The Manila Times

SKorea bus drivers stage strike

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Thousands of bus drivers in Seoul went on strike Thursday over a wage dispute, with 97 percent of bus routes in the South Korean capital affected, their union said, causing chaos for commuters during rush hour.

It was the first general strike by drivers since 2012 and came after negotiatio­ns on pay collapsed early Thursday, with the drivers requesting a 12.7-percent hourly wage increase.

Talks will resume later in the day, a union spokesman told Agence France-Presse (AFP), adding that “we cannot say at this point whether the strike will continue into tomorrow pending the outcome of the negotiatio­ns.”

The strike has left many bus stations empty as commuters flocked to the subway to get to work, with some caught off guard by the news.

“I wasn’t aware of the bus strike because I don’t follow the news closely,” Cho Min-sang told the Yonhap news agency. “I was puzzled because there were no bus schedules on the bus station screens.”

Yoo Jae-yeon, a 37-year-old artificial intelligen­ce industry researcher, told AFP she had switched to work from home Thursday after learning of the strike, but said she supported it.

“I am willing to take some inconvenie­nce that could incur from the labor-management negotiatio­ns,” she said.

To mitigate the fallout, the Seoul city government has extended subway operating hours to 2 a.m. and added more trains during peak commuting hours. It is also putting 480 nonunion buses on the road.

“We will deploy every transporta­tion means at our disposal to minimize the inconvenie­nce to the people,” said Yoon Jong-jang, deputy director of the transporta­tion office.

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