Hundreds of thousands of British public sector workers went on strike Thursday to defend their pensions, causing widespread school closures in a major challenge to the year-old government.
Jobcentres, tax offices and museums were also closed across the country as four unions called out up to 6,00,000 workers to protest against plans to make them work longer and pay more into their pensions.
However, airport operator BAA said fears of delays at London Heathrow from a walkout by immigration and customs staff had failed to materialise on Thursday morning.
Prime minister David Cameron said the strike was premature as the changes were still being negotiated, and warned that with an ageing population reform was inevitable because 'the pension system is in danger of going broke'.
Action by three education unions caused the closure of about a third of schools in England and the disruption of another third, according to the Department for Education. There was also widespread disruption in Wales.
Picket lines were also set up outside government buildings, law courts and even the British Museum, and several thousand people gathered for a march in London, brandishing banners calling for 'Fair pensions for all'.
'I will lose £60,000 (66,000 euros, $96,000), I'll pay an extra £60 a month and I'll have to work seven or eight years longer' under the reforms, said Richard Jones, a 39-year-old civil servant on the march.
It looks set to be the largest public sector strike since one million local government workers walked out in March 2006, and some union leaders have warned it may only be the beginning of months of industrial unrest over pensions.
Cameron's Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition has been the focal point of public sector anger after it announced a two-year pay freeze and 3,30,000 job losses by 2015 in an attempt to rein in a record budget deficit.
Source : New Age