Paris Metro workers strike for wage hike, disrupt commutes

Striking subway workers shut down half of the Paris Metro lines Thursday, a nationwide day of walkouts and protests by French train drivers, teachers and other public-sector workers demanding the government and employers increase salaries to keep up with inflation.

UKRAINE GETTING 90 REFURBISHED T-72B TANKS FROM US, THE NETHERLANDS, AND CZECH REPUBLIC

Expecting major disruptions on their morning commutes, many Parisians biked or walked to work. Others took buses that were provided as an alternative way to reach offices and workplaces, or reverted to their pandemic lockdown routines and worked from home.

Protest rallies were planned in Paris and other French cities later Thursday, amid deepening worker discontent around Europe.

CLIMATE ACTIVISTS GLUE HANDS TO GOYA PAINTINGS IN SPAIN’S PRADO MUSEUM

The strikes in France build on multiple union actions in recent months by French workers demanding higher wages to keep up with the rising cost of living. Last month, a strike by oil refinery workers caused nationwide fuel shortages that disrupted lives and businesses. The French government intervened to force them back to work.

Europe has faced a series of protests and strikes in recent months over soaring inflation. Nurses, pilots, postal workers. railway staff and others have walked off the job, seeking wages that keep pace with inflation as Russia’s war in Ukraine has driven up energy and food prices.

BARCELONA’S GERARD PIQU? ANNOUNCES RETIREMENT FROM SOCCER

Labor unions also have organized street protests to pressure governments to do more to ease rising bills even as European leaders have passed energy relief packages.

Nationwide general strikes over cost of living increases caused by inflation and higher energy costs linked to Russia’s war in Ukraine snarled traffic through much of Belgium and shut down public services in Greece on Wednesday.

Striking subway workers shut down half of the Paris Metro lines Thursday, a nationwide day of walkouts and protests by French train drivers, teachers and other public-sector workers demanding the government and employers increase salaries to keep up with inflation.

UKRAINE GETTING 90 REFURBISHED T-72B TANKS FROM US, THE NETHERLANDS, AND CZECH REPUBLIC

Expecting major disruptions on their morning commutes, many Parisians biked or walked to work. Others took buses that were provided as an alternative way to reach offices and workplaces, or reverted to their pandemic lockdown routines and worked from home.

A woman walks by a closed subway station Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022 in Paris.
(AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Protest rallies were planned in Paris and other French cities later Thursday, amid deepening worker discontent around Europe.

CLIMATE ACTIVISTS GLUE HANDS TO GOYA PAINTINGS IN SPAIN’S PRADO MUSEUM

The strikes in France build on multiple union actions in recent months by French workers demanding higher wages to keep up with the rising cost of living. Last month, a strike by oil refinery workers caused nationwide fuel shortages that disrupted lives and businesses. The French government intervened to force them back to work.

People stand in front of a closed subway station Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022 in Paris.
(AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Europe has faced a series of protests and strikes in recent months over soaring inflation. Nurses, pilots, postal workers. railway staff and others have walked off the job, seeking wages that keep pace with inflation as Russia’s war in Ukraine has driven up energy and food prices.

BARCELONA’S GERARD PIQU? ANNOUNCES RETIREMENT FROM SOCCER

Labor unions also have organized street protests to pressure governments to do more to ease rising bills even as European leaders have passed energy relief packages.

French President Emmanuel Macron, left, shakes hands with former French President Francois Hollande as they stand in front of a commemorative plaque outside the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, near Paris, Monday, Nov. 13, 2017.
(Philippe Wojazer, Pool via AP)

Nationwide general strikes over cost of living increases caused by inflation and higher energy costs linked to Russia’s war in Ukraine snarled traffic through much of Belgium and shut down public services in Greece on Wednesday.

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