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’All I want to do is get on my train, drink my Thatchers and be happy’ – rail chaos fury

’All I want to do is get on my train, drink my Thatchers and be happy’ – rail chaos fury


To the fury of rail passengers across Britain, the resumption of train services after a four-day Christmas strike turned into a shambles in many locations.

At London Paddington, hub for the west of England and South Wales, thousands of travellers hoping to return home after Christmas breaks turned up to catch trains that did not exist.

The first wave of departures to Cardiff, Oxford, Bristol and Plymouth was wiped out by overrunning engineering works at North Pole depot, close to Paddington.

Adrian Bevan was trying to get home from Paddington to Newton Abbot in Devon. “My train is nearly two hours late already,” he told The Independent. “It’s ridiculous. Just a disaster, again. Very, very disappointed, again.

“All I want to do is get on my train, drink my Thatchers and be happy.”

Two American tourists were last seen heading for the exit from Paddington having booked a car to take them to a spa hotel Moreton-in-Marsh in the Cotswolds at a cost of £320. “We’ve already paid for treatments, and they start at 1pm,” they said as they left.

“I’ve been here since 7am,” said Tom Davies, who was hoping to get home to Swansea in time to work at 2pm.

“There’s not been much communication. They said 10 o’clock they’d be opening back up, then they said half-past. So who knows? It could be any time. Looks like I’ll be late for work.”

The first trains left just before 11am, at least 97 minutes behind the intended start of services.

A spokesperson for Great Western Railway (GWR) said: “Network Rail and GWR teams have been working hard to keep passengers as up to date as possible in a rapidly changing situation, and we’re sorry for customers inconvenienced this morning.

“We are expecting delays to reduce over the coming hours, but there may be some continued disruption on some routes throughout the day.”

With far fewer trains during the morning, passengers were left standing on stations including Reading, Swindon and Stroud due to extreme overcrowding. At Reading, travellers hoping to catch nonstop trains to London Paddington were directed to the much slower, all-stations Elizabeth Line.

Elsewhere in Britain, similar scenes were playing out after the four-day strike by members of the RMT union working for Network Rail.

The private operator Lumo combined its first two departures from Edinburgh to London after…

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