Bangkok Post

Macron’s plans incite rail chaos

-

PARIS: Millions of French commuters and holidaymak­ers faced another wave of crippling transport stoppages yesterday, as rail workers protested at President Emmanuel Macron’s economic reform plans and some unions warned they could step up strike action.

Train staff last week kicked off three months of nationwide rolling strikes in a dispute over the government’s planned overhaul of state-run rail firm SNCF, in the biggest challenge yet to Mr Macron’s attempts to modernise the French economy.

Just over a third of workers needed to make the train network run smoothly were expected to walk out yesterday, a dip in participat­ion compared to the last 48 hours of walkouts on Tuesday and Wednesday, the SNCF said.

But some labour unions have already signalled a hardening stance as negotiatio­ns with ministers over the reforms hit a wall. Officials at the Communist-rooted CGT said on Friday strikes could drag on well beyond June if nothing shifted.

Laurent Brun, head of the CGT’s railway section, added workers were ready for a “marathon” if needed.

Unions have so far called strikes for two days out of every five until the end of June, to fight a shake-up of monopoly SNCF before it is opened to competitio­n in line with European Union rules.

That includes ending job-for-life guarantees and early retirement for rail workers, which the government argues will help transform the heavily indebted company into a profitable public service.

Workers have hit back with complaints the SNCF was being dismantled to pave the way for a privatisat­ion.

The showdown between Mr Macron and the rail unions is one of the toughest tests yet of the former investment banker’s presidency.

The 40-year-old came to power last May on a promise to shake up Europe’s secondbigg­est economy, in a bid to modernise some of France’s creaking institutio­ns and spur jobs growth, and Mr Macron has so far liberalise­d labour regulation­s for instance.

But locking horns with the rail sector has backfired on previous French government­s — paralysing train strikes in 1995 forced prime minister Alain Juppe to pull planned reforms — and unions are seeking to show they still have clout.

Some insisted they did not want a drawnout conflict but called on Mr Macron’s government to compromise.

“The ball is in the government’s court,” Laurent Berger, head of the CFDT union, told Europe 1 radio on Saturday. The CFDT is also joining the latest stoppages.

The government has so far said it will stand firm on the main points of the reform.

“The status quo is not viable,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said in an interview published in Le Parisien newspaper yesterday. “It’s urgent, we need to advance, and everyone should know we are determined to see this through to the end.”

The SNCF reform has broadly drawn public support so far. Nearly two-thirds of people were in favour of the government facing down the strikes, while 56% thought the train stoppages were unjustifie­d, according to an Ifop poll published yesterday in the Journal du Dimanche.

Yet discontent is also brewing in other sectors.

Students have disrupted several universiti­es across France in protest at a planned new selection system in higher education. Garbage collectors and other public workers have also held demonstrat­ions.

Though nowhere near as potent, the various protests come as France prepares to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the studentled riots of May 1968, which gridlocked the country and led to the adoption of more progressiv­e social policies.

Disruption­s yesterday were set to hit local trains as well as regional highspeed trains and some internatio­nal journeys.

 ?? AFP ?? People wait for the departure of their train at the Saint-Charles station in Marseille on the day of the resumption of the strike by employees of the SNCF.
AFP People wait for the departure of their train at the Saint-Charles station in Marseille on the day of the resumption of the strike by employees of the SNCF.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand