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General strike in Greece over working hours disrupts travel and services nationwide

General strike in Greece over working hours disrupts travel and services nationwide



Protesters take part in a nationwide 24-hour strike in Athens, Greece, 1 Oct, 2025, as labor unions demand higher wages and the withdrawal of a bill changing work hours
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Copyright 
Thanassis Stavrakis/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved

Copyright Thanassis Stavrakis/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved
By&nbspEuronews&nbspwith&nbspΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ
Published on
01/10/2025 – 11:10 GMT+2

Transport and public services in Greece have been disrupted by a 24-hour general strike against government plans to introduce a 13-hour workday.


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A nationwide general strike in Greece on Wednesday halted trains, ferries and taxis across the capital, as public and private sector workers protest changes to the country’s labour laws.

No taxis in Athens or trains will run for the duration of the 24-hour strike, while buses and the city’s subway, tram and trolley services were operating on a reduced schedule.

The strike was disrupting services across Greece, including in schools, courts, public hospitals and municipalities.

Two protest marches were planned in central Athens, with demonstrations also set for other cities.

Unions representing civil servants and private sector workers called the strike to protest labour law changes that will introduce more flexibility, including allowing overtime that could stretch shifts to 13 hours in a day.

Under the new regulations, working hours that include overtime would be capped at 48 hours per week, with a maximum 150 overtime hours allowed per year.

Unions argue the new rules leave workers vulnerable to labour abuses by employers.

“We say no to the 13-hour (shift). Exhaustion is not development, human tolerance has limits,” the private sector umbrella union, the General Confederation of Workers of Greece, said in a statement.

The union called for a 37.5-hour working week and the return of collective bargaining agreements.

The legal working day in Greece is eight hours, with the possibility of paid overtime.

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