GERMAN STRIKE EXPECTED TO ‘PARALYZE’ TRAVEL MONDAY

Following the lead of French workers, German unions are calling on thousands of workers across the country’s transport system to stage a one-day strike on Monday (March 27) that is expected to bring widespread disruption to planes, trains and local transit.

The ver.di service workers’ union and the EVG union, which represents many railway workers, announced the 24-hour walkout that come as employees in many sectors have been seeking hefty raises to reflect persistently high inflation.

Ver.di chair Frank Werneke said that his union is calling for 120,000 workers to walk out. Those will include security and ground workers at all German airports except Berlin, local transit employees in seven of Germany’s 16 states, harbour employees and workers on highways — the latter a measure that Werneke said is likely to affect some tunnels.

“This strike day will have a massive effect — we are aware of this and it is also necessary,” Werneke said. He added that it’s important to make clear before the next round of negotiations “that our demands have broad support in the workforce.”

EVG counterpart Martin Burkert said that his union is calling for 230,000 workers at Germany’s main railway operator, government-owned Deutsche Bahn, and others to walk out. He said people traveling on Sunday should take care “to be at their destination in a timely manner,” because some of the affected shifts could start on Sunday evening.

Deutsche Bahn personnel chief Martin Seiler called the EVG strike announcement “completely excessive, unnecessary and disproportionate.”

“We assume that the country will be paralyzed on Monday, and that as good as nothing will be possible in rail transport,” he added.

Ver.di has already staged a series of one-day walkouts at individual airports and in public services, including local transit.