Foreign
Ministry strike closes 103 diplomatic missions abroad, including at
United Nations • Strike could cost Israel tens of millions of dollars •
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman: Strike is a miserable decision that
displays a lack of sense.
The Israeli Embassy in
London, closed due to the strike
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Photo credit: AP |
For the first time in Israel's
history, the Foreign Ministry has gone on strike, closing all
diplomatic missions abroad as well as the ministry's Jerusalem
headquarters indefinitely.
A total of 103 Israeli missions are closed,
including at the United Nations. Some 100 consulates and other
lower-ranking missions will also remain closed.
The strike could cause political damage to
Israel as a result of cutting off communication with diplomatic
officials around the world. It also leaves Israelis abroad without
official assistance. Workers are: cutting off communications with
international organizations and influential officials worldwide;
freezing public diplomacy efforts in the foreign press; not issuing
passports or consular certificates; refusing to handle official state
visits to Israel and abroad; and denying permits for secure exports,
preventing international business. The Foreign Ministry has stated that
it estimates the direct damage of the strike to the Israeli economy to
be tens of millions of dollars.
The Jerusalem headquarters will be closed to
all Foreign Ministry employees, including Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman and Director-General Nissim Ben-Sheetrit.
Worker demands include anchored wages and pay
increases in line with the cost of living in the countries to which they
are posted, addressing the issue of spouses' loss of employment,
adjustment of pension plans, and appropriate compensation for executive
branch employees.
Foreign Ministry Workers' Committee Chairman
Yair Fromer said, "The Finance Ministry has declared an all-out war
against the Foreign Ministry of the State of Israel. We will not accept
the intolerable disregard of Finance Ministry officials, sabotaging the
interests of the State of Israel."
Lieberman condemned the workers, calling the strike a "miserable decision that displays a lack of sense."
"We will do everything possible to minimize the damage being caused to the state and its citizens," he said.
The Finance Ministry said in a statement that "the
Foreign Ministry Workers' Committee is holding Israeli citizens hostage
and harming the essential interests of the state. The workers' committee
refused to accept the solutions [offered], and abandoned the mediation
process headed by retired Judge Steve Adler."
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