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Portugal faced major disruptions on Wednesday as a nationwide general strike halted train services, cancelled hundreds of flights, and forced school closures. The strike, organized by the country’s largest labour union confederation, was called in protest against the government’s proposed labour reforms, marking the second nationwide shutdown in six months.

The centre-right government is pushing changes to more than 100 sections of Portugal’s labour code, arguing that the reforms are necessary to improve productivity and economic growth. However, unions claim the proposals would weaken worker protections by making dismissals easier, expanding outsourcing, increasing job insecurity, and limiting labour rights.

The strike affected key public services across the country. Rail operations were largely suspended, Lisbon’s metro system shut down, schools closed due to staffing shortages, and hospitals postponed many surgeries and appointments. Major airlines also reduced operations significantly, highlighting the widespread impact of the labour dispute as tensions continue between the government and unions.

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Belgium is preparing for severe disruption this week as unions launch a three-day national strike in protest against Prime Minister Bart De Wever’s austerity plans aimed at reducing the country’s high debt. The action spans multiple sectors, with teachers, healthcare workers, and waste collectors joining rolling walkouts, and public transport facing major interruptions beginning Monday. The strikes are set to culminate in a nationwide general stoppage on Wednesday.

Transport services are already heavily affected, with national rail operator SNCB running only part of its schedule and several Eurostar routes between Brussels and Paris cancelled. The country’s main airports—Bruxelles-Zaventem and Charleroi—have warned passengers of significant disruption, announcing that all departures on Wednesday will be cancelled and arrivals may also be affected due to staff participation in the strike.

Unions argue that proposed reforms to labour rules, pensions, and unemployment benefits threaten welfare security, demanding fair pensions and new taxation measures including a wealth and digital tax. Belgium’s government, which has recently reached a budget agreement, says the reforms are essential to safeguard the welfare system amid a deficit of 4.5% of GDP and debt above 104%.

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