Paris: Traffic improved slightly on French trains on Thursday as nationwide strikes over the government's retirement reform entered the 15th day and small signs of progress emerged in negotiations with unions.
However, the crisis hitting one of the world's biggest economies at the height of the holiday season is far from over.
Anti-government protesters are keeping up the pressure on President Emmanuel Macron with a new march through Paris in the afternoon. And some workers are expected to maintain their strike through the Christmas holidays and beyond.
The French National Railway Company's (SNCF) authority said that about 60% of trains were at a standstill on Thursday, down from 90% earlier in the strike. While provincial cities have suffered fewer problems, tourists and Paris commuters alike are still struggling to get around the French capital, spending hours fighting through clogged intersections or waiting for elusive subway trains.
The centrist Macron, a former investment banker, wants to raise the retirement age to 64 and said that the current pension system costs too much; unions say that the pension reform is part of Macron's plans to dismantle hard-won worker rights, and want to preserve a system that allows some workers to leave as early as their 50s.
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