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Strike ends, airport chaos
continues in Brazil
Brazilian air traffic
controllers have ended their
strike after the government
agreed to meet their demands,
but airport chaos in the country
continues.
Controllers returned to work on
Saturday after the government
agreed to give them a bonus,
review the promotion system,
change the military status of
some controllers to civilian and
cancel all staff transfers made
over the past six months,
reported local news service
Agencia Brasil.
Controllers began a hunger
strike on Friday to protest poor
work conditions and equipment
safety concerns. The decision
was taken after the country's
top controller was transferred
by the Air Force, which oversees
the control of Brazil's air
traffic.
Those controllers viewed the
transfer as a reprisal for a
"work-to-rule" slowdown that
controllers staged for better
pay and more staff in the wake
of last September's crash
between a Gol airlines Boeing
737 and an Embraer Legacy
executive jet that killed 154
people.
The six-hour strike resulted in
the cancellation of 82 flights
and the delays of 101. Airport
confusion continued as
long-delayed passengers competed
for seats, and airlines
estimated that it would take
days for services to return to
normal.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva, who is in
Washington for a meeting with
his U.S. counterpart George W.
Bush, promised to make a "final
decision" on the conflict
Tuesday.
He also criticized the strikers
for not sticking to their
responsibilities. "When I was a
union leader and wanted to order
a company strike there were
certain sectors that we decided
wouldn't stop work. People who
perform a service considered
essential have more
responsibility than others," he
told Brazilian TV reporters.
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