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SNCF strike: which lines could be disrupted this Thursday, November 21?

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All railway unions are calling for a strike this Thursday, November 21. Here are the traffic forecasts from SNCF Voyageurs.

Thursday's strike called by all railway workers' unions will have little impact on train frequency, SNCF Voyageurs announced on Tuesday. Thus, rail traffic will be “almost normal on the TGVs”, while “some disruptions are expected on certain regional lines”. The company will announce more detailed forecasts at the local level this Tuesday afternoon.

The railway unions are calling for a 24-hour strike this Thursday, before a renewable movement from December 11.

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Strikes: SNCF, farmers, airlines… the social movements announced are numerous, what should we expect?

A repeatable movement

Their anger was triggered by the confirmation at the beginning of November of the dismantling of Fret SNCF, the leading company in for the transport of goods by rail, with the loss of 500 jobs out of 5,000.

The company will be replaced on January 1 by two companies, one specializing in freight transport (Hexafret) and the other in locomotive maintenance (Technis). SNCF has promised zero layoffs by taking over all railway workers not retained in other group companies.

“We cannot let this pass without doing anything”

This dismantling results from an agreement signed between the government and the European Commission, after the opening of an investigation into illegal state aid paid to Fret SNCF. “We cannot let this pass without doing anything,” says Fabien Villedieu, Sud-Rail federal secretary. The agreement signed with Europe also provides for an opening of capital to the private sector at the beginning of 2026.

The unions denounce a privatization, which the management of the SNCF contests since the railway group will retain the majority of the capital.

“It’s a process of privatization in the broad sense,” says the general secretary of the CGT-Cheminots Thierry Nier. “The same process applied to Freight will apply to travelers tomorrow,” he continues.

The unions are concerned about the “subsidiarization” process in the TER since on December 14, around 1,200 railway workers in , and will be transferred from SNCF Voyageurs to dedicated companies having won calls for tenders launched by the regions for the TER market.

The transferred railway workers will retain certain benefits (retirement rights, travel facilities, etc.) but will also see the entire organization of their working time reorganized, in order to increase productivity. “There is a very strong awareness (among railway workers) that these structural changes are obviously not going in the right direction,” assures the general secretary of the CFDT-Cheminots, Thomas Cavel.

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