Rail strike cripples rail services in southern England


              Passengers queue up for an express train to Gatwick Airport, running a reduced service as a result of a train strike, in Victoria rail station London, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2016.  A 48-hour strike starting Tuesday morning has crippled rail services in southern England as a long-running dispute continues to cause misery for hundreds of thousands of commuters in and out of London. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
Passengers queue up for an express train to Gatwick Airport, running a reduced service as a result of a train strike, in Victoria rail station London, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2016. A 48-hour strike starting Tuesday morning has crippled rail services in southern England as a long-running dispute continues to cause misery for hundreds of thousands of commuters in and out of London. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

LONDON (AP) - A 48-hour strike crippled rail services Tuesday in southern England as a long-running dispute triggered delayed and canceled journeys for hundreds of thousands of London commuters.

The dispute on Southern Railways about whether drivers or on-board guards should close the train doors has dragged on for months, and commuters have complained that some of them have lost their jobs in the ongoing chaos.

Drivers joined the picket lines Tuesday, ensuring that all of Southern's 2,242 weekday services were cancelled.

Another daylong strike is planned for Friday, meaning some 300,000 commuters in one of the most densely populated areas of Britain will have no train service for the much of the week.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling blamed the unions and urged talks. Unions attacked the government, saying the issue is one of safety and that ministers have been preventing Southern from negotiating properly.

Passengers traveling to Gatwick Airport were also affected, with an express service running every half hour rather than every 15 minutes.

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