WIRE — 23-hour national walkout by high-speed rail workers set to cause delays and cancellations across much of Italy. Staff at Italy's private high-speed rail operator Italo will strike for 23 hours on Thursday 9 July, in the latest of a wave of transport strikes affecting Italy this month. The strike, called by the UIL Trasporti union, is scheduled from 03.00 on Thursday 9 July until 02.00 on Friday 10 July. According to Italy's rail infrastructure operator RFI, the strike is due to affect Italo's high-speed services in multiple regions including Calabria, Campania, Emilia Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Lazio, Liguria, Lombardia, Molise, Piemonte, Puglia, Trentino Alto Adige, Tuscany and Veneto. Expected disruption The strike may cause cancellations, delays and route or timetable changes across Italo's main high-speed lines, potentially affecting connections between Turin, Milan, Bologna, Florence, Rome, Naples, Salerno and destinations across southern Italy. The scale of disruption will depend on how many staff join the action, so passengers are advised to check the status of their train before travelling. As required under Italian rules on strikes affecting essential public services, a minimum number of guaranteed services will continue to run throughout the day. Italo publishes a list of these guaranteed trains on its official website, which passengers are encouraged to check before departure, along with any last-minute updates via the company's app or customer service channels. Trains already under way when the strike begins are not automatically affected: services due to arrive within an hour of the strike's start can continue to their final destination, while others may be terminated at an intermediate station, where staff will assist passengers with alternative travel arrangements. Passengers whose trains are cancelled or significantly altered can contact Italo's customer service to rebook or request a refund under the applicable conditions of carriage. The strike, which has been called to demand better working conditions for Italo staff, forms part of a broader pattern of transport walkouts this summer, following a national airport and airline strike on 5 July and ahead of a further nationwide rail strike scheduled for 24 July. For the official strike calendar see the Italian transport ministry website. Photo credit: Markus Mainka / Shutterstock.com

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