No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsLatin AmericaChiquita Panama Fires Thousands Amid Illegal Banana Strike

Chiquita Panama Fires Thousands Amid Illegal Banana Strike

The Panamanian subsidiary of U.S. banana giant Chiquita Brands announced a mass dismissal of workers on Thursday, nearly a month after a strike that has cost the company an estimated US $75 million. In a statement, Chiquita Panamá said it had “regrettably” fired all of its daily workers for “unjustified abandonment of duties.” Daily workers are hired only for the harvest season and do not hold permanent contracts.

Employees have been on strike since 28 April, protesting a pension reform passed by Congress. Although the company did not specify the number of layoffs, Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino had warned earlier in the day that thousands of jobs could be lost if the walkout continued.

His comments came four days after a labor court declared the strike at Chiquita’s Changuinola plant—near the Costa Rican border—illegal.
“The strike is illegal; the company has already reported 4,900 cases of job abandonment,” Mulino said. “Under the Labor Code the next step is dismissal—for just cause.”

Chiquita’s local unit employs about 7,000 people. It must “dismiss those responsible to keep the operation alive,” the president added. “Believe me, it hurts.” Even so, banana-workers’ union leader Francisco Smith told reporters the strike would continue indefinitely.

According to Chiquita, the walkout has caused “at least US $75 million in losses” and “irreversible damage to production” due to the “complete abandonment” of plantations. A government delegation is still negotiating with unions, which want a new law restoring benefits they say were guaranteed under the previous pension and health-care regime.

Striking workers have staged protests and blocked roads in Bocas del Toro, a Caribbean province that relies on tourism and banana farming. Some areas are now facing fuel shortages and school closures. “We no longer know in what language to explain” the “enormous damage” caused by the unions’ intransigence, Mulino said.

The president is also grappling with separate strikes by construction workers and teachers who oppose the same pension overhaul.

Trending Now

Activists Take to San Salvador Streets on Independence Day

As El Salvador celebrated 204 years of Central American independence with military parades, about 1,500 activists filled the downtown streets of San Salvador. They...

Costa Rica Rental House Stories – From Doorknob Disasters to Gecko Guests

We’ve lived in a long line of rental properties over our time in Costa Rica. In sequential order, we started in a tiny apartment...

Stolen Costa Rican Antiquities Head Home After Manhattan Probe

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., revealed the return of nine ancient artifacts to Costa Rica on Thursday. These items came from investigations...

El Salvador Faces Fastest Democratic Decline in Latin America

El Salvador is the country in Latin America and the Caribbean facing the “fastest deterioration” of democracy in recent years, according to a report...

Costa Rica’s South Pacific Emerges as Prime Drug Route

Costa Rica's Judicial Investigation Agency flags the southern Pacific coast as the top spot for drug smugglers. Officials point to four main entry points...

Nicaragua Releases Prison Photos of Detained Doctor Amid US Demands

The government of Nicaragua published this Friday photographs in prison of a doctor with Costa Rican and Nicaraguan nationality, two days after the United...
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica