|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
Transport strike brings France to a standstill
By Antoine Lerougetel
19 October 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Transport workers striking in defence of their pensions brought
Frances rail, bus and urban transport system to a virtual
standstill on Thursday. The Gaullist government headed by President
Nicolas Sarkozy is pushing through a reform that would dismantle
the rail workers retirement schemethe regimes spéciaux.
The powerful strike is the first mass action in opposition
to Sarkozys plans to destroy the French welfare state system
of social benefits. The rail workers were joined by gas and electricity
workers, as well as sections of teachers and private sector workers.
Three unionsSUD Rail, Force Ouvrière and the Autonomous
General Federation of Drivers (FGAAC)have called for the
24-hour stoppage to be extended.
The General Confederation of Labour (CGT), which is politically
dominated by the Communist Party of France, as well as the Socialist
Party-aligned French Democratic Federation of Labour (CFDT), have
opposed any extension of the strike and called on workers to wait
until negotiations have been held with the government.
However, broad sections of rail workers defied the main union
federations and called for continued strike action at mass meetings
held Thursday morning. Some 95 percent of workers at train stations
in Paris, Marseilles and Lyons voted to prolong the strike. In
Paris, public transport workers voted to join the strike. Mass
meetings are to be held again Friday morning to decide on the
next step.
Officials with SNCF, the national rail company, said service
would be heavily disrupted Friday morning, but promised
service would improve in the course of the day.
The strike began at 8 p.m. Wednesday evening. SNCF indicated
Thursday morning that only 46 of Frances 700 high-speed
TGV trains were running. It reported at 6:30 a.m. Thursday that
some regions would be completely deprived of trains and called
on passengers to cancel or postpone their journeys till
Friday evening. The Eurostar service was less affected:
Eight out of ten trains were running normally between London and
Paris.
The RATP, the Paris urban transport company, reported that
the Metro service was likely to be virtually non-existent.
It warned that the highly travelled suburban RER lines A and B,
bringing workers into the capital from the outer banlieues,
would provide no service. Only 10 percent of the buses and
no trams were running.
Urban transport systems in 28 major towns were struck, including
Clermont-Ferrand, Dijon, Lyons, Montpellier, Nancy, Reims and
Toulouse. The trade unions in Frances second city, Marseilles,
did not call out the workers on its urban transport system, the
RTM. These workers are not covered by the régimes spéciaux.
By 7:30 a.m. on Thursday, traffic was stalled around the main
urban centres, especially the Ile de France Paris region, where
vehicles were backed up as far away as 165 kilometres.
The SNCF reported that just under 75 percent of its employees
were on strike. That is a higher percentage than in the great
1995 rail strike, also called in defence of régime special
pensions. The 1995 shutdown forced then-Prime Minister Alain
Juppé to retreat and crippled his government.
The figure given by the RATP for the Paris bus and metro network
was 59 percent.
Some 50 percent of workers for the electricity and gas utilities
EDF and GDF joined the strike. Under Sarkozys reform, they
will see the annuities needed to obtain a full pension extended
from the present 37.5 years to 40 years, and further extended
in 2008 to 41 years. As with retirees under the general pension
scheme, they will face severe penalties if they fail to reach
the required annuities and large decreases in retirement income.
Over 60 demonstrations took place in towns all over France,
mostly made up of railway and urban transport workers, but with
important contingents of electricity and gas utility workers and
smaller delegations of teachers, whose main federation, the Federation
of Unitary Unions (FSU), had not called for a strike. Estimates
of the numbers marching vary from 150,000 to 300,000.
CGT National Secretary Bernard Thibault and Didier Le Reste,
leader of its railway section, both Communist Party members, called
on workers to go back to work and await the results of discussions.
On Thursday, Thibaults second-in-command, Maryse Dumas,
welcomed Minister of Labour Xavier Bertrands proposal to
meet with the unions again to discuss the governments proposals.
The Socialist Party has said nothing about a continuation of
the strike, but indicated its desire for the workers militancy
to be suppressed and channelled behind negotiations with the government,
as well as its support for cuts in rail workers pensions,
declaring that pension reform was necessary, but that Sarkozy
was going about it in the wrong manner.
A Communist Party statement issued on October 17 gave nominal
support for the strike, but the CP has made no call for its extension
Christian Drouet, a Sud Rail worker at the Gare de Lyons station
in southeast Paris, told the World Socialist Web Site,
Everyone is aware that 24 hours is not enough.
He reported that in at least 30 of some 250 work locations in
France, notably Lille in the north, CGT members defied the national
leadership and voted to continue the strike beyond 24 hours.
Another Sud Rail member at the union office in the Gare du
Nord station in Paris told the WSWS that he thought drivers and
ticket inspectors would vote on Friday to continue the strike.
He said that at the Gare du Nord most CGT members would vote to
extend the walkout.
There is beginning to be a break at the base from the
national leadership, he said. Its like when
the CFDT, which used to be strong on the railway, negotiated with
the government on pensions [referring to the agreement of the
CFDT leadership with Alain Juppé in 1995]. Three quarters
of their members left, and many joined us. Theyve now got
only 3 to 4 percent representation. The CGT leaders want to negotiate,
the rank and file say there is nothing to negotiate.
He said that the CGT leadership is now seen by many workers
as working hand-in-glove with the government and management.
He added that the Force Ouvrière leadership
had reluctantly called for a continuation of the strike under
pressure from below. At first, the FO leadership were not
for extending the strike, he said, but they had to
give in to discontent from the rank and file.
A further report on the strike will be posted Saturday,
October 20.
See Also:
France: The struggle against Sarkozy
requires a new political perspective
[12 October 2007]
Sarkozy announces vast attacks on French
workers rights and conditions
[3 October 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |