce inflation as quickly as possible," Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said.

But the RCN has criticised the government's stance and accused Barclay of adopting a "macho" negotiating style during recent brief meetings.

It has warned that nurses would take wider industrial action next month if the government "keeps giving our nursing staff the cold shoulder".

Despite the government's insistence that it will not negotiate, polls indicate most people support nurses, and to a lesser extent other workers walking out.

YouGov polling published Tuesday showed two-thirds of Britons support striking nurses, with 63-percent support for ambulance staff.

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)