The Prague Post - General strike hits planes, trains and services in Portugal

EUR -
AED 4.206905
AFN 71.589866
ALL 95.627825
AMD 433.346952
ANG 2.050608
AOA 1050.436762
ARS 1598.48234
AUD 1.626239
AWG 2.063359
AZN 1.95061
BAM 1.945237
BBD 2.3149
BDT 141.034193
BGN 1.957564
BHD 0.432596
BIF 3411.899127
BMD 1.145515
BND 1.465206
BOB 7.941876
BRL 6.0135
BSD 1.149324
BTN 105.875104
BWP 15.493398
BYN 3.388486
BYR 22452.092461
BZD 2.311618
CAD 1.565203
CDF 2494.931712
CHF 0.902775
CLF 0.026459
CLP 1044.74356
CNY 7.868571
CNH 7.902896
COP 4241.12008
CRC 541.744173
CUC 1.145515
CUP 30.356145
CVE 109.669501
CZK 24.450958
DJF 204.675942
DKK 7.472262
DOP 70.206942
DZD 151.785302
EGP 60.067711
ERN 17.182724
ETB 179.402573
FJD 2.542819
FKP 0.85466
GBP 0.863267
GEL 3.110036
GGP 0.85466
GHS 12.453379
GIP 0.85466
GMD 83.622845
GNF 10076.023902
GTQ 8.813145
GYD 240.464293
HKD 8.96677
HNL 30.423871
HRK 7.534736
HTG 150.54728
HUF 392.343435
IDR 19425.642039
ILS 3.595663
IMP 0.85466
INR 105.86511
IQD 1505.724007
IRR 1514112.985193
ISK 144.403808
JEP 0.85466
JMD 179.887724
JOD 0.812159
JPY 182.484538
KES 148.058096
KGS 100.175676
KHR 4612.851814
KMF 490.280442
KPW 1031.001455
KRW 1713.135972
KWD 0.351868
KYD 0.957799
KZT 562.605088
LAK 24623.403846
LBP 102926.863934
LKR 357.341218
LRD 210.337878
LSL 18.987482
LTL 3.382408
LVL 0.692911
LYD 7.33607
MAD 10.771113
MDL 19.958539
MGA 4763.986277
MKD 61.713955
MMK 2405.604459
MNT 4089.652192
MOP 9.264763
MRU 45.675787
MUR 52.705547
MVR 17.709765
MWK 1993.01714
MXN 20.49911
MYR 4.509923
MZN 73.19785
NAD 18.9874
NGN 1591.7964
NIO 42.29921
NOK 11.167967
NPR 169.395019
NZD 1.96741
OMR 0.440409
PAB 1.149359
PEN 3.933143
PGK 4.957019
PHP 68.317375
PKR 321.070695
PLN 4.269821
PYG 7441.495674
QAR 4.190446
RON 5.095279
RSD 117.416399
RUB 92.238199
RWF 1680.324596
SAR 4.298653
SBD 9.223297
SCR 15.949562
SDG 688.453919
SEK 10.77122
SGD 1.466379
SHP 0.859433
SLE 28.179556
SLL 24020.895685
SOS 655.719447
SRD 42.803884
STD 23709.846089
STN 24.367368
SVC 10.057389
SYP 127.011646
SZL 18.992293
THB 36.96007
TJS 11.016879
TMT 4.020757
TND 3.379151
TOP 2.758125
TRY 50.620651
TTD 7.799648
TWD 36.607792
TZS 2995.345058
UAH 50.89091
UGX 4302.636935
USD 1.145515
UYU 45.960438
UZS 13948.261761
VES 504.501324
VND 30125.324163
VUV 137.001435
WST 3.109413
XAF 652.394603
XAG 0.01383
XAU 0.000225
XCD 3.095811
XCG 2.071452
XDR 0.81137
XOF 652.405931
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.262413
ZAR 19.293152
ZMK 10311.029579
ZMW 22.326476
ZWL 368.855337
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.14

    -0.43%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    25.68

    -0.82%

  • RELX

    -0.5800

    34.18

    -1.7%

  • RIO

    -1.3800

    90.7

    -1.52%

  • BTI

    0.7300

    59.89

    +1.22%

  • NGG

    1.1200

    90.81

    +1.23%

  • BP

    0.6000

    42.16

    +1.42%

  • GSK

    -0.8700

    54.28

    -1.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    17.25

    -0.58%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.1

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.82

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    -2.2800

    69.62

    -3.27%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.31

    -0.63%

  • AZN

    -0.8100

    192.5

    -0.42%

General strike hits planes, trains and services in Portugal
General strike hits planes, trains and services in Portugal / Photo: PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA - AFP

General strike hits planes, trains and services in Portugal

Widespread disruption hit Portuguese air travel and trains, hospitals and schools Thursday as the unions called the biggest nationwide strike action for more than a decade against government labour reforms.

Text size:

Lisbon's main train station was empty with most services cancelled and the TAP Air Portugal national airline called off about two thirds of its normal 250 flights.

According to unions, refuse collection was at a standstill along with hospital departments handling non-urgent cases. Schools and courts were also affected.

Unions have been infuriated by a law proposed by the right wing minority government that it says aims to simplify firing procedures, extend the length of fixed-term contracts and expand the minimum services required during a strike.

Prime Minister Luis Montenegro insisted that the labour reforms, with more than 100 measures, were intended to "stimulate economic growth and pay better salaries".

But the communist-leaning CGTP and more moderate UGT unions have lambasted the plans. And the walk-out is Portugal's biggest since June 2013, when the country needed International Monetary Fund and European Union help to overcome a debt crisis.

CGTP secretary general Tiago Oliveira said the reforms were "among the biggest attacks on the world of work". He told AFP the government action would "normalise job insecurity" and "make dismissals easier".

- Support for strikers -

Out of a working population of some five million people, around 1.3 million are already in insecure positions, Oliveira said.

With Portugal set to elect a new president in early 2026, Oliveira said he considered the strike was "already a success" even before it started as it had drawn public attention to the labour reforms.

Public opinion is largely behind the action, with 61 percent of those polled in favour of the walk-out, according to a survey published in the Portuguese press.

On the eve of the strike, Montenegro said he hoped "that the country will function as normally as possible... because the rights of some must not infringe on the rights of others".

Although his right-wing party lacks a majority in parliament, Montenegro's government should be able to force the bill through with the support of the liberals -- and the far right, which has become the second-largest political force in Portugal.

The left-wing opposition has accused Montenegro's camp of not telling voters that workers' rights roll-backs were on the cards while campaigning for the last parliamentary elections.

Although Portugal has recorded economic growth of around two percent and a historically low unemployment rate of some six percent, the prime minister has argued that the country should take advantage of the favourable climate to push through reforms.

Armindo Monteiro, head of the main employers confederation, the CIP, condemned the strike and told AFP the government's draft law was only a "basis for discussion" aiming to correct the "misbalance" caused by labour changes made by a previous left wing government.

M.Soucek--TPP