Union officials have called off the threat of further industrial action on the London Underground after agreeing a deal with Transport for London (TfL).
The Transport Salaried Staffs Association (TSSA) announced it would be discontinuing its overtime ban and said it now expected to see "rapid improvement" in safety standards following the agreement.
The Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union called off its own strikes at the end of January after TfL said it would restore hundreds of jobs which had been cut under the former mayor Boris Johnson.
The London Underground has been hit by repeated industrial action since Mayor Sadiq Khan came into office, causing misery for thousands of commuters.
The most recent strikes, which took place in January, caused major travel disruption in the capital and closed almost 40% of stations on the Tube network.
The unions claimed that cutbacks to staffing levels, made as a result of a £700m cut in TfL's central government grant by 2020, had resulted in dangerous conditions for both passengers and staff.
More than 800 jobs were lost as part of Mr Johnson's "modernisation" of the Underground but TfL has agreed to reinstate almost 60% of these.
Commenting on Monday's deal, TSSA general secretary Manuel Cortes said: "Enormous credit must be paid to our members on our Tube.
"In refusing to work overtime for the last few months, they have proved beyond any doubt that our Tube was no longer employing enough people for stations to meet minimum legal staffing requirements to remain open, let alone deal with congestion or other major security issues.
"Boris Johnson's cull of over 800 jobs blew all safety procedures apart.
"Reassignments of staff from CCTV monitoring and evacuation responsibility on to gate lines to implement his deep cuts left staff terrified for their own safety, as well as that of passengers."
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