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Dockworkers have reported numerous problems with working conditions since China-based Cosco began operating at Greece's Port of Piraeus in 2010.Dimitrios Batsoulis has become one of Cosco’s harshest critics.
Mr. Batsoulis says he was fired from his job as a Cosco dockworker in February after he tried to organize a workers’ committee to raise concerns about safety violations that he said Cosco subcontractors repeatedly ignored.
He said his bosses had blacklisted him several weeks earlier after he left the steering compartment of a crane one snowy morning when the heater broke, leaving his hands too cold and stiff to control the giant machine from his post 15 meters above ground.
“I was jeopardizing my life and my colleagues’ lives,” Mr. Batsoulis said. When he climbed down to warm himself, he said his manager and a Cosco executive chastised him for slowing operations. He said he was not called back to work for another week.
“If you are a worker for Cosco, then you know suddenly how it is to work in the Chinese Republic,” said Mr. Batsoulis, who is now suing the company for unlawful dismissal and unpaid overtime.
More in the New York Times

Alberto Aleman Zubieta will receive the 2012 Connie Award, presented by the Containerization & Intermodal Institute on Dec. 10 at The Newark Club in New Jersey, for his work as an administrator of the $5.25 billion Panama Canal expansion project, which will widen and deepen the interocean passage to accommodate larger ships and boost global trade.
More at the Journal of Commerce

2,700 dockworkers are on strike at Ain Sokhna port in Egypt to demand the reinstatment of eight fo their colleagues by DP World.
Dubai Ports World, the company operating the Ain Sokhna port, filed charges against striking workers on Monday, accusing them of costing the company LE40 million (USD $6,550,000) in just five days.
The majority of losses accrued came from fines by shipping companies. The company claimed the losses also harm the Egyptian economy.
The workers responded by saying they would continue the strike until eight of their colleagues, who they say were fired arbitrarily, return to their jobs.
More in the Egypt Independent

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