Workers at General Motors Europe’s Ellesmere Port Vauxhall Astra plant in Britain have returned to work on Friday, ending a wildcat strike over plans by the company to cut nearly 1,000 jobs at the factory, a union told Reuters.


A Transport & General Workers Union (T&G) spokesman told the news agency operations at the plant resumed on Friday after the morning shift returned to work.


Workers at the plant, in northwest England, staged a spontaneous walkout on Thursday which halted production, in protest at comments made by a senior GM executive in Germany.


Staff on the night shift also did not show up for work, unions reportedly said.


Reuters said more talks over plans to streamline production of the Opel/Vauxhall Astra model between GM Europe and labour unions were scheduled for Monday but unions said they were not optimistic about preventing more UK car manufacturing job losses.

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The strike was in response to comments by GM Europe President Car-Peter Forster on Wednesday that the company had proposed cutting jobs at the plant and that proposals by unions to spread production cuts over other GM plants in Europe were “not super-attractive”, the report noted.