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Article

13 Jun 2025

Author:
Richa Naidu, Loucoumane Coulibaly, Reuters

Côte d'Ivoire: Unilever faces worker protests over fear of layoffs and severance rights amid sale of local unit, incl. co. comment

Allegations

" Ivory Coast workers say Unilever is violating their union rights amid share sale, documents show~" 13 June 2025

Unilever workers in Ivory Coast say the global consumer goods giant is violating their collective bargaining agreement in refusing to ensure severance pay if layoffs take place after the company sells its business there, documents show.British-based Unilever is selling all of its shares in its struggling Ivory Coast unit, which employs some 160 people, to a local consortium of investors led by wholesale distributor Société de Distribution de Toutes Marchandises Côte d’Ivoire (SDTM). [...]

Workers began staging protests at Unilever offices in Abidjan on April 25, fearing the unit's falling turnover in recent years and the loss of the international brand business will trigger layoffs after the sale, which is expected to close by June 20. Their collective bargaining agreement with Unilever, seen by Reuters, states that in the event of layoffs associated with disposing of its Ivory Coast business, Unilever will give employees severance pay equal to "one month of average gross salary per year of seniority, with a maximum of 18 months." [...] Unilever confirmed it was selling the Ivory Coast unit but said in a statement to Reuters: "the proposed transaction is by way of a sale of shares, which does not result in the termination of employees' contracts."