Employees of the Belarusian sanatorium: we do not rule out the possibility of concentrations Business



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As reported by the sanatorium on Saturday, parliamentarians are being asked to reconsider the sanctions applied in the EU, to assess the details of the sanatorium’s work, the nature of the work, the sources of funding and to resolve the situation by “non-drastic means” .

“Otherwise, almost 400 people of working age will find themselves on the streets without social guarantees and future prospects,” the sanatorium said.

We are in complete uncertainty: can we save our jobs? he asked in the staff report.

You are also being asked to make sure workers are paid for downtime during a pandemic.

“We are in complete uncertainty, can we save my job? Why will we pay taxes tomorrow and feed our children if we are expelled to the streets after the Seimas approves the amendments to the law? Those two promised solutions do not fundamentally solve the situation What will we do after those two months? Will we be unemployed? “The report asks.

They stressed that it is impossible for so many people to find work at Druskininkai.

According to the medical institution, the EU sanctions are improperly imposed on him because he belongs to the Central Economic Council of the Presidential Administration of Belarus.

“It just came to our attention then. The sanatorium is owned by the Belarusian state and children and adolescents with severe disabilities come to it for treatment and rehabilitation, accompanied by their parents,” the report says.

We do not rule out the possibility of concentrations, because we no longer have anything to lose, says the sanatorium.

According to the sanatorium, it employs 393 people, 350 of whom are Lithuanian citizens, and is one of the largest contributors to Druskininkai.

“We are open and we want to preserve our jobs and start a dialogue with the government of the country, but if we do not do so, we do not rule out the possibility of concentrations, because we have nothing to lose,” says the sanatorium.

The Seimas is considering amendments that would allow the payment of special benefits to employees of the Druskininkai “Belorus” sanatorium affected by the European Union sanctions.

Sanatorium staff were left without income when the institution’s accounts were frozen after the imposition of sanctions by the European Union on the Main Economic Council of the President of Belarus.

Lithuania has applied an exception to the salaries of sanitarium employees, the majority of whom are Lithuanian. As a result of the sanctions applied, almost 400 employees of the sanatorium were waiting for December.

The case of the Belarusian sanatorium is the first in the history of Lithuania, when international sanctions are applied to a company operating in the country.



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