>In 2011, Stefan Popescu came from Romania to Belgium for a job as a truck driver at the Limburg transport company Essers. He would earn considerably more than in his home country. Little did he know that he wasn’t even earning the Belgian minimum wage, let alone that he was largely paid under the table.
After a legal battle lasting no less than eleven years, the country’s highest court has ruled in favor of truck driver Stefan Popescu once and for all. Transport company Essers was found guilty of social exploitation. ‘They tried everything to break me.’
‘I am nobody. I am a Romanian license plate that you can trample on. If I lay out my case, a child can see who is at fault. Yet it took eleven years. The difference between people like me and a multinational is enormous. I have no capital like Essers and had to work hard to keep going. I have seen how Essers’ lawyers behave like hyenas. But now I am glad that I persevered, thanks to the help of my lawyers and ACV-Transcom, and thanks to God. That makes this victory a miracle.’
Allsulfur on
I always wonder in such large organizations, if they pay employees under the table. Where is this money coming from? Is it from old local contacts of someone high up or do other large companies still have old ‘zwart geld’ to pay to other large companies.
karma100k on
Many Belgian companies are still run by people with a colonial and extractive mindset and the judicial system protects them.
‘Het ging mij nooit om het geld. De kosten die Essers aan advocaten en juridische bijstand betaald heeft, zijn een veelvoud van wat ze mij verschuldigd zijn. Weet je wat mijn frustratie is? De uitkomst van deze rechtszaak is dat Essers mijn achterstallig loon moet betalen. Maar daarnaast zijn er geen juridische gevolgen voor hen. Zo kunnen ze ongestraft doorgaan.’
4 commenti
>In 2011, Stefan Popescu came from Romania to Belgium for a job as a truck driver at the Limburg transport company Essers. He would earn considerably more than in his home country. Little did he know that he wasn’t even earning the Belgian minimum wage, let alone that he was largely paid under the table.
After a legal battle lasting no less than eleven years, the country’s highest court has ruled in favor of truck driver Stefan Popescu once and for all. Transport company Essers was found guilty of social exploitation. ‘They tried everything to break me.’
‘I am nobody. I am a Romanian license plate that you can trample on. If I lay out my case, a child can see who is at fault. Yet it took eleven years. The difference between people like me and a multinational is enormous. I have no capital like Essers and had to work hard to keep going. I have seen how Essers’ lawyers behave like hyenas. But now I am glad that I persevered, thanks to the help of my lawyers and ACV-Transcom, and thanks to God. That makes this victory a miracle.’
I always wonder in such large organizations, if they pay employees under the table. Where is this money coming from? Is it from old local contacts of someone high up or do other large companies still have old ‘zwart geld’ to pay to other large companies.
Many Belgian companies are still run by people with a colonial and extractive mindset and the judicial system protects them.
‘Het ging mij nooit om het geld. De kosten die Essers aan advocaten en juridische bijstand betaald heeft, zijn een veelvoud van wat ze mij verschuldigd zijn. Weet je wat mijn frustratie is? De uitkomst van deze rechtszaak is dat Essers mijn achterstallig loon moet betalen. Maar daarnaast zijn er geen juridische gevolgen voor hen. Zo kunnen ze ongestraft doorgaan.’
There is power in a union.