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Greece’s journalists went on a 24-hour strike on Wednesday as part of two days of labor unrest this week in protest of the 57-person fatal train accident that occurred last month.
The walkout, according to the journalists’ union Poesy, was in favor of the “national demand to assign responsibility for the (train) crime and take all measures” to prevent further casualties.
The accident occurred shortly before midnight on February 28 when a passenger train crashed into a freight train in central Greece after both were mistakenly left running on the same track.
Most of the passengers were students returning from a holiday weekend.
Ojú Kálé: Àwọn Ọmọ Nàìjíríà Fi Èrò Wọn Hàn Nípa Ikú…
Several people are still in hospital, and one passenger is still fighting for his life.
A general strike will be held Thursday over the tragedy, which exposed decades of safety failings in Greek railways and has put major pressure on the conservative government ahead of national elections.
The stationmaster and three other railway officials have been charged, but public anger has focused on long-running mismanagement of the network and the country has been rocked by a series of sometimes violent mass protests.
On Sunday, about 12,000 demonstrators gathered outside parliament, while 5,000 took to the streets of the second city Thessaloniki, police said.
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Greece’s transport minister resigned after the crash and Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has sought to soothe public anger by repeatedly apologising and vowing a transparent probe.
Acting transport minister Giorgos Gerapetritis this week said rail traffic will gradually resume from March 22.
Gerapetritis and former transport ministers will appear before a parliament committee on Monday to answer MPs’ questions on the tragedy.
With public anger mounting weeks before elections, Mitsotakis has seen a 7.5-point lead in polls cut to half in the latest surveys.
The PM has come under fire for initially pointing to “human error” for the accident and blaming the station master on duty at the time, who allegedly routed the trains onto the same stretch of track by accident.
But railway unions had long been warning about problems on the underfunded and understaffed train network.
Mitsotakis had been expected to set an April election date. Ballots are now expected in May.
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