UK postal workers continue strike
Thousands of postal workers in the UK started a second day of strikes today, with a fresh wave of action set to be held next week in an escalation of the bitter Royal Mail dispute.
The Communication Workers Union served notice of further walk-outs starting next Thursday as thousands of delivery and collection workers mounted picket lines across the country today.
Up to 78,000 union members will join todayâs walkout, following a âsolidly supportedâ strike yesterday by over 40,000 mail centre staff and drivers.
Details of how long next weekâs strikes will last and which group of workers will be involved are expected to be announced today.
The union offered âunconditionalâ talks at the conciliation service Acas in a bid to break the deadlocked row over jobs, pay and modernisation.
Mark Higson, Royal Mailâs managing director, said it was âappalling but sadly not surprisingâ that more strikes had been called.
The new stoppages will cause further disruption to mail deliveries, which are already facing big delays because of this weekâs action.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown urged Royal Mail management and postal workers to get âround the tableâ to solve the dispute, saying the strike was âself-defeatingâ.
He warned: âIf more and more customers leave the Royal Mail and more and more customers stop using the Royal Mail, then more jobs will be lost, so this is self-defeating.â
Union leaders stepped up their attack on Business Secretary Peter Mandelson, accusing him of telling âuntruthsâ.
The minister responded by urging both sides to continue talking until the deadlock was broken and raised the prospect that the conciliation service Acas could become involved.
âI donât think trading insults in this situation helps resolve the dispute. Politicising or dramatising it is useless. People need to focus on what issues are dividing them.â
Pickets were joined yesterday by other union activists, waving banners and flags, with slogans including Defend Our Postal Services, and Protect Our Pensions, attracting hoots of support from passing motorists.
The atmosphere was peaceful, with pickets expressing strong support for the industrial action and hitting out at the Royal Mail and Mr Mandelson â one accusing the Business Secretary of having a âvendettaâ against postal workers.






