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Thyssenkrupp steel workers protest merger plans

DUISBURG, Germany, Aug 31 (Reuters) - Several thousand steel workers at Thyssenkrupp (LSE: 0O1C.L - news) on Wednesday protested management's plans for a merger of its European steel business with that of Tata Steel (BSE: TATASTEEL.BO - news) as well as possible site closures.

Carrying banners saying "Stop steel exit" and "Steel is the future" in a rally organised by powerful labour union IG Metall, they marched to the headquarters of Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe in the industrial city of Duisburg, where the steel business's supervisory board is due to meet on Wednesday.

Steel-to-elevators group Thyssenkrupp is in talks with India's Tata Steel to merge their European steel operations, but a senior labour official at Thyssen said this month that any plan to close some plants could go ahead irrespective of whether there is a merger deal.

Thyssenkrupp has its 19th century roots in steelmaking but the sector is now being hit by lacklustre demand and cheap imports into Europe. Labour representatives fear the group wants to exit the sector at any cost, under pressure from activist investor Cevian, which owns 15 percent of the group.

"The workers want clarity on what is going on. They are worried," Steel Europe's works council chief Guenter Back told Reuters on Wednesday. (Reporting by Tom Kaeckenhoff; Writing by Maria Sheahan, editing by Louise Heavens)