Cape Argus

Half a million go on strike in the UK

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UP TO half a million British teachers, civil servants, and train drivers walked out over pay in the largest co-ordinated strike action for a decade yesterday, with unions threatenin­g more disruption as the government digs in its heels over pay demands.

The mass walkouts across the country shut schools, halted most rail services, and forced the military to be put on standby to help with border checks on a day dubbed “Walkout Wednesday”.

According to unions, as many as 300 000 teachers took part, the biggest group involved, as part of wider action by 500 000 people, the highest number since 2011, when civil servants walked out en masse.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak condemned the strikes which forced millions of children to miss school.

“I am clear that our children’s education is precious and they deserve to be in school today being taught,” he said.

His government has taken a hard line against the unions, arguing that giving in to demands for large wage hikes would fuel Britain’s inflation.

Tens of thousands of education workers marched through central London with placards which read “Children Deserve better” and “Save our Schools, Pay Up”.

Taking part in the march, primary school teacher Hannah Rice, 32, said she hoped the scale of the action would send the government a strong message. “This government should be ashamed of the way they are managing things,” she said. “It’s clear people are unhappy, it’s clear there needs to be a change.”

The PCS Union, representi­ng about 100 000 striking civil servants from over 120 government department­s, warned of further co-ordinated strikes.

“If the government doesn’t do something about it, I think we will see more days like today with more and more unions joining in,” PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said.

With inflation at more than 10% – the highest level in four decades – Britain has seen a wave of strikes across the public and private sectors, including health and transport workers, Amazon warehouse employees and Royal Mail postal staff.

Next week, nurses, ambulance staff, paramedics, emergency call handlers and other health-care workers are set to stage more walkouts, while firefighte­rs this week also backed a nationwide strike. The strikers are demanding above-inflation pay rises to cover rocketing food and energy bills they say have left them struggling.

So far the economy has not taken a major hit from the industrial action, with the cost of strikes in the eight months to January estimated by the Centre for Economics and Business Research at about £1.7 billion (about R36bn), or 0.1% of expected GDP.

It put the estimated impact of the teachers’ strikes at about £20 million a day. But the strikes may be having a political impact on Sunak’s government. His Conservati­ve Party has been trailing the opposition Labour Party by as much as 25 percentage points in polls and surveys indicate the public think the government has handled the strikes badly.

Mary Bousted, general secretary of National Education Union, said that teachers in her union felt they had no choice but to strike.

 ?? Reuters | ?? WORKERS protest in London, yesterday, in Britain’s largest strike action in a decade.
Reuters | WORKERS protest in London, yesterday, in Britain’s largest strike action in a decade.

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