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Seeds of conflict remain at Ssangyong despite reinstatement

Despite Ssangyong Motor’s Thursday agreement to reinstate 455 workers on unpaid leave from 2009, another labor dispute is looming at the nation’s fifth-largest carmaker. At the center of the brewing controversy is how to deal with those who voluntarily resigned or were fired during the restructuring process in 2009.

The carmaker didn’t include them in the list of reinstatement, but labor circles, including the Korean Metal Workers Union, have urged the company to rehire them as they left the company due to what they claimed were the company’s wrongdoings.

A total of 1,904 workers left the company by applying for a voluntary leave program, while 159 were laid off in 2009 in the course of a structural adjustment to sell the company to Indian Mahindra Group.

Employment and Labor Minister Lee Chae-pil said in a radio interview on Friday that Ssangyong Motor has no responsibility to rehire workers who left the company voluntarily or who were fired in the restructuring process, unless corporate management is normalized.

Labor circles dismissed his remark on the issue as “careless,” claiming that they had to leave the company as corporate management doctored the books to put the company at the brink of bankruptcy, which gave a reason for downsizing. In 2010, the company sold a majority stake to Indian-based Mahindra in 2010.

The Korean Metal Workers Union has urged political parties to launch a parliamentary inspection on what really happened when the company decided to cut personnel.

Sim Sang-jeung, a pro-labor lawmaker from the opposition Progressive Justice Party, also hosted a press conference on Friday to urge the government to look into wrongdoings at Ssangyong Motor during the cutting of its workforce in 2009.

The company’s current workers, however, allegedly opposed the engagement of political circles with the corporate issue, in concern for the negative impact on its recovering business. According to the company, its total vehicle sales rose 6.8 percent on-year in 2012 to 120,717 units. They have argued that their company’s image had been tarnished due to the involvement of political parties and labor groups in its in-house issues.

“All parties involved in the prolonged labor dispute at Ssangyong Motor were deeply hurt and what is needed the most now is to focus together on normalization of the company,’’ an official from the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry said.

Ssangyong Motor’s prolonged labor dispute has epitomized key issues faced by Korean workers, including mass layoffs and speculative foreign capital.

By Seo Jee-yeon  (jyseo@heraldcorp.com)
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