Staff storm board meeting at Charles de Gaulle airport and force executives to flee, with one clambering over fence half-naked

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Striking staff at Air France have taken demonstrating their anger with direct action to a shocking new level. Approximately 100 workers forced their way into a meeting of the airline’s senior management and ripped the shirts from the backs of the executives.

The airline filed a criminal complaint after the employees stormed its headquarters, near Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris, in what was condemned as a “scandalous” outbreak of violence.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Air France’s human resources deputy director, Xavier Broseta, is helped over a fence to escape angry staff. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images





Photographs showed one ashen-faced director being led through a baying crowd, his clothes torn to shreds. In another picture, the deputy head of human resources, Xavier Broseta, left bare-chested after workers ripped off his shirt and jacket, is photographed being pushed to safety over a fence.

Tensions between management and workers at France’s loss-making flagship carrier had been building over the weekend in the runup to a meeting aimed at finalising a controversial “restructuring plan” involving 2,900 redundancies between now and 2017. The proposed job losses involve 1,700 ground staff, 900 cabin crew and 300 pilots.



Facebook Twitter Pinterest Broseta is evacuated to safety. Photograph: Jacky Naegelen/Reuters

After the violence erupted at about 9.30am on Monday, there was widespread condemnation from French union leaders who sought to blame each other’s members for the assaults.



Laurent Berger, secretary general of the CFDT, said the attacks were “undignified and unacceptable”, while Claude Mailly, of Force Ouvrière (Workers Force) said he understood Air France workers’ exasperation, but added: “One can fight management without being violent.”

Manuel Valls, France’s prime minister, said he was “scandalised” by the behaviour of staff and offered the airline chiefs his “full support”.



Air France said it had lodged an official police complaint for “aggravated violence”.



Facebook Twitter Pinterest Pierre Plissonnier, vice-president of Air France, is helped by police. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images

Several hundred airline employees had gathered to demonstrate outside Air France’s head office and members of senior management were greeted by an angry crowd shouting and waving flags and placards featuring the company chiefs portrayed as criminals in police mugshots. As executives entered the building, dozens of workers forced their way into the committee room shouting “this is our home”.

The Air France president, Frédéric Gagey, escaped unharmed. However, Pierre Plissonnier, vice-president of the airline’s Orly airport hub, was attacked.



Afterwards, Broseta told a press conference that he was “shocked and disappointed” by the attack, but added: “What we saw this morning is not typical of company staff.” He said: “I’ve received hundreds of messages of sympathy from union representatives and colleagues.”

The French finance minister tweeted his support for the attacked men. “Those who engage in violence are irresponsible. Nothing can replace social dialogue,” Emmanuel Macron wrote.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Air France staff demonstrate near the company headquarters in Roissy-en-France. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images

The French employers organisation, MEDEF, blamed an “irresponsible minority” for “unacceptable and scandalous aggression”.



Air France was founded in 1933 and in 2004 merged with the Dutch airline KLM to create the world’s fifth-largest air transport company.



Increased competition from Middle Eastern rivals and budget airlines recently prompted the loss-making group to seek a reorganisation and €1.8bn (£1.3bn) savings. The company is also planning to close five long-haul routes and sell off 14 of its larger, long distance aircraft.

On Monday morning, before the demonstration, Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the powerful CGT union, told RTL radio: “For several years now, successive heads of Air France have suggested rescue plans … each time, it’s a bottomless pit with the same suggestions. I believe they are trying to set one lot of us against the other. We need a real expert appraisal of the situation.” He admitted that Air France had been hard hit by the deregulation of the industry and the popularity of low-cost airlines.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest The Air France president, Frédéric Gagey, speaks to reporters. He escaped the protesters unharmed. Photograph: Eric Piermont/AFP/Getty Images

Before the meeting, a government official, Stéphane Le Foll, said all parties had to get round the table to thrash out an agreement. “I call on everyone, especially the pilots, to make an effort,” he told France Inter radio.



After the violence, Air France said the committee meeting would be postponed until Monday afternoon, before cancelling it altogether. In a statement, the airline said executives were willing to negotiate with workers but “under certain conditions”.

Alexandre de Juniac, president of Air France-KLM, said the group condemned “the physical violence that took place around the executive meeting with the greatest firmness”, adding that it nevertheless “does not alter the management’s willingness to continue discussions”.



Facebook Twitter Pinterest An Air France employee waves a CGT union flag in front of an Airbus A330, at the company headquarters. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images

It is not the first time French workers have taken matters into their own hands with violent results. Since 2009, as the global economic crisis has escalated, several bosses have been held hostage by angry staff.



In January 2014, workers at a Goodyear factory in northern France prevented two managers from leaving and said the pair would be held until the company gave a “satisfactory response to requests”.



Olivier Labarre, director of BTI, a human resources consultancy, told Libération newspaper in 2009: “This happens elsewhere, but to my knowledge, taking the boss hostage is typically French. It’s the nature of the social dialogue in our country.”