Rail strike disrupts travel of Germans

Divya Updated - May 05, 2015 at 06:54 PM.

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A front of a Deutsche Bahn train is seen at the main train station in Frankfurt, Germany on May 5, 2015.
In a rare intervention in an ongoing wage dispute, Chancellor Angela Merkel urged state railway Deutsche Bahn and striking train drivers to put an end to a long-running conflict that industry has denounced as "poison" for the German economy.
A paper with information on Deutsche Bahn schedule changes is seen at the main train station in Frankfurt, Germany on May 5, 2015
People walk under the sign reading 'Please do not board' at the main train station in Frankfurt, Germany on May 5, 2015.
A logo of Deutsche Bahn is seen at the main train station in Frankfurt, Germany on May 5, 2015.

A railway strike set to last an unprecedented seven days caused major disruption across Germany on its first full day on Tuesday and pressure rose on the government to intervene by pushing the two sides into arbitration. Most of the 5.5 million passengers using Deutsche Bahn each day had to find alternative transport and normally bustling rail stations from the Black Forest to the Baltic seashore were oddly empty.

Photos by Reuters

Published on April 29, 2024 00:29