Monday, 9 November 2009

RMT pledges all out fight to stop plans to privatise Royal Fleet Auxiliary

MARTIME UNION RMT today pledged an all out fight to block plans to privatise the Royal Fleet Auxiliary – the navy's lifeline delivering fuel, food stores and ammunition – after it emerged today that pressure from Treasury officials had forced the Ministry of Defence to consider handing the RFA over to private companies, putting thousands of jobs at risk.

RMT warned that the flogging off of the RFA to private companies would threaten the reliability and security of this vital lifeline to our naval vessels around the world as the drive for profits and cuts would override the quality of service. The MoD would also lose direct control of the most essential element of the Royal Navy's support structure.

RMT has also pointed out that a review of the of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary just two years ago concluded that the service was first rate and that there was no need to review it again until 2020.

Under the MoD proposals today a new review, expected to recommend privatisation, will be cobbled together in just two or three months in time for the pre-Budget report.

Bob Crow, RMT General Secretary, said today:

"It is a national disgrace that top of the list for Government public spending cuts and privatisation is the Royal Fleet Auxiliary – the essential lifeline to Royal Navy vessels on active service all around the globe.

"RMT will mobilise to fight this plan which would amount to an act of short-term suicide that would rob the navy of over a hundred years of experience in the dash for public spending cuts and private profits. RMT is seeking an urgent meeting with Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth to prevent this act of vandalism from reaching the pre-Budget report."

Steve Todd, RMT National Maritime Secretary, said:

"Thousands of skilled merchant seafarers, serving the Royal Navy in war zones around the world and here at home, face the prospect of being slung on the scrap heap. That is a disgraceful kick in the teeth to brave seafarers who have played a vital role in conflict after conflict with many paying the ultimate price with their lives."

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