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Shutdown forces some overseas US military bases to stop paying workers

Local staff in Italy and Portugal have been without pay, while governments in some other countries are footing the bill for now

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A US Air Force C-5 Galaxy takes off from the joint-use Spanish and US base in Moron, southern Spain, in September 2001. Photo: AP
Associated Press

The longest US government shutdown on record is doing more than grind activities to a halt at home; an ocean away in Europe, local workers at US military bases have started to feel the pain.

Thousands of people working at overseas bases in Europe have had their salaries interrupted since the shutdown began almost six weeks ago.

In some cases, governments hosting the US bases have stepped in to foot the bill, expecting the United States to eventually make good. In others, including in Italy and Portugal, workers have simply kept working unpaid as the gridlock in Washington drags on.

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“It’s an absurd situation because nobody has responses, nobody feels responsible,” said Angelo Zaccaria, a union coordinator at the Aviano Air Base in northeastern Italy.

“This is having dramatic effects on us Italian workers,” he said.

US Air Force transport aircraft are seen on the tarmac at the Ramstein US airbase in Landstuhl, Germany, in June. Photo: dpa via AP
US Air Force transport aircraft are seen on the tarmac at the Ramstein US airbase in Landstuhl, Germany, in June. Photo: dpa via AP

The jobs foreign nationals do at US bases around the world range from food service, construction, logistics and maintenance to other, more specialised roles.

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