London commuters face second day of strike disruption

A board advises passengers of industrial action by Southern railway workers, at Victoria station in London

A board advises passengers of industrial action by Southern railway workers, at Victoria station in London

Published Dec 14, 2016

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London - London commuters faced a second

day of travel chaos as the latest round of train strikes stopped

services between London and the south coast in Britain's worst

rail disruption for two decades.

Hundreds of thousands of commuters struggled to get to work

on Wednesday as drivers working for Southern Rail began the

second day of a 48-hour stoppage over a long-running dispute

about whose job it should be to open and close the train doors.

The opposing sides, Southern and the two unions, the RMT and

Aslef, were due to meet for talks later in the day at the

conciliation service Acas, ahead of further industrial action

planned for Friday, next week and in January.

Southern, run by Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR), a joint

venture owned by London-listed Go-Ahead and France's

Keolis, told passengers not to try to travel during the strike.

Local media said this week's strikes would have the biggest

impact since action by signal workers in the mid-1990s.

It comes after a series of strikes on Southern this year

which have caused misery for commuters. Some workers say they

lost their jobs because they could not get to work on time.

Go-Ahead, which has apologised for the troubles on Southern,

is due to provide investors with a trading update on Thursday.

REUTERS

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