City
Epaper

French railway workers announce July strike

By ANI | Updated: June 24, 2022 22:45 IST

Workers of France's national state-owned railway company SNCF will go on strike on July 6 to demand higher wages, French news daily Le Figaro reported on Friday.

Open in App

Workers of France's national state-owned railway company SNCF will go on strike on July 6 to demand higher wages, French news daily Le Figaro reported on Friday.

Citing a joint press release of the Railway Workers' Federation (CGT-Cheminot), SUD-Rail and the French Democratic Confederation of Labor (CFDT), Le Figaro said the three unions already submitted on June 16 a request for "immediate discussions" on how to tackle the effects of growing inflation and decreasing purchasing power.

The unions have criticized the SNCF for what they see as a failure to avoid the steady depreciation of wages, a process they say had started already in 2014.

"The SNCF management must stop this policy (of turning a blind eye to growing) social division," the unions said. (ANI/Xinhua)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: SncfLe figaroToho companyRailway companyFrench national railway company
Open in App

Related Stories

International340 kg of drugs seized in France: Police

PoliticsRailway strike to continue up to Christmas in France

HealthFrance raises bird flu risk level

HealthBird flu detected in French duck farm

PoliticsFrance's railway giant SNCF to pay 1.7-bn-euro more for electricity

International Realted Stories

InternationalSri Lanka reopens most schools as 3rd term resumes after Cyclone Ditwah

InternationalMoscow: One Killed, 3 Injured in Knife Attack at School in Odintsovo

InternationalOld trade routes can power future prosperity, says PM Modi at India-Jordan Business Forum

International'India has witnessed remarkable growth under PM Modi': King Abdullah II at India-Jordan Business Forum

InternationalNew Zealand food inflation slows to 4.4 per cent