Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Lufthansa pilots' strike grounds around 20,000 passengers


A new walkout by Lufthansa pilots on Tuesday (Sep 30) forced the cancellation of 50 flights in Frankfurt, Germany's busiest airport, affecting roughly 20,000 passengers, the airline said.

Flights in and out of the hub were being affected but a company spokesman said the situation was calm and that Lufthansa was confident it would operate all 32 flights it had promised would take off.

In its fourth labour action in recent weeks, the pilots' union Vereinigung Cockpit called on its members to strike on long-haul flights departing from the airport between 8am and 11pm (2pm Tuesday and 5am Wednesday Singapore time). Affected were flights operated on Airbus A380, A330 and A340 aircraft, as well as Boeing 747 jets. "The situation in Frankfurt is calm. It seems like a normal day," the spokesman told AFP.

Lufthansa's pilots are striking over changes to their retirement benefits being introduced as part of deep restructuring in recent years to bring down the German carrier's costs. Pilots can currently take paid early retirement from the age of 55. They are fighting a plan by the airline to raise the minimum age and to involve pilots in the financing of their pensions.

Tuesday's work stoppage was the fourth by the pilots' union in recent series of bottom-line-hitting operations. The first strike at the end of August hit Lufthansa's low-cost subsidiary Germanwings. The second walkout hit Frankfurt and the third stoppage targeted Munich airport, Germany's second-busiest air hub.

Vereinigung Cockpit already grounded thousands of Lufthansa flights during three days of strikes in March and April, costing the airline around 60 million euros (US$76 million).

Many of Europe's older airlines are running into opposition from powerful unions as they try to cut costs to compete with budget rivals. On Sunday, Air France's main pilots' union ended the longest strike in the carrier's history to allow "calmer" talks to go ahead over the contentious issue of the airline's low-cost subsidiary Transavia.

SOURCE


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