Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

South Korean truckers end 8-day strike

- HYUNG-JIN KIM

SEOUL, South Korea — Truckers in South Korea ended an eight-day strike that disrupted domestic production and cargo transport, their union and the government announced after negotiatio­ns Tuesday.

Thousands of truckers joined the nationwide strike, calling for an extension of temporary guarantees of minimum wages amid soaring fuel prices. The strike triggered delays in the shipment and delivery of steel, cement, petrochemi­cals, tires and other items, with some factories forced to halt production.

The strike’s damage has been largely limited to domestic industries, though experts say a prolonged strike could have undermined global supply chains already hit by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and China’s covid-19 restrictio­ns. There have been no reports of substantia­l disruption­s of key South Korean export items such as semiconduc­tors and automobile­s, Industry Ministry officials said.

During their fifth round of negotiatio­ns on Tuesday night, representa­tives of the truckers and Transport Ministry officials reached a deal on ending the strike, the Cargo Truckers Solidarity and the ministry announced in separate statements.

They said the ministry agreed to seek to extend the current rules on minimum wage guarantees and consider increasing fuel subsidies for truckers. The union said drivers will immediatel­y return to work.

“It’s fortunate that the Cargo Truckers Solidarity withdraw its collective refusal of (cargo) transport and decided to return to work now,” the Transport Ministry statement said.

The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy said Monday that the first six days of the strike had caused an estimated $1.2 billion in damages.

Earlier Tuesday, about 6,800 truckers rallied at various sites across South Korea on their eighth day of the strike, according to the Transport Ministry. It said some steel and cement factories had halted operations and some striking truckers obstructed cargo transport at some major southeaste­rn ports.

During a Cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, the country’s No. 2 official, called the reported transport obstructio­ns “illicit activities” that would never receive public support, according to Cho Yongman, a government spokespers­on.

Cho cited Han as saying that the transport disruption­s could pose “a big irrecovera­ble blow” to South Korea’s economy, which already faces other difficulti­es.

Police said Monday that they had detained 44 striking truckers but released most of them except for two who were formally arrested. Two additional truckers were detained Tuesday, the Transport Ministry said.

 ?? (AP/Kim Dong-ju) ?? Members of the Cargo Truckers Solidarity of the Korean Confederat­ion of Trade Unions gather in front of a shipping port in Gwangyang, South Korea, on Tuesday. A weeklong strike by thousands of truckers in South Korea has triggered major disruption­s in cargo transport and production.
(AP/Kim Dong-ju) Members of the Cargo Truckers Solidarity of the Korean Confederat­ion of Trade Unions gather in front of a shipping port in Gwangyang, South Korea, on Tuesday. A weeklong strike by thousands of truckers in South Korea has triggered major disruption­s in cargo transport and production.

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