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Airbus to furlough 3 200 staff at Broughton factory in Wales

Airbus
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Airbus will furlough around 3 200 staff at its Broughton factory in Wales, the European planemaker said on Monday after it warned staff that the coronavirus crisis had put its survival at stake.

Airbus has given its starkest assessment yet of damage from the crisis, telling the company’s 135 000 employees to brace for potentially deeper job cuts as it grapples with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the aerospace sector.

Earlier this month, the group said it would furlough some 3 000 French workers by tapping a government-backed scheme for four weeks.

“Airbus confirms it has agreed with its social partners to apply the government’s Job Retention Scheme for approximately 3 200 production and production-support employees at its commercial aircraft site in Broughton,” it said in a statement.

Britain’s job retention scheme allows employers to furlough staff and claim cash grants up to 80% of wages, capped at 2 500 pounds per worker.

Airbus will top up gross salaries to bring pay up to 85-90% of pay, in accordance with an agreement signed with trade union representatives.

The deal affects the majority of the production and production support teams in Broughton, the north Wales factory which assembles wings.

Furlough periods will be staggered, with all starting in the next three weeks and lasting for at least three weeks.

The move does not affect Airbus’ 3 000 staff in Filton, western England, where wings are designed and supported.

Airbus deal with SAA:

In 2015, under the approval of former Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene, SAA negotiated to return ten aircraft purchased from Airbus and lease five fuel-efficient models.

This deal ended up saving SAA over R600 million.

However, former South African Airways (SAA) board chairperson, Dudu Myeni, is accused of trying to block the deal.

On trial in the High Court in Pretoria after the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (OUTA) brought an application to declare her a delinquent director in February, she conceded that there might have been an error of judgment from the board on what is referred to as the Airbus Swap deal.

In the video below, SAA puts up 9 of its Airbus planes on sale:

Additional reporting by SABC News!

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