Europe’s Christmas of Chaos
PARIS/LONDON (AFP) – Some 200,000 holidaymakers in France were scrambling Wednesday for alternatives to their cancelled trains as a rail strike caused mayhem in the run-up to Christmas.
National rail operator SNCF cut one third of scheduled trains for the Christmas weekend at a time when millions of French people traditionally travel for family gatherings.
The worst affected services were high-speed TGV lines, the mainstay of long-distance rail travel in France, SNCF said.
According to the SNCF website, half or more of scheduled trains were cancelled for the weekend on key itineraries such as Paris to Rennes, western France, or Paris to Bordeaux, in the southwest.
The rail operator promised re-bookings free of charge, including for more expensive seats, but most TGVs were already fully booked on Wednesday.
It also offered to pay out twice the original ticket price to people unable to rebook, but travelers queuing at railway stations said that was not much of a consolation for a ruined holiday.
“I understand their demands but do they have to go on strike during the festivities?” said Isabelle Barrier, holder of a ticket from Paris to Toulouse, in France’s southwest, standing in line for a refund after her train got cancelled.
“It’s hard on children and families,” she said, adding that she would now travel a day early by coach, a trip of eight hours. “It’s quite annoying,” she said.
SNCF’s travel division boss Christophe Fanichet earlier Wednesday called the strike action by travel inspectors -- launched without union backing -- “scandalous” and “unacceptable”.
“You don’t strike at Christmas,” agreed government spokesman Olivier Veran.
Demand for air tickets has surged four-fold since the strike was announced, according to travel site Liligo.
Carshare platforms and car rental companies also reported a sharp increase in bookings.
Mathilde, a 38-year old Parisian whose train to Bordeaux was cancelled, said she was tempted to get on another train even without a ticket.
“I might try to force my way onto a train, although I’m not sure that will work,” she said, adding: “I don’t expect the SNCF to be very understanding.”
Thousands of UK Ambulance Staff Join Strike
UK ambulance workers went on strike Wednesday, widening a dispute with the government over its refusal to increase pay above inflation after recent walkouts by nurses.
A series of stoppages are causing misery Britain in the run-up to Christmas, with railway workers and passport control officers also threatening to ruin festive holiday getaways as the government refuses to cede on pay demands.
On Wednesday, ambulance staff at the state-run National Health Service (NHS), including paramedics and call handlers, walked out, prompting warnings from healthcare leaders about straining a health system already in crisis.
Thousands of members of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland took to picket lines on Tuesday, just five days after their first strike in its 106-year history.
Unions representing both NHS nurses and ambulance workers have threatened further stoppages in the new year if the government keeps refusing to discuss pay.
Around 40 staff formed a picket line outside West Midlands Ambulance Services’ hub in Longford in central England, standing behind a banner reading “Our NHS is under siege”.
As passing ambulances sounded their horns in support, a Unite union representative, Steve Thompson, said the walkout was about trying to retain and improve services, as well as pay.
“This is about telling them (the government) that we are not going to allow it (a deterioration in services) to happen. We are not going to roll over.
Employees across the UK economy are demanding salary rises in the face of decades-high inflation -- currently running at nearly 11 percent -- which is spurring the worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation.
“We want the government to actually wake up and realize that this situation is serious.”
Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, urged the public not to panic during strikes on Wednesday.
“It’s important to say that if you have a life-threatening emergency, you must call 999 and the trade unions have made absolutely clear they’ll respond to those,” he said.
Adrian Boyle, president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, however, said the emergency system had been under “immense pressure” for the last three years.
He called the last year “the worst we’ve ever seen it” when it came to delays in getting patients into hospital from ambulances due to a lack of beds.
He said accident and emergency departments were expecting people to make their own way to hospital -- even those with life threatening conditions.
“We’re expecting people with strokes and heart attacks to turn up at the front door. Now, because of the delays this has already been happening quite a lot anyway,” he told Times Radio.
But the government insists it must stick to more modest increases for public sector workers recommended by independent pay review bodies.
“The best way to help them and help everyone else in the country is for us to get a grip and reduce inflation as quickly as possible,” Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said.
The RCN has criticized the government’s stance and accused Health Secretary Steve Barclay of adopting a “macho” negotiating style during recent brief meetings.
It has warned that nurses would take wider industrial action next month if the government “keeps giving our nursing staff the cold shoulder”.
Despite the government’s insistence that it will not negotiate, polls indicate most people support nurses, and to a lesser extent other workers walking out.
YouGov polling published Tuesday showed two-thirds of Britons support striking nurses, with 63-percent support for ambulance staff.