THE London Tube strike will go ahead today with the capital facing further travel disruption.
The second of this week's 24-hour strikes has officially already begun as thousands of workers walked out at 12.01am.
Londoners and commuters face a struggle getting around and people have been urged to work from home by TfL.
Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union have crippled the network with industrial action in a bitter dispute over jobs, pensions and conditions.
Furious central London business leaders have slammed the walkout as a "kick in the teeth".
A stoppage on Tuesday led to the Tube being suspended during the rush hour, with only a handful of services running later in the day.
Disruption continued on Wednesday morning, with a knock-on impact on services expected on Friday as well.
TfL have said there are likely to be no Tube services at all today with the strike action will last until 11.59pm on Thursday.
There are fears of a repeat of huge queues and chaotic scenes at bus and taxi ranks as people switched to other forms of public transport to get to work.
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The RMT fears that spending cuts linked to a funding deal by the Government will lead to hundreds of job losses, reduced pensions and worse working conditions.
Andy Lord, TfL's chief operating officer, said: "I would ask anyone who needs to use the Tube on Thursday to check before they make their journey, consider whether they are able to work from home and use alternative modes of transport where possible.
"It's highly unlikely there will be an Underground service running during the strike action and, if any service is provided, it will not continue into the evening.
"Services will also be severely impacted until mid-morning on Friday March 4 because of a number of factors including the placement of drivers and trains following a day without service.
"I apologise to customers for this and understand they will be frustrated by this strike action, but urge them not to take it out on those who are trying to help.
"We haven't proposed any changes to pensions or terms and conditions, and nobody has lost or will lose their jobs because of the proposals we have set out, so this action is completely unnecessary.
"We know our customers deserve better than this continued disruption and that is why we're urging the RMT to talk to us so we can find a resolution to this dispute which has already damaged London's recovery from the pandemic."
RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said: "If London mayor Sadiq Khan spent as much time putting pressure on ministers for a long-term TfL funding deal, instead of accepting their cuts agenda and attacking our members, there would be no need for a strike.
"However, as it stands, Tube staff face a raid on their pensions and at least 600 job cuts if the Government get their way.
"No self-respecting trade unionist would accept that, particularly given the sterling work done by Tube staff keeping Londoners safe throughout the Covid-19 pandemic."
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