Strike brings trains to standstill across Austria
The strike affected transport at all levels, from public transport to regional services and long-distance night trains, as well as rail freight lines. The head of the nation's rail network said services would be more or less back to normal by the following day. The main rail workers' union had called for a 400 euro ($417.88) monthly pay rise for the sector's 50,000 employees.
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- Austria
Austrian rail traffic ground to a halt from midnight, impacting around 8,000 connections and some one million passengers, as workers held a 24-hour strike on Monday in a dispute over pay. The strike affected transport at all levels, from public transport to regional services and long-distance night trains, as well as rail freight lines.
The head of the nation's rail network said services would be more or less back to normal by the following day. "I don't want to rule out the possibility of irregularities on one train or the other, but in general I expect that we will be back to serving our customers with the usual quality as of Tuesday," OeBB chief Andreas Matthae told the ORF radio broadcaster.
Wedged between eight countries including Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Hungary and the Czech Republic, Austria is an important hub for European rail travel. The main rail workers' union had called for a 400 euro ($417.88) monthly pay rise for the sector's 50,000 employees. They are being offered 208 euros more, plus a one-off payment of 1000 euros.
The union called Monday's "warning strike" after a fifth round of negotiations fell through on Sunday. ($1 = 0.9572 euros)
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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