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Commuter misery: Tube strikes and website issues

Commuter misery deepened this morning as the Transport for London website crashed, on the first day of a week of tube strikes.

People clicking on specific lines to find out more about the impact of a five-day strike by the RMT union were greeted with an “internal service error” message earlier this morning.

This appears to be fixed now, but the journey planner section on the TfL website is still not working.

The series of strikes will mean almost no tube trains running until Friday, with other transport in the capital likely to be affected by crowding and congestion.

The RMT union has batted back pleas to call off the industrial action, involving about 10,000 workers, as it attempts to secure a shorter working week as part of pay negotiations.

London’s other rail services – the Elizabeth line, London Overground and National Rail services – will continue to run, as will buses. Some central rail stations with tube interchanges will be closed.

Shelly Asquith, health & safety policy officer at Trades Union Congress, said on X:

A very good morning to all London Underground workers on strike today

Fatigue from long hours and extremely early or late shift work takes a major toll on the body, increasing likelihood physical and mental health conditions

You deserve better! #tubestrike @TfL @RMTunion

— Shelly Asquith (@ShellyAsquith) September 8, 2025

Economist Ben Ramanauskas, a former government adviser, said:

The @RMTunion shouldn’t be able to hold Londoners to ransom and stifle the UK’s economic growth. As much of TFL as possible needs to be automated ASAP. In the meantime the Tube should be declared an essential service and its workers banned from striking.

— Ben Ramanauskas (@BenRamanauskas) September 8, 2025

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Protests expected as 51 Israeli arms makers among exhibitors at London trade fair

Fifty-one Israeli arms makers and the US defence giant behind the F-35 fighters used to bomb Gaza are among the 1,600 exhibitors at the biennial DSEI trade show that begins in London’s Docklands on Tuesday.

Their presence will be the focus for hundreds planning to demonstrate outside the four-day arms fair, at which the defence secretary, John Healey, is expected to speak alongside senior British military officials.

Campaign Against Arms Trade (Caat) said Israel’s three biggest arms companies – Elbit Systems, Rafael and Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) – were among those planning to attend despite the UK barring an Israeli government delegation last month.

Emily Apple, Caat’s media coordinator, said the British government had reached “peak complicity in genocide” in allowing Israeli arms makers to exhibit, a decision that she said allowed “companies to market their genocide-tested weapons” to international buyers.

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