Union workers and BGF Logis executives finalize tentative agreement amid logistics trucks and protest remnants after Jinju rally fatality.
Union workers and BGF Logis executives finalize tentative agreement amid logistics trucks and protest remnants after Jinju rally fatality.
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Tentative agreement reached with BGF Logis after Jinju rally truck fatality

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Unionized cargo workers announced a tentative agreement with BGF Logis, CU convenience store chain's logistics affiliate, following the fatal truck collision at a Jinju rally earlier this month that killed one union member and injured two. Blockades at major logistics centers will end after formal signing.

The Korean Public Service and Transport Workers' Union revealed on Wednesday that it secured a tentative deal with BGF Logis in an early morning meeting. A formal signing is set for 11 a.m., after which blockades—initiated earlier this month amid the ongoing dispute—will be lifted.

The agreement addresses union demands for direct negotiations with cargo truck drivers (not directly employed by BGF), spurred by the 'yellow envelope act' increasing prime contractor accountability. Key asks included more days off, higher freight rates, and no damage claims against strikers.

This follows the April 20 incident at the Jinju CU logistics center (see prior coverage in this series), where a 2.5-ton truck struck rallygoers blocking its exit, killing a union member in his 50s and injuring two. Police referred the non-union driver to prosecutors on murder charges (up from initial injury charges) and two union members for assaulting an officer during a related van ramming.

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X discussions reflect relief over the tentative agreement between 화물연대 and BGF Logis ending blockades after the Jinju fatality, with progressive voices welcoming it and urging fulfillment. Franchise owners and critics decry union disruptions causing losses and demand compensation. Outrage persists over the worker's death blamed on company refusals and police. Skepticism targets labor laws enabling risky protests.

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Dramatic illustration of chaos after a delivery truck strikes protesters at a Jinju labor rally, with injured on the ground and police responding.
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Police seek arrest warrant for truck driver in Jinju rally fatality

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Police filed for an arrest warrant Wednesday against the driver of a truck that struck rallygoers in Jinju on Monday, killing one and injuring two. The non-union driver in his 40s faces a murder charge for reckless actions amid claims that protesters blocked the vehicle. The union has accused police and CU operator BGF Retail of facilitating the incident.

A cargo truck collided with rally participants in the southern South Korean city of Jinju on Monday, killing one person and injuring two others, officials said. The 2.5-ton vehicle struck the group near a logistics center at 10:32 a.m. as people tried to stop it from leaving, according to police.

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Autoconvoked grain truckers have parked their trucks along roadsides in several Argentine provinces, halting the harvest flow to ports like Quequén and Bahía Blanca. Triggered by gasoil price hikes, the protest has caused estimated losses of US$ 100 million over four days. Agroindustry groups urge an urgent resolution.

The Golkar Party faction in Indonesia's parliament received input from logistics driver groups on the Over Dimension Over Loading policy during a meeting in Jakarta.

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Trade union Verdi and the Municipal Employers' Association (KAV) have reached a tariff agreement for 2,800 employees in public transport in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The fifth round of negotiations concluded with this deal. It includes reduced weekly hours and pay rises until 2029.

Unionized workers at Samsung Biologics launched a five-day general strike on Friday over pay disputes. This marks the biotech firm's first labor strike since its 2011 founding. The company is deploying personnel to minimize disruptions but reports some production halts.

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President Lee Jae Myung met Friday with Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) President Yang Kyung-soo and other leaders at Cheong Wa Dae to exchange views on protecting workers' rights. Lee highlighted pitfalls in a law requiring employers to convert non-regular workers to permanent status after two years. Yang gave a positive assessment of some administration labor policies while demanding a sharp minimum wage increase.

 

 

 

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