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As the strike continues, Chilean authorities are preparing to remove workers from Mantoverde.

The Chilean Court authorized the use of force on Friday to remove striking workers from a desalination facility serving Capstone Copper’s Mantoverde Copper and Gold Mine. This escalating labor dispute came hours after workers voted to reject?the latest contract offer by the company.

The employees at Mantoverde have rejected the revised proposal that was presented by the company. It included final payments of about $17.400 per member, and a wage adjustment of 1%. This means their strike, which began at the start this month, will continue.

According to the union, despite only?14% eligible employees voting against the offer, the majority rejected it. The group claimed that the terms of the offer were worse than a previous proposal, and called it an "anti-union maneuver".

The statement also stated that workers received an annual bonus which would have helped sustain a "prolonged walkout", bringing the total payment to about 2.2 times the monthly wage per worker.

The main focus of the legal battle has been Mantoverde’s desalination station on the coast (about 40 km away from the mine), which provides water for the operation.

Capstone said on January 18 that individuals broke into the desalination plant while workers were present, and interfered with the electrical system of the plant. This led to an interruption in the water supply for Mantoverde.

The company said that striking union members prevented access to the plant. It also said that those who occupied?the facility are a small group of employees, and not supported by the union.

Capstone has warned that the water interruption forced it to rely upon on-site reserves and temporarily stop parts of operations, such as sulphide treatment, with further stops possible if?water cannot be restored.

According to the union, the Chilean labor authority is preparing a case against the firm for alleged anti-union practices, such as illegal replacement of strikers. The union representatives also met the outgoing president Gabriel Boric, asking for his assistance in restarting negotiations. (Reporting and writing by Fabian Cambero, Kylie Madry, Cassandra Garrison, Sarah Morland).

(source: Reuters)