Strike at Paris metro disrupts daily commute for millions

The entrance of a metro station is closed as employees of the RATP go on strike, in Paris on Feb 18, 2022.  (THOMAS SAMSON / AFP)

PARIS – A major strike paralyzed most of Paris's metro network and city train grid on Friday, disrupting the daily commutes of millions of people, as workers demand pay hikes.

The French capital's RATP public transport company said eight subway lines were closed, with the remaining six operating only partially, while two of the city's RER north-to-south and east-to-west lines were also heavily hit.

Just two lines, the 1 and 14, which are both self-driving, without a human conductor aboard, were unaffected by the strikes, RATP said on its website.

"We call on businesses to make maximum use of home office working," Transport Minister Jean-Baptiste Djeebbari said on Twitter.

Just two lines, the 1 and 14, which are both self-driving, without a human conductor aboard, were unaffected by the strikes, RATP public transport company said on its website

ALSO READ: France to restart building nuclear reactors

RATP workers have said the walkouts, which come as unions and management head into annual wage talks, were a result of insufficient pay increases offered by the state-owned company.

RATP had said it was prepared to hike wages by 2.7 percent in 2022, a move unions described this month as a "provocation".

In recent years, Paris's public transport system, one of the world's busiest, has been thrown into chaos several times.

Parisians remember above all the month-long walkouts in the fall of 2019 when public transport and railway workers protested against plans for pension reform by President Emmanuel Macron.

READ MORE: France pulls back in Brexit fish row, gives talks more time

Macron later called off the reform, citing the changed situation because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Previous post Malawi detects polio, first wild case in Africa in over 5 years
Next post Europe seeks strategic autonomy in de-escalating Ukraine crisis