IANS/Kolkata

Commuters Kolkata were greatly inconvenienced yesterday due to a 24-hour strike by taxi drivers against a fare hike and “police excesses.”
This is the tenth strike by local taxi drivers since August 2014.
Commuters were stranded and harried as taxis stayed off the roads again due to the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC)-sponsored strike.
The Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) and the Indian National Trade Union Congress (INTUC) also supported the protest.
Across the eastern city, long queues were seen at auto-rickshaw and cycle-rickshaw stands while buses plied at full capacity.
Residents in the districts of Howrah, Hooghly and South and North 24 Parganas were also affected.
The Bengal Taxi Association (BTA), which is not participating in the current agitation, provided services in key transit points like the airport and railway stations.
According to Bimal Guha of BTA, a helpline has been set up where passengers can get cab pick-ups from home.
Taxi drivers have pulled out their vehicles off the city roads on nine earlier occasions by calling wildcat strikes or protest walks as part of their stir against alleged police excesses.
At the centre of the dispute is the government decision to increase fine for passenger refusal from Rs100 to Rs3,000.
The government in August arrested 22 drivers for vandalism as they damaged taxis which did not heed their call for strike and continued plying. They were released on bail after spending four days in jail. Around 37,000 taxis ply in the city.



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