Sign Up |  Login

     
 
Daily News |  Most Emailed |  Most Viewed |  Most Recommended |  Most Bookmarked                                  
 Home
Oddly Enough  
Politics  
Sports  
Business  
Life  
Technology  
Top News  
 Most Popular
News > Oddly Enough
Factory workers bare all to save jobs
2009-08-24 17:25:45

PARIS (Reuters) - Workers at a crisis-hit boiler factory in France have stripped off for a nude calendar in a bid to save 204 jobs slated for redundancy.

Staff at the Chaffoteaux et Maury factory in Brittany will use the proceeds to fund a trip to Italy where they plan to stage a protest at their parent company, Ariston Thermo Group (ATG), which pulled the plug on the site earlier this year.

"Our aim is to show there are workers here who will do anything to save their jobs, even take their clothes off," said Brigitte Coadic, representative of the CGT union at the site and the woman behind the calendar, which is due out in the autumn.

The operation is the latest in a line of colorful protest stunts by French workers after "bossnappings," threats to blow up factories or pollute the Seine river, as well as the traditional dumping of agricultural produce by angry farmers.

But Coadic insists that the Chaffoteaux action, in which 13 male workers pose nude covered only with masks or helmets, is completely peaceful.

"We don't want to destroy anything," she said. "We want to show what we can do, tell the management that, if they keep us, we can turn all this media attention into something positive."

Coadic said she was inspired by the stylish "Gods of the Stadium" calendar in which the muscular stars of Paris rugby club Stade Francais bare all in an annual display of discreetly lit beefcake.

The project also carries echoes of Britain's Calendar Girls -- the ladies of the Yorkshire Women's Institute who bared all for a charity calendar -- and the stripping steel workers of the 1997 British film "The Full Monty."

Coadic said that workers had been prompted to action when ATG said at the start of the summer that it would close production operations in northern France, cutting 204 jobs out of a total of 250 at the site.

(Reporting by Vicky Buffery; Editing by Steve Addison)

Average Rating
   Email This to a Friend            Print This News  

  Bookmark:  
   News Comments
No Comments found
    Would you like to comment?
     (Maximum characters: 5000)
     You have characters left.
    
    Security code:  
                        
                         Refresh Image
                          
   Recent News

New fossils reveal a world full of crocodiles
Kate Winslet, Michelle Obama make People's best-dressed
Arrest made in theft ring that hit Bernankes
Hoarding energy-guzzling bulbs ahead of EU ban
Amsterdam lets "beer bike" ride on, with limits
   Related News

Airline crew bares all to get flyers' attention
Russia bans all gambling and shuts casinos
Stay married and save the planet
Life not all a Carnival for Rio's drum queens
Scrap workers find $128,000 in safe
Page load time: 0.50347995758057 ms