Amazon Strike
© Getty Images / Leon NealMembers and supporters of the GMB union protest outside the Amazon offices on November 23, 2018 in Milton Keynes, Britain.
Amazon workers have staged protests and strikes in several European countries, accusing company of poor working conditions. The protesters claim the company treats them like "robots," citing bad safety record and low wages.

The strike hit the largest Amazon facility in Spain, the warehouse in in San Fernando de Henares near Madrid. The protestors gathered outside the building, displaying banners, chanting slogans, and inciting co-workers to walk off and join them. Some participants wore shirts reading "Amazon, not only Fridays are black."

"We are striking here because of poor working conditions," CGT Union member Moises Fernandez told Ruptly. "We are losing professional categories, we are losing occupational groups, they don't ensure us any wage guarantee."


According to the unions, between 85 and 90 percent of staff at the company's warehouse have joined in the strike. Amazon disputed the claims, however, saying that the majority of employees were actually inside, processing orders.


Protests held at five locations across Britain were spearheaded by the GMB Union. Protesters put emphasis on the apparently poor safety record at the Amazon's warehouses, claiming that ambulances were called there a whopping 600 times. The UK protests were dubbed "Amazon, we're not robots."


"The conditions our members at Amazon are working under are frankly inhuman. They are breaking bones, being knocked unconscious and being taken away in ambulances," general secretary of the GMB union Tim Roache said in a statement. "Enough is enough. Time these workers were treated like humans, not robots."


In Germany, workers walked off the job at Amazon facilities in Rheinberg and Bad Hersfeld, led by the ver.di union, which higher pay and a collective bargaining agreement for the company's employees.
amazon strike
© Reuters / Andreas BuergerA placard calls on workers at an Amazon logistics center to go on strike in Bad Hersfeld.
"Employees currently have to fill up the shelves for the Christmas business as well as send thousands of Black Friday offers. This results in a lot of overtime, which is paid much worse than is the case with companies subject to collective bargaining," said Silke Zimmer, head of the ver.di regional trade department in North Rhine-Westphalia, as quoted by Deutsche Welle.

Amazon has faced numerous allegations of maintaining an awful working atmosphere at their facilities. Back in 2017, a journalist for the Daily Mirror went undercover at one of the company's warehouses, claiming that workers were treated like "animals" or "slaves," being forced to work long shifts until they literally collapsed.

It has also been alleged that the daily work targets at the company were so strict, the employees were forced to urinate in bottles as leaving the workplace even for a moment was a sure way to miss them. Others claimed that the company "arranged to have paramedics parked in ambulances outside" some of its warehouses in the summertime instead of installing proper air conditioning.

The company, however, has repeatedly denied the accusations, claiming that their warehouses were perfectly safe places to work.