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French radio strike rumbles on after talks fail

 

Striking Radio France musicians and employees demonstrate at the Radio France headquarters, known as Maison de la Radio, in Paris. Journalists and technical staff at France’s national media broadcaster have been on strike since March 19, the longest radio news silence for a decade.

Reuters/Paris

The longest strike in a decade at France’s public radio broadcaster has left paralysed news stations playing music and shows no sign of ending after weekend talks failed to defuse a stand-off over cost cuts.
Radio France chief Mathieu Gallet has warned the group could run out of money within months if no measures are taken, and said the strike is costing €1mn a week.
The 18-day-old dispute at Radio France stems from concerns over job losses and service reductions aimed at reining in a budget deficit expected to reach €21mn ($23mn) this year.
The strike has added to the headaches of Francois Hollande’s unpopular Socialist government. It has decided to keep its level of grant to Radio France unchanged over the next three years and has called on the broadcaster to cut spending.
In talks on Saturday, management offered not to merge the group’s orchestras, one potential cost-saving measure, but did not address other concerns, unions at Radio France said in a statement.
Gallet has set a target of €50mn in savings over the 2015-19 period and proposed cutting 200 to 300 jobs through voluntary redundancies, out of a staff of some 4,900.
His relations with staff have deteriorated since press revelations last month that renovation work in his office cost €100,000.
“Radio France management has still not fully grasped the situation,” the unions said, reiterating their current strike call that runs until tomorrow morning.
Radio France runs national stations France Info, France Inter and France Culture, as well as a network of local outlets.
The strike has taken many programmes off the air and seen gaps filled by extended musical interludes.
In a report this week, the state auditor criticised spiralling costs at Radio France, including an expected doubling in the budget of decade-old renovation work at the broadcaster’s building overlooking the river Seine in western Paris.
It said the group should follow the example of other public broadcasters such as Britain’s BBC which have reorganised their operations in recent years.


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