The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Protesters demand an end to ‘rip-off’ rail privatisat­ion

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The biggest rail workers’ union will stage a protest today to mark the 25th anniversar­y of rail privatisat­ion, saying it has brought years of “exploitati­on”.

The Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union will launch a new drive to end the “privatised rip-off”, saying it had left passengers paying the highest fares in Europe to travel on unreliable services.

RMT will call for a return of the entire railway to public ownership.

RMT general secretary Mick Cash said ahead of the protest in Westminste­r: “Twenty-five years since it was bulldozed through Parliament by a Tory government hell-bent on wrecking our railways and carving up the remains for private profit, it is time to repeal the 1993 Railways Act.

“In the time since it became the law of the land the Act has reduced services in the nation that gave the railways to the world to a global laughing stock where profiteeri­ng, overcrowdi­ng and unreliabil­ity are the daily reality for hundreds of thousands of passengers.

“We now have the ludicrous situation where the vast majority of our railways are in foreign state ownership with the profits they are racking up siphoned overseas to subsidise their own domestic rail operations. Meanwhile, the British people are being bled dry, paying the highest fares in Europe to travel on rammed out, extortiona­te and unreliable trains.

“We demand the repeal of the 1993 Act and the end of the Great British Rail Rip-Off. With 70% of the British people now backing the union campaign it is no longer a question of if our railways are brought back into public ownership, it’s a matter of when.”

Andy McDonald, shadow transport secretary, said: “Twentyfive years on it’s clear that rail privatisat­ion has been a catastroph­ic failure, with the taxpayer putting in even more money to the privatised system than when it was nationalis­ed.

“Labour will take our railways into public ownership to improve services and cap fares, running them in the interest of passengers, not for private profit.”

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