Audio By Carbonatix
Germany's transport network will be at a near standstill on Monday as two of the country's largest unions strike.
Staff at airports, ports, railways, buses and subways walked out shortly after midnight for a 24-hour stoppage.
Unions are demanding higher wages to help their members cope with the rising cost of living across the country.
There have been multiple smaller walkouts by other public service sectors, but Monday's will be the largest in decades in the country.
The two unions involved in the strike are among the largest in Germany.

Verdi represents around 2.5 million employees across the public sector including in public transport and at airports.
EVG represents around 230,000 employees at Deutsche Bahn - Germany's national rail operator, and other bus companies.
They hope it will increase pressure on employers ahead of another round of pay negotiations on Monday.
Frank Werneke, the chief of Verdi described the pay rise as "a matter of survival for many thousands of employees, according to local media.
"The people are not only underpaid, they are hopelessly overworked," he said.
Verdi wants to secure a 10.5% pay rise for staff, while the other union involved, EVG, wants a 12% raise.
Germany's national rail operator, Deutsche Bahn, condemned the plans and described it as "completely excessive, groundless and unnecessary".
At Munich Airport on Sunday, multiple flights were disrupted by the walkout.
Germany's airport association said about 380,000 air travellers would be affected by the strike but added that it was "beyond any imaginable and justifiable measure".
Some employer representatives warn the unions are making unreasonable demands which risk alienating the public.
However, some unions have succeeded in winning wage increases, including postal workers who won an 11.5% pay rise in early march.
Latest Stories
-
Barcelona reach Copa del Rey quarter-finals
6 minutes -
Players need social skills for World Cup – Tuchel
10 minutes -
Labubu toy manufacturer exploited workers, labour group claims
15 minutes -
Lawerh Foundation, AyaPrep to introduce Dangme-language maths module
45 minutes -
US forces seize a sixth Venezuela-linked oil tanker in Caribbean Sea
55 minutes -
Votes being counted in Uganda election as opposition alleges rigging
1 hour -
Ntim Fordjour accuses government of deliberate LGBT push in schools
1 hour -
National security task force storms ‘trotro’ terminals to halt illegal fare hikes
1 hour -
U.S. visa restriction development for Ghana concerning – Samuel Jinapor
1 hour -
Uganda election chief says he has had threats over results declaration
1 hour -
Quality control lapses allowed LGBT content into teachers’ manual – IFEST
1 hour -
Akufo-Addo’s name will be “written in gold” in Ghana’s history in the fullness of time – Jinapor
1 hour -
Tread cautiously about financial hedging – US-based Associate Professor to BoG
1 hour -
LGBTQ curriculum row: Quality control failure, not timing, caused teacher manual controversy – Dr Anti-Partey
1 hour -
Banks wrote-off GH¢1.39bn as bad debt in 10-months of 2025
1 hour
