By Chris Davies on Monday, 21 March 2022
Category: European Union

P&O in employment race to the bottom where no one wins

Background
In one of the most egregious examples of the nefarious practice of fire and rehire, P&O Ferries sacked 800 workers via Zoom this week, without notice, attempting to replace them with agency workers on much lower pay and worse terms and conditions.

By using security guards to escort hardworking employees forcibly and inhumanely off their ships, on which they had served in some cases for decades, P&O showed an, at best, "cavalier" approach to business ethics. Consumers have also been badly let down.

P&O received over £150M of furlough support from the British government during the COVID-19 pandemic. It claims that it has been losing £100M a year with its legacy business model, despite its parent company boasting annual profits exceeding £1Bn. P&O's competitors include Brittany Ferries, who are subsidised by the French government.

Diplomatic catastrophe

In what has been an appalling week diplomatically for Boris Johnson:


P&O Ownership

This once proud company, providing a vital service by connecting mainland Great Britain to Northern Ireland, Ireland, and Continental Europe is owned by Dubai Ports World, ("DP World") managed by Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, a member of the UAE's leading families.

DP World is, via a holding company, owned by the United Arab Emirates' Government. Ultimate responsibility rests with the UAE's Vice President and Prime Minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.

Broken promises

DP World have broken the promises they made on acquiring P&O Ferries. They had pledged:


Manipulating EU & Maritime law

Not only has DP World's word been broken, P&O's Dubai-based billionaire owners are conducting a race to the bottom by practicing social dumping of existing staff (asserting they are "redundant" which is mendacious) and replacing them with, predominantly Colombian nationals working for substantially poorer pay and with worse conditions.

In an underhand move and manipulation of maritime legislation, the owners registered P&O's fleet of ferries in Cyprus. By doing so, they believed they could dismiss the current workforce as "redundant" and replace them with low-cost agency workers.

Under UK law it is not possible to make people redundant unless the role no longer exists. DP World can only do this because they're operating under EU law.

Consequences

DP World's suspension amounts to economic blackmail against the United Kingdom which must not be tolerated. Furthermore, DP World's decision must be reversed and other operators deterred from following similar measures.

To secure the livelihoods of the sacked P&O workers requires immediate legislative changes and a recognition of the unacceptable influences that have been allowed to penetrate the UK economy and obtain control over our vital industries.

Action plan Inquiry

Legacy European Union laws

Help for workers

Help for passengers

Blacklist DP World and the UAE

Take back control

The UAE is directly attacking the economic interests of working people in the United Kingdom.

It is deeply regretful that such a prestigious British company, once a hallmark of the United Kingdom's maritime strength, trade, and prosperity, is now owned by a regime notorious for human rights abuses and exploitation of its own workforce, many of whom are themselves the victims of social dumping.

It is shameful that the fire and rehire economic model, which should have no place in the twenty first century, is still being practiced in the UAE and is now being exported to the UK. The British government must send a clear message that draconian consequences will arise from reckless and reprehensible employment practices by foreign owners.