Apple's Australian workers go on Christmas strike demanding better wages, work terms

Apple's Australian workers go on Christmas strike demanding better wages, work terms
A customer stands underneath an illuminated Apple logo as he looks out the window of the Apple store located in central Sydney, Australia on May 28, 2018.
PHOTO: Reuters file

Apple Inc's workers in Australia initiated a strike Friday (Dec 23) afternoon, demanding better working conditions and wages, a workers' union said, a move that might dent sales of the tech giant during the peak Christmas shopping time.

Workers represented by Australia's Retail and Fast Food Workers Union had earlier this month announced a walk out from Apple's retail outlets nationwide at 3pm local time on Dec 23, with plans to stay away throughout Christmas Eve.

The strike comes in the wake of the tech giant facing disruption at its flagship iPhone plant in China owing to a rare workers' protest against ultra-severe Covid-19 rules in the country and poor handling of the situation at the factory.

Earlier in June, Apple workers in Maryland, US, became the first retail employees of the tech giant to unionise in the country as workers continued to criticise the company's working conditions.

RAFFWU, which is at the forefront of the strike, claims an eight-year old agreement denies workers "weekends, consecutive days off, set rosters, set days of work, 12-hour breaks between shifts, overtime rates," among others.

"The 2014 agreement is one such agreement which pushed workers below the legal minimum," the union alleged, demanding the iPhone maker immediately return to the table and negotiate a fair agreement.

Apple declined a Reuters request for comment.

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