Unions in Italy worried about local job cuts under Doge at US military bases

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FILE PHOTO: A U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon from Aviano Air Base, Italy, deploys to Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, in this U.S. Air Force handout picture August 9, 2015./File Photo

Local staff at all four US bases in Italy have received emails from Trump ally Elon Musk's Doge cost-cutting department.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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ROME - Italian unions are mobilising against possible job cuts for local staff at US military bases as part of

government downsizing plans

spearheaded by President Donald Trump and his billionaire tech mogul ally Elon Musk.

Nato-member Italy hosts four military bases on its territory, employing more than 4,000 Italian civilian personnel such as cooks, waiters, shop clerks and also engineers, architects and mechanics.

"If we don't get plausible and clear answers, it's clear that there will be protests and sooner or later also a strike," Uiltucs trade unionist Angelo Zaccaria said.

Mr Zaccaria, who represents staff at the Aviano air base in north-east Italy, said the site already experienced cuts for local staff before Mr Trump took office in January, with 44 redundancies announced in September.

After negotiations, they were reduced to 30, he said.

Italian staff at all four US bases have received - some directly, some forwarded by superiors - an email in which Mr Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) asks federal workers to provide

a list of their accomplishments

for the week.

Italian employees also had their work credit cards frozen for a month, starting from March 2, and were informed of a hiring freeze, meaning that any of their colleagues who retire would not be replaced.

"Workers are worried," Mr Roberto Del Savio, a representative of another trade union, Fisascat-Cisl, at the Aviano base, said, adding that "so far, I have not seen any written document" pointing to US disengagement from the site.

"There are elements that make us wonder," he added, referring to the Doge emails and the credit card and hiring freezes. REUTERS

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