Key Points

Kerala grinds to a halt as 20,000 private buses strike over fare demands, crippling daily commutes. The KSRTC’s limited fleet fails to cover rural gaps, forcing reliance on costly alternatives. Operators threaten an indefinite strike if demands go unmet by July 22. A looming national trade union strike could worsen the chaos from Wednesday.

Key Points: Kerala Private Bus Strike Disrupts Life Amid Transport Crisis

  • Private bus strike halts Kerala transport over student fare hikes
  • KSRTC’s limited fleet leaves rural areas stranded
  • Auto-rickshaws exploit commuters amid chaos
  • National trade union strike threatens further disruptions
2 min read

Kerala comes to a standstill as private bus operators go on token strike

Kerala faces transport paralysis as 20,000 private buses strike over student fare demands, leaving commuters stranded ahead of a national strike.

"If the government fails to address demands, we’ll go indefinite from July 22 – Private Bus Operators"

Thiruvananthapuram, July 8

Normal life came to a standstill across Kerala on Tuesday after around 20,000 private buses were off the roads due to a token strike called by the operators.

The operators have been raising demands like an increase in charges for student concessions, steps to check fake concession cards, besides a few other demands for a while now.

With the talks with the Transport Commissioner failing, the operators decided to have a token strike on Tuesday. They have warned that if the government fails to address their demands in a week, they will have no other option but to go on an indefinite strike from July 22.

Incidentally, it’s the private buses which provide succour for the common man all across the state, as the state-owned Kerala State Road Transport Corporation has only around 6,200 buses.

Moreover, the KSRTC services are more concentrated in and around the main cities and towns, leaving the private buses to operate in the interior places in all the districts.

KSRTC has dominance only in the state capital city besides they operate long distances also, while the private buses operate more short distances services.

Consequent to the strike, the attendance in offices has been affected, and the same is the case in educational institutions which do not have their own services or other parallel services. Having a field day on Tuesday is the auto rickshaws and fly-by-night operators who operate small vans and buses in suburban areas and interior places.

A 24-hour national strike called by 10 central trade unions on a 17-point charter of demands will be observed on Wednesday. The strike will begin from Tuesday midnight, and is likely to paralyse the public transport system and normal life in Kerala. The state-level joint committee of trade unions have appealed to the general public to cooperate.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya M
The fake concession card issue is real! My neighbor's daughter has been using one even after graduating. Government should implement digital ID verification system to solve this. #DigitalKerala
S
Suresh K
Why can't KSRTC expand its services? We pay taxes but get poor public transport. Private operators fill this gap but now even they're struggling. Government must find permanent solution.
A
Anjali R
As a school teacher, I saw many students missing classes today. Education shouldn't suffer because of transport issues. Maybe schools can arrange temporary buses during such crises?
V
Vikram N
The timing with national strike tomorrow is terrible! Two days of transport chaos will hurt our economy. Both sides need to sit down and sort this out like mature people.
M
Meera P
While I sympathize with bus operators, this strike affects daily wage workers the most. Many couldn't reach work today. There must be better ways to protest without punishing common people.
K
Karthik V
This shows how dependent we are on private transport. Time to invest in metro expansion and better last-mile connectivity across Kerala. Can't keep relying on buses forever!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50