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Business // Tuesday, October 7, 2008 Print Article Email To Friend(s) Feedback Text Larger Text Smaller One Column Two Columns  
Brussels at virtual standstill as Belgium gripped by strike
Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 7-Oct-2008 04:27 hrs
Gridlock is pictured on a motorway at the entrance of Brussels. Brussels ground to a virtual standstill Monday with international train services halted and government offices closed as thousands of workers across Belgium protested against rising living costs.
 
 
Brussels ground to a virtual standstill Monday with international train services halted and government offices closed as thousands of workers across Belgium protested against rising living costs.
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The public sector in the seat of the main European Union institutions was the worst affected with some schools also closed alongside factories, a pattern repeated in other major Belgian cities and towns.
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Belgian trade unions said employees in public services and industry were equally responsive in downing pens and tools.
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"The day of action is a success," the major Christian union CSC proclaimed.
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There were sporadic reports of ugly incidents at some picket lines as non-striking workers attempted to get to work while industry leaders voiced annoyance that profits would be lost at a time of financial crisis.
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The trade union day of action saw nearly all public transport in Brussels grounded from late Sunday, with most tramlines paralysed and very few underground metro trains running.
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In the midst of a financial storm sweeping through Europe, Eurostar trains to London and Paris as well as high-speed Thalys services to France, Germany and the Netherlands were not running.
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Road traffic in the capital was also lighter than normal with many non-strikers opting to take the day off.
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Rail services were also stopped in in the southern region of Wallonia and were infrequent in Flanders to the north.
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Only the banks made a point of opening, seeking to reassure anxious customers as the global financial crisis hits home.
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In Belgium's second city of Antwerp, creches, museums and libraries were closed while in Bruges all public offices remained closed.
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Charleroi and Liege in the southern region of Wallonia were also affected.
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The strike action took place the day after French bank BNP Paribas took a controlling interest in Belgium's largest banking group Fortis, which has been subject to three different bailout packages in a week.
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Members of the liberal CGSLB union took to the streets outside the Brussels stock exchange distributing leaflets saying "Purchasing power, what's left? Peanuts."
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"The message is clear," said the union's secretary general Philippe Vandenabeele.
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"We are calling for better purchasing power for workers. There aren't the reserves left and it's time to think now of Mrs. Everywoman rather than thinking of the banks."
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Thierry Bodson, general secretary of the Wallonia wing of the FGTB, one of the country's biggest trade unions, told local radio that one of the strikers' key demands was a reduction in energy costs via lower consumption tax on oil, gas and heating fuel.
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While the level of protest differed from region to region, meaning the action fell short of a general strike, Bodson recalled that in June some 100,000 people had taken to the streets to protest against the steep rise in living costs.
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In September, consumer price inflation in Belgium hit 5.46 percent. — AFP

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