Train drivers strike, farmer protests cause major disruption in Germany | DW News

Germany is facing potential transport chaos on Wednesday caused by a three-day nationwide strike by train drivers, coupled with ongoing protests by farmers angered by planned subsidy cuts. The train strike was given the go-ahead on Tuesday after a labor court in Frankfurt rejected a temporary injunction sought by German rail operator Deutsche Bahn (DB). During the strike, rail services will run on a heavily reduced emergency timetable, forcing many of DB’s millions of passengers to cancel their journeys or find other ways of getting to their destinations. Some 80% of long-distance services will be canceled, while regional lines will be affected to varying extents, DB said. Freight train drivers will also be striking until Friday evening. The strike has been called by the train drivers’ union, GDL, which is demanding better wages, along with a reduction in work from 38 down to 35 hours a week. It is the third and largest strike by the drivers since their union took up negotiations with DB and other carriers in November.

The rail strike comes as German farmers vowed to ramp up their nationwide protests against planned subsidy cuts, such as those for diesel fuel. Since Monday, farmers have been blocking a number highway entrances with their tractors, as well as holding rallies in towns and cities. The protests have caused considerable disruption to traffic. Some observers have criticized the fact that many conservatives have given their support to the farmers’ protests after slamming similar tactics used by Last Generation climate activists. Others have expressed concern that the far right has harnessed the farmers’ anger to support its own agenda.

In a newspaper interview published on Wednesday, Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir has voiced understanding for the farmers’ fears, saying many were worried that their interests were being overlooked in a political landscape dominated by urban actors. However, he warned that the current social atmosphere could lead to a situation “like that in the US,” where people “do not talk with each other, do not believe each other and assume the absolute worst of each other.” The strikes and protests come as Germany’s coalition government under Chancellor Olaf Scholz faces huge challenges in pushing through its 2024 budget.

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