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UPDATED: November 6, 2008  
Chongqing Cabbies Return to Work
All 9,000 urban cab drivers had returned to work after a two-day strike
 
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Authorities in China's fourth largest city Chongqing on Wednesday announced that all 9,000 urban cab drivers had returned to work after a two-day strike that was marred by outbreaks of violence.

Chongqing municipal police bureau deputy director Gao Xiaodong said police patrols had been stepped up to keep public order after they arrested an unspecified number of cab drivers in connection with attacks that left 103 taxis damaged.

The streets of downtown Chongqing appeared to be back to normal on Wednesday morning, with taxies cruising for fares on busy streets.

One driver told Xinhua that his company manager had sent text messages to the drivers, telling them to "put on the roof sign and do business as usual".

Almost 4,000 drivers had returned to work by Tuesday afternoon after the municipal government moved to address their grievances.

Drivers in the main urban areas of the city stopped work on Monday morning to protest a number of issues, including insufficient supplies of compressed natural gas (CNG), which fuels most cabs in the city, competition from unlicensed cabs, high fines for traffic violations and the unfair division of fares between drivers and companies.

Drivers must wait for one to three hours to refill their CNG tanks at a limited number of fuel stations.

The strike became violent as some strikers gathered on business streets to stop working cabs and pull out the drivers.

At least three police cars were also smashed in the violence.

The city government has promised to reduce the fees that drivers pay to their companies, increase CNG supplies and step up efforts to crack down unlicensed cabs, to meet the demands of cab drivers.

Cab companies also promised to pay for losses incurred during the strike and exempt drivers from daily fees in a move to get drivers back to work.

(Xinhua News Agency November 5, 2008)



 
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