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Chile offers striking workers a 9.5 percent raise

  • Story Highlights
  • 450,000 Chilean municipal workers have been on strike since Monday
  • Workers want 14.5 percent annual raise; government initially offered 6.5 percent
  • Striking workers have been marching in most major cities in Chile this week
  • Meanwhile garbage piling up, taxes not collected, weddings not performed
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(CNN) -- The government of Chile has offered nearly half a million striking municipal workers a 9.5 percent wage increase and the Congress is expected to vote on it Thursday, officials said.

A banner in Santiago, Chile, supports a 14.5 percent pay increase for striking workers.

A banner in Santiago, Chile, supports a 14.5 percent pay increase for striking workers.

The 450,000 workers, who have been on strike since Monday, are asking for a 14.5 percent pay increase. The government had initially offered a 6.5 percent increase.

A 9.5 percent increase would be the highest since the 9.9 percent accorded in 1997, El Mercurio newspaper reported.

Striking workers have taken to the streets this week, marching in most of the nation's major cities.

The nation was paralyzed for two days last week when the workers went on strike. The public employees have not set an end date for the strike.

Because of the strike, garbage is piling up on streets, tax and fee collection has stopped and public health and education are practically paralyzed. Even weddings and autopsies are not being performed.

All About ChileLabor Strikes and Disputes

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