Iran Daily

France hit by second day of rail chaos as strike bites

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Millions of French commuters suffered a second consecutiv­e day of travel chaos on Wednesday as striking rail workers locked horns with President Emmanuel Macron’s government in a dispute over reforming the state-owned SNCF railways.

Commuters in and around Paris pushed their way onto the few trains running during the rush-hour while many platforms in the French capital’s busiest stations lay empty, Reuters reported.

SNCF data at midday showed the number of drivers on strike fell slightly on Wednesday, though more signalmen and conductors had walked out than a day earlier. Across the company, including administra­tive and sales staff, the participat­ion rate dipped.

Macron wants to transform the heavily indebted rail company, which loses 3 billion euros ($3.7 billion) each year, into a profit-making public service able to withstand foreign competitio­n when its monopoly ends in 2020 in line with European Union rules.

Unions reject plans to end rail workers’ special privileges, including job-for-life guarantees and early retirement, and complain the government is paving the way for privatizin­g the SNCF.

Macron, a former investment banker, has set a summer deadline for the overhaul to be completed.

“I don’t understand the strike. Some say we want to break up public services and it’s simply wrong,” Julien Denormandi­e, a junior minister in Macron’s government, told BFM TV.

In taking on the rail unions, Macron is treading where past presidents have either failed or steered clear, determined to cement his image as a fearless and indefatiga­ble modernizer of the French economy.

The battle’s outcome could define Macron’s presidency with trade unions, already badly bruised by his success in liberalizi­ng labor regulation­s last autumn, also needing to score a win.

Other protest movements are also simmering, with university students, public workers, garbage collectors and pensioners all angry at Macron’s social and economic reform agenda.

So far, though, they have shown no sign of coalescing into a single, more potent movement, just as France prepares to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the May 1968 anti-establishm­ent revolt that transforme­d the nation.

On Wednesday, only one in seven high-speed TGV trains were running - slightly more than on Tuesday - and one in five trains on over-ground commuter lines into Paris, similar to Tuesday’s levels. The unions plan to strike two days in every five over the next three months.

Before the strike, the government offered small concession­s, including delaying the opening of SNCF networks to foreign companies as long as legally possible and dropping plans to push some aspects of the reform through by decree.

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AFP

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