South Korea to negotiate with striking truckers again, but gap seen too big

South Korea to negotiate with striking truckers again, but gap seen too big
# 30 November 2022 09:20 (UTC +04:00)

South Korea will meet striking truckers for more negotiations on Wednesday as concerns rose over shortages of petrol, pricier groceries and economic damage, and the government invoked a law forcing 2,500 cement industry drivers back to work, APA reports citing Reuters.

Union officials told Reuters the gap between the two sides is too wide to reach a compromise. About 25,000 union drivers are striking over minimum wage rules.

It is the second strike in less than six months and is causing daily losses of an estimated 300 billion won ($224 million), disrupting industrial activity in Asia's fourth-largest economy, which is set to slump next year.

As of Tuesday, 21 petrol stations had run dry, the industry ministry said. Petrol stations nationwide had an average of about eight days of gasoline supply as they secured stock before the strike, but stations with high turnover in the Seoul metropolitan area are seeing shortages.

Out of 985 construction sites nationwide operated by 46 construction companies that submitted reports on Tuesday, work at 59%, or 577 sites, had been suspended because of a lack of supplies, the transport ministry said.

President Yoon Suk-yeol on Tuesday called the drivers' demands "unreasonable" and said the government would take "every possible measure" to end the strike.

Union leaders were angered by the government "start work" order requiring drivers to get back on the road, saying that it was "anti-constitutional" and that they would take legal action against the move.

If cement transport workers do not comply to the start-work order, the government can suspend their transport licenses for 30 days, then revoke them.

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