"Post Office management wants to muzzle the unions": five Sud PTT postal workers before the court for acts dating back to a 2014 strike

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Accused of "home invasion" and "violence" after two attempts to occupy the postal group's headquarters during a strike in 2014, five union members were summoned to the Paris Criminal Court on June 12. They deny the accusations, denouncing an attempt to intimidate their management, which could earn them a five-year prison sentence and a €75,000 fine.
Two intrusions into its national headquarters, as part of a social movement. This is what the management of the Post Office calls a "home invasion" , which, eleven years after the alleged events, has led to a court appearance for four postal workers and one postal worker, Sud-PTT activists in Hauts-de-Seine, summoned to appear before the Paris Criminal Court on June 12. They are also accused of acts of "violence" allegedly committed, on the same occasion, against the head of security at the time. This is something the accused consistently deny.
One month before this judicial summons, activists organized a press conference on Thursday, May 15, which was attended by MP Éric Coquerel (LFI), to make public an appeal of support for the strikers involved, signed by several figures from the trade union and political worlds, including Senator and director of L'Humanité Fabien Gay.
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