November 21, 2008
Source: CNN and BDP International
A strike by nearly
a half million Chilean government workers ended Friday in anticipation
of government approval of a 10 percent wage increase.
Chile's Senate unanimously approved the measure Thursday and
the Chamber of Deputies, Chile's lower house, was scheduled
to vote on it Friday afternoon. Passage was widely expected.
Chile's minister of labor said he approves of the 10 percent
increase, as does Arturo Martinez, head of the Workers Central
Union, the nation's largest labor federation.
Martinez said the workers had won and pronounced himself "very
satisfied."
The increase would go into effect December 10 and affect 450,000
government workers, from the president on down.
The workers, who had been on strike since Monday, had been asking
for a 14.5 percent increase.
The government had initially offered a 6.5 percent increase,
then upped the offer to 9.5 percent on Wednesday.
Officials then increased the offer to 10 percent after Chile's
lower house rejected the 9.5 percent adjustment on Thursday.
Striking workers had taken to the streets this week, staging
large protests in most of the nation's major cities.
Because of the strike, garbage piled up on streets, 18 hospitals
were paralyzed and 3,000 surgeries were postponed.
Even weddings and autopsies were not performed.
BDP International's General Manager of the Santiago office
in Chile, Ana Maria Pena has confirmed that the Public Employee
strike is finally over and importing and exporting activites
will return to normal. "We believe that on Monday everything
will be functioning at full capacity."



