Kuwait Times

French rail strikes have cost 100m euros

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PARIS: France’s rail operator said yesterday that the rolling strikes against plans to overhaul the debt-laden company had already cost it around 100 million euros ($123 million) as the standoff between unions and the government drags on. Train drivers and other staff at the state-owned SNCF have vowed to continue walking off the job two days out of every five until at least June 28 unless the government backs down on its reforms.

The stoppages so far are costing around 20 million euros per strike day and the disruption often spills into non-strike days, SNCF chief Guillaume Pepy told BFM television yesterday, the fourth day of the strike. “From what I can see, France has not been paralyzed,” Pepy said, “but clients are being heavily penalized.”

Both sides are claiming broad public support. An Ifop poll published Sunday showed 62 percent in favor of the government’s reforms, compared with a slim majority of 51 percent in the same survey a week earlier.Yet unions point to the nearly 530,000 euros in donations raised as of Monday morning via a web-based fund for compensati­ng strikers’ lost wages. “Nobody wants a long, difficult conflict but for now, we’re up against a wall,” Philippe Martinez of the CGT union, the largest at the SNCF, told Europe 1 radio. “The government has forced us to take this type of action.”

Weeks of headaches

President Emmanuel Macron, who has barely spoken publicly on the standoff, is set to give an hour-long televised interview Thursday, nearly a year after sweeping away France’s traditiona­l parties with his election victory. The 40-year-old centrist, who is pushing reforms to swathes of the French economy, will also appear for a two-hour primetime interview on Sunday night, facing journalist­s from BFM and the hard-hitting investigat­ive news site Mediapart. Parliament was scheduled to begin debating the SNCF overhaul yesterday, though Macron has said he will implement the changes by decree another bone of contention for unions.

The government says it needs to move quickly ahead of the opening of French passenger rail traffic to competitio­n starting in 2020, part of an EU-wide opening of state rail markets. Unions are protesting a plan that would do away with the jobs-for-life and early retirement guarantees enjoyed by current rail employees. The SNCF would also be transforme­d into a private company whose shares are owned by the state-which unions see as a first step toward privatisat­ion, despite government denials. The standoff promises weeks of headaches for the network’s 4.5 million daily passengers-which has coincided with a series of strikes at Air Francy by workers seeking a six percent raise. The airline said Monday that one-quarter of flights would be cancelled on average today, with another day of strike set for tomorrow. Lasting consequenc­es

Just one in five high-speed TGV trains were running Monday, compared with one in seven or eight during last week’s strikes, and about 20 percent of the Eurostar trains in and out of London have been cancelled. Pepy noted “quite heavy participat­ion” for the strike on Monday, “though there are more trains than last time”. He also warned of lasting consequenc­es for the SNCF if the strike extends into the summer. “When our freight train clients see that the service isn’t reliable... they start using the roads, and it’s very difficult to get them to come back,” Pepy said. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe warned Sunday that the government would not be deterred from the main elements of its reforms. “I get messages from people who support the government, saying we need to carry this through all the way. And that’s what we are going to do,” Philippe told the Parisien newspaper.

 ??  ?? PARIS: SNCF railway workers hold CGT union flags and chant slogans as they demonstrat­e as part of their strike over plans to overhaul the national state-owned railway company SNCF, yesterday near the National Assembly in Paris. — AFP
PARIS: SNCF railway workers hold CGT union flags and chant slogans as they demonstrat­e as part of their strike over plans to overhaul the national state-owned railway company SNCF, yesterday near the National Assembly in Paris. — AFP

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