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Europe
French national strike causes travel chaos
2005-10-05
PARIS (AFP) - French commuters faced serious travel disruptions from a one-day nationwide strike that was also expected to ground hundreds of flights from Paris' two main airports. France's civil aviation authority predicted that 175 short- and medium-haul flights would be cancelled from Orly airport south of Paris and 212 from Roissy Charles de Gaulle north of the capital. No disruptions were expected on long-haul flights.

In the capital, around one underground metro trains in two were operating, while only one third of suburban trains were in service. Outside the greater Paris area, transport authorities said that 40 percent of regional services were up and running as well as 60 percent of high-speed intercity lines.

Outside Paris disruptions were also reported in southeastern Marseille, eastern Lyon, and in Nantes, Rennes and Rouen in western France.

As well as transport workers, around half of all teachers were also striking, and most post offices and government buildings and some banks were to remain shut while most national newspapers failed to appear.

Five of the country's biggest trade unions called the stoppage to protest policies the centre-right government has brought in to invigorate France's sluggish economy and to push for public sector pay rises.
Posted by:Steve White

#6  "That's the way to help your country get out of a sluggish economy - increase public debt while making it impossible for people with real jobs to do anything." - Vodkapundit

Hehe, alltime classic quote.
Posted by: mmurray821   2005-10-05 09:13  

#5  I suspect that the AFP reporter is a leftist

That any reporter is a leftist is a pretty safe assumption.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-10-05 08:09  

#4  Ooops post should have read "long range, low frequency lines are in the hands of SNCF and those had a high strike rate while intra-muros and high-frequcny, shorter range regional lines are in hands of RATP and those had a low strike rate.

I suspect that the AFP reporter is a leftist aiming to gibve the impresion that the strike was an unmitigated success
Posted by: JFM   2005-10-05 04:28  

#3  The article is pure unadulterated BS. Parisian public transportation is in the hands of two companies: long range and low frequency lines are in the hands of SNCF (who also ensures national-wide railways) transportation and these had a strike rate while intra-muros transportation and high frequency lines (ie one train every two minutes in the rush hours) are in the hands of RATP and these were nearly unaffected. In fact RATP trains were less crowded than usual. Busses are in the hands of RATP and were also unaffected except for trafic conditions who were worse than in a normal day.
Posted by: JFM   2005-10-05 04:14  

#2  Lol, jackal! But a strike is so cosmopolite et sophistiqué, no? Who wants an économie fortifiée? That's soooo Américain.
Posted by: .com   2005-10-05 01:11  

#1  Is this the kind of "revolution" that Chirac wants to take effect in Turkey?
Posted by: Jackal   2005-10-05 00:29  

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