On 15 March, Wildberries employees went on strike in Russia. The employees demanded a revision of the system of fines, procedures for returning defective goods, and overtime accounting. Wildberries initially denied the strike, but later decided to meet some of the protesters’ demands: the latest fines were cancelled and the system of wage deductions was frozen.
The scandal even reached the Russian State Duma (lower house), where a trilateral meeting was held on 17 March: it was attended by representatives of the company, MPs and private entrepreneurs — partners who own order pickup offices and participants of the Wildberries franchise. Meanwhile, members of the employee initiative group were not allowed at the meeting. Due to this, the trade union Employees’ Truth believes that concessions were made only to return the employees to their places of work. The union now intends to use new pressure methods on the company.
But even this result was one of the few successes of the trade union movement in Russia. The overwhelming majority of collective professional solidarity practices in the country are unpromising and dangerous. It would suffice to recall the persecution of the Courier trade union member Kirill Ukraintsev, who was sentenced to a real prison term for “violating public assembly rules”.
We could also mention the fate of Anton Orlov, coordinator of the Action medical union, who was sentenced to 6 years and 3 months in prison on what seems to be a trumped-up case of large-scale fraud.