Finance Ministry claims Foreign Ministry
employees are well paid and have no reason to strike • Finance Ministry:
Many make more than 20,000 shekels ($5,700) per month, double the
Israeli average • Workers: Finance Ministry's data is false.
Protestors outside the
Foreign Ministry on Monday
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Photo credit: AFP |
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As the Foreign Ministry strike entered its
third day on Tuesday, striking employees directed citizens in need to
phone Finance Ministry Wage Director Kobi Amsalem.
The Finance Ministry has said that the salary
increases being demanded by Foreign Ministry workers amount to some 140
million shekels ($40 million).
Foreign Ministry employees, who are asking for
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's intervention, have received the
cold shoulder from Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. Lieberman
released a statement at the beginning of the week condemning the strike.
At a press conference on Tuesday, Lieberman
said the strike "crossed several red lines and caused damage to Foreign
Ministry workers."
He said the strike was hurting Israeli
travelers abroad whose passports had been lost or stolen, and was
"damaging our good name."
"I am the foreign minister, and I have
accomplished more than past ministers," Lieberman said. "I was with the
workers as long as they conducted themselves legally. But now I have
turned to a mediating judge."
Meanwhile, Foreign Ministry employees continued to protest in Jerusalem.
Kobi Bar-Natan, Amsalem's deputy, called on
the workers to return to the negotiating table. He said the average
salary of ministry employees working inside Israel was 21,000 ($6,000)
shekels per month, more than double the average Israeli salary.
Finance Ministry data shows that 42 percent of
Foreign Ministry workers earn more than 20,000 ($5,700) shekels per
month, 23% earn more than 25,000 ($7,200) shekels per month and 1% earn
more than 40,000 ($11,500) shekels per month.
However, Foreign Ministry Workers' Committee
Chairman Yair Fromer said: "Finance Ministry employees are presenting
false data that do not represent reality. In the first five years in the
Foreign Ministry, a new diplomat makes 5,500 shekels [$1,580] per
month, before taxes. After a decade, their salary increases to 9,500
shekels [$2,733], before taxes. The families of Foreign Ministry
employees live off of this salary alone after their spouses lose their
careers."
The Foreign Ministry Workers' Committee has
received support from the Histadrut's Professional Unions Department
head Avi Nissenkorn, who said: "Instead of bad-mouthing the people in
the foreign service, the Finance Ministry should take responsibility and
come to immediate agreements with the workers according to what is
needed."
On Monday, Israeli missions abroad were closed
and some 2,500 urgent requests from the public were directed to a
committee for exceptional cases. Only a few requests were approved, with
the criterion for approval being a danger to life.
Elad Levy, 28, is traveling in India had
planned to meet his friends on the beaches of Ko Pha Ngan in Thailand,
but the Foreign Ministry strike interfered with his vacation plans.
"My girlfriend's passport was stolen, and now
we are essentially hostages here," said Levy, who is stuck in New Delhi
with his girlfriend. "We planned to meet friends in Thailand and now we
have no way out of here because the embassy is on strike."
Roi, 24, an Israeli traveling in Chile is experiencing similar frustration.
"They stole my passport, and my sister had a
baby in Israel yesterday," he said. "There is no chance I will be able
to leave the country in the coming days. Let's hope I will be able to
make it to the brit milah. I am stuck here now. My money is running out,
and I will not have many options left. It's not as if I have nothing on
my mind and extra money and I can start trekking now. It's lucky there
are other Israelis and a Chabad house here."
Roi has been in Chile for three months and
says he has "done everything. Now I am dying to fly home to Israel --
and because of the strike, I can't. The Israelis here are angry and
impatient. This strike, justified as it may be, should not come at our
expense."
Meanwhile, due to the strike, Netanyahu put off for now a
planned official visit to Latin America and Defense Minister Moshe
Ya'alon canceled a visit to Italy. The Foreign Ministry expects that
Pope Francis' visit to Israel, planned for May, will also be affected.
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