The Phnom Penh Post

Huge French rail strike begins

- Craig Timberg, Thomas Heath and Tony Romm

COMMUTERS across France faced severe disruption­s on Tuesday as rail workers launched three months of rolling strikes, a major test of President Emmanuel Macron’s resolve to reshape the country through sweeping reforms.

More than three-quarters of train drivers joined the first day of the walkout, according to the SNCF, the heavily indebted state rail operator which Macron wants to overhaul. But overall only a third of staff were on strike, the company said.

Only one in eight highspeed TGV trains and a fifth of regional trains were running on what French media have dubbed “black Tuesday”.

And with stoppages planned two days out of five until June 28, weeks of disruption lie ahead for France’s 4.5 million daily train passengers.

“We have been asking for the same thing for several weeks – that the government completely reconsider its plan. They need to start again from scratch,” Philippe Martinez, head of the CGT trade union, told France Inter radio.

Staff at Air France, garbage collectors and some energy workers were also staging separate walkouts on Tuesday in a growing atmosphere of social strife 11 months after 40-yearold Macron came to power.

Public support for the rail strike stands at just below half, according to an Ifop poll, and commuters expressed a mixture of sympathy and frustratio­n with the reduced service.

“I start work at 1pm. Do you know what time I had to get up? Five am,” complained Jean Nahavua, a manager at a wholesale company who lives in Lille and commutes to Paris. “Three months like this, it’s going to be complicate­d.”

Pascal Lasnier, a banker waiting at the same station, added: “I understand that they want to defend their piece of the pie, but maybe there are other ways of doing it.”

As commuters took to the roads instead, the streets of Paris were snarled with an “exceptiona­l” 370 kilometres of traffic jams during morning rush hour before easing, according to traffic website Sytadin.

At the capital’s busy Gare du Lyon station, the platforms were so crammed that a woman fell onto the tracks and had to be helped out.

But regional stations including Nice, Lille and Marseille were virtually deserted as travellers anticipate­d cancellati­ons.

Three-quarters of Eurostar trains to London and Brussels were running on Tuesday and Thalys trains towards Belgium and the Netherland­s were op- erating almost normally, but there were none at all to Spain, Italy or Switzerlan­d.

At Air France, where staff are striking for the fourth time in a month to demand a pay rise, managers said 75 percent of flights would operate. Further walkouts are planned at the airline for April 7, 10 and 11.

Thanks to the internet and mobile apps – technology unavailabl­e the last time France saw rolling rail strikes on a comparable scale in 1995 – many commuters were able to work from home on Monday or arrange car-pools.

There was no respite expected before the second day of walkouts on Wednesday, and the economy is set to take a hit as the strike rumbles on.

Alain Krakovitch, chief of the SNCF’s Transilien network, estimated the cost of the strike at “between € 10 million and € 20 million a day”.

Macron says the SNCF, saddled with € 46.6 billion of debt, needs to drasticall­y improve its efficiency and cut running costs as EU countries prepare to open passenger rail to competitio­n by 2020.

His government is planning to stop granting the rail workers’ special status – which guarantees jobs for life and early retirement – to new SNCF hires entering the company.

It also wants to combine the three bodies that make up the SNCF into a single stateowned company, prompting fears among unions that it could be a step towards privatisin­g the rail operator.

“The SNCF is a public enterprise and will stay a public enterprise,” Transport Minister Elisabeth Borne insisted on Tuesday, stressing that the government is talking to unions.

The stakes are high for both sides in the standoff.

The rail strikes are being seen as the biggest challenge yet to Macron’s sweeping plans to liberalise the French economy and make it more competitiv­e, earning comparison­s to Margaret Thatcher’s 1984 showdown with Britain’s coal miners.

For France’s once fearsome unions, it is a major test of how much influence they still hold.

“The question is whether people will support a strike movement that will block the country for weeks,” political analyst Stephane Rozes told the 20 Minutes newspaper. “That’s what could allow the strikers to hang on and make the government back down.”

 ?? BERTRAND GUAY/AFP ?? A commuter stands in front of platforms at the Saint-Lazare train station in Paris on April 3.
BERTRAND GUAY/AFP A commuter stands in front of platforms at the Saint-Lazare train station in Paris on April 3.

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