Wednesday 16 February 2011

Huge Delays in Pakistan as Rail Workers Strike

LAHORE: Trains from Lahore were delayed for up to eight hours on Tuesday as Pakistan Railways (PR) workers, in a protest against the non-payment of their salaries, refused to let locomotives out of their shed.
Train services resumed later after the workers were paid and they stopped their protest, but not before thousands of passengers spent hours stranded at Lahore Railway Station. Many had been planning journeys home for the Eid-e-Milad-un-Nabi holiday. The protest lasted around eight hours.
Pakistan Railways, like several other public departments, is under severe financial constraints at present. There were small-scale protests at the beginning of February after pensioners did not get their monthly cheques.

On Tuesday, railway shed workers surrounded the Mughalpura locomotives shed, which housed 32 engines. As a result, the Karakoram Express, Allama Iqbal Express, Tez Gam Express, Rail Car to Rawalpindi, Farid Express, Night Coach to Karachi and others were unable to depart Lahore. Meanwhile, the city railway station filled up with passengers anxiously awaiting news of their trains.
The head of the Railways Workers Union (RWU) told The Express Tribune the protest was related to the upcoming Eid-e-Milad holiday. “We were scheduled to get our salaries today [Tuesday],” said RWU president Sarfaraz Khan. “We are religious people and we need money for the holiday. We cannot celebrate without our salaries.”
Khan said the union was not insensitive to the needs of passengers headed home for the holiday, but that they had little choice. “Our members are poor people. They don’t have money to feed their families. If the distribution of salaries had started on the 12th there would not be this problem. There are some PR officials who are always trying to create disturbances in railway operations.”
A PR spokesman said that the due date for the salaries of these employees was between the 15th and 22nd of every month. “If workers do not get their salaries today [Tuesday] they will get them on Thursday after the holiday,” he said. “It’s routine practice.”
PR officials tried to resolve the protest by offering to pay half the salaries of the shed employees. Workers said they had been offered Rs6 million, but the total salaries came to Rs12 million.
They refused to stop the protest. After further negotiations, PR divisional superintendent Abdul Jabbar had the workers paid their full salaries. The locomotives were allowed out of the shed and the delayed trains set off, but not before the holidays of thousands of passengers had been ruined.

Monday 14 February 2011

Romantic Train Journeys - Switzerland

When you think about the most romantic mode of transportation, what comes to mind? Cars take concentration. Bus rides are too busy. Cruises only deliver you to ports reachable by water. Trains, though, are a terrific way for couples to travel. 
 
Seated side by side, you get to view magnificent scenery through your window. There's time to kiss. Sleep. Dream. Whether you board a scenic train, an overnight train, or even scenic commuter trains, you're likely to find such rides great fun for two.

Swiss Train Rides

 

The country best known for its clean, modern, on-time trains, Switzerland offers visitors an incomparable way to experience the countryside. Couples you can go from point to point at their leisure or speedily. In fact, vacationers in Switzerland can ride from mountain top to balmy beach by train in less than two hours. Imagine skiing in the morning at Engelberg, attending the Zurich Opera at night, and leaving the details to the highly efficient and dependable
Swiss Travel System?
Swiss train stations, staffed by multi-lingual personnel, function as service centers complete with currency exchanges, luggage-storage facilities, and bicycle rentals.

Tuesday 8 February 2011

More Brits use high-speed rail to reach luxury villa holidays

More and more Brits are opting for high-speed rail travel as their chosen transport for summer holidays.


Ideal for villa holidays in France, high-speed rail now has the highest number of UK passengers since the 1920s, according to the Association of Train Operator Companies (ATOC).

ATOC member Eurostar has seen passenger numbers double over the last 30 years.

Last year, the travel company had 9.5 million passengers, travelling to a range of European destinations including Lille, Paris and Nice.

Brits planning luxury villa holidays in France this year can travel to a range of French cities with Eurostar.

Recent research by the rail company revealed that 97 per cent of respondents believe Eurostar's services have brought the UK closer to France and Belgium in terms of social and cultural exchanges.

Travellers currently have the opportunity to win free rail tickets as part of a new social media campaign launched by the company.

To enter, passengers have to upload a video of themselves explaining why they want to visit a Eurostar destination, before asking people to vote online for their entries.