Low salaries, extremely poor working conditions, demotivated.
The protesting continues: more than 30 police officers spent the night in front of the Assembly of the Republic.
The protests, which have been joined by thousands of members of the police forces, have been taking place since Monday in various parts of the country. The professionals promise not to stop their demands until the government takes effective action.
is it legal in portugal?
That’s the most aggressive anti homeless installation I’ve seen so far. /s
But really, I hope they get better working conditions.
And what happens if these protests get out of hand? If the police are protesting, who is to keep them in line? (Not saying that will happen here… just theoretically speaking)
In Denmark, this news doesn’t even get a mention in the news.
PSP officers demand the risk allowance that the Polícia Judiciária have.
why they dont just go back to portugal
Vai dormir no martim moniz
Europe should help eachother by guiding failing policies in other countries towards solutions that work.
The culture and society of the different countries should be respected however which means a policy that works in iceland might not work in Turkey.
We need an international panel of experts in economic, scientific, psychological and societal fields to help governments make changes.
11 comments
https://sicnoticias.pt/pais/2024-01-12-Protesto-continua-mais-de-30-policias-passaram-a-noite-em-frente-a-Assembleia-da-Republica-56c0a460
Low salaries, extremely poor working conditions, demotivated.
The protesting continues: more than 30 police officers spent the night in front of the Assembly of the Republic.
The protests, which have been joined by thousands of members of the police forces, have been taking place since Monday in various parts of the country. The professionals promise not to stop their demands until the government takes effective action.
is it legal in portugal?
That’s the most aggressive anti homeless installation I’ve seen so far. /s
But really, I hope they get better working conditions.
And what happens if these protests get out of hand? If the police are protesting, who is to keep them in line? (Not saying that will happen here… just theoretically speaking)
In Denmark, this news doesn’t even get a mention in the news.
PSP officers demand the risk allowance that the Polícia Judiciária have.
why they dont just go back to portugal
Vai dormir no martim moniz
Europe should help eachother by guiding failing policies in other countries towards solutions that work.
The culture and society of the different countries should be respected however which means a policy that works in iceland might not work in Turkey.
We need an international panel of experts in economic, scientific, psychological and societal fields to help governments make changes.
Linda like the Avengers but in Politics 😘
Starting wage for a cop in Bulgarian is €800.
What about in the police station?