German commuter transport faces 'standstill' on Monday amid call for strike


People walk on the platform of the empty Cologne Central Station in Cologne, Germany, April 21, 2023. REUTERS/Thilo Schmuelgen/File Photo

FRANKFURT, Jan ‌30 (Reuters) - German bus and commuter ‌rail services will likely ‌grind to a halt across the country as the main public services trade ‍union called for an ‍almost nationwide ‌strike in a dispute with municipal ‍and ​state employers over work conditions.

"It is safe ⁠to assume that public transport will ‌come to a standstill in the affected ⁠transport ‍systems," union Verdi said in a statement on Friday, adding ‍that close to 100,000 ‌staff have been called on to walk out.

Verdi is pushing for better working conditions in local public transport, such as reduced working hours, longer breaks and ‌better pay for night and weekend shifts.

In some regions, collective bargaining on ​overall pay is also ongoing.

(Reporting by Ludwig Burger, editing by Thomas Seythal)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Italy's Meloni picks new tourism minister in shake-up after referendum
Exclusive-US upends global supply program for malaria and HIV amid warnings of gaps
World food price rise set to continue if Iran war lasts, FAO says
Russian Su 30 fighter crashes on training flight in Crimea, TASS reports
Greek PM to reshuffle cabinet amid farm fraud scandal over EU aid
Zelenskiy says frontline situation best for Ukraine in the last 10 months
Forget democracy, Burkina Faso military leader Traore says
Italy’s Uffizi hit by cyberattack, jewels moved to Bank of Italy, Corriere reports
Australians cancel Easter travel as worries mount over fuel crisis
Russia conducting rolling aerial attack on Ukraine, Kyiv says

Others Also Read