Yoon to review order to force striking truckers to return to work
SEOUL, Nov. 28 (Yonhap) -- President Yoon Suk-yeol will review an executive order to force striking truckers to return to work at a Cabinet meeting, a senior presidential official said Monday.
"(Yoon) will preside over a Cabinet meeting (Tuesday) to deliberate on the work resumption order for the Cargo Truckers Solidarity Union," Kim Eun-hye, senior presidential secretary for press affairs, said in a statement.
"The rule of law in the labor-management relations should be firmly established," Yoon said during a meeting with senior presidential aides earlier in the day, according to Kim. "It is important to firmly establish law and order regardless of whether illegal acts happen on the labor or management side."
Yoon has warned of invoking the work resumption order as a nationwide walkout by the union entered its fifth day to demand the extension of a freight rate system guaranteeing basic wages.
The strike is the second of its kind in five months and threatens to disrupt supply chains amid post-pandemic recovery efforts.
Earlier in the day, the government raised its warning of a cargo transport disruption to the highest level.

President Yoon Suk-yeol speaks during the inaugural meeting of export strategies at the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency in Seoul on Nov. 23, 2022. (Pool photo) (Yonhap)
kdh@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
Arrest warrant hearing for DP leader Lee to be held Tuesday
-
Actor Yoo Ah-in apologizes ahead of arrest warrant decision by court over illegal drug use
-
(2nd LD) N. Korea holds politburo meeting to discuss Kim-Putin summit: KCNA
-
Allies vow stern measures against Russia-N. Korea arms deal
-
S. Korea calls on Russia to 'transparently explain' its dealing with N. Korea amid suspected arms supply agreement
-
5 years after signing, future of inter-Korean military accord unclear
-
In desperation, N. Korea, Russia turn to one another for mutual assistance rivaling U.S.-S. Korea cooperation
-
Yoon seeks to carve out bigger role for S. Korea in Indo-Pacific, world
-
Despite gov't assurance, seafood safety woes spread in S. Korea over Japan's Fukushima plan
-
S. Korea-U.S.-Japan summit outcomes herald deeper, consistent security cooperation against N. Korean, other challenges: analysts