Lufthansa is engaged in a long-run pay dispute with
pilots. Photo/AFP
In Summary
· The stoppage, called by the
pilots' union Cockpit, affected Lufthansa flights at airports across Germany.
· Out of its roughly 3,000 scheduled flights, 876 were cancelled due to the strike, "affecting some 100,000 passengers", the airline also said.
· "Lufthansa has taken note, with complete incomprehension, of the announcement the Cockpit pilots' union will continue its strike on Thursday even before its start on Wednesday," the company said in a statement.
· Out of its roughly 3,000 scheduled flights, 876 were cancelled due to the strike, "affecting some 100,000 passengers", the airline also said.
· "Lufthansa has taken note, with complete incomprehension, of the announcement the Cockpit pilots' union will continue its strike on Thursday even before its start on Wednesday," the company said in a statement.
Frankfurt am Main, Germany |
AFP |.Germany's flagship carrier Lufthansa cancelled nearly 900 flights
Wednesday because of a strike by pilots, causing travel disruption for tens of
thousands of passengers in the latest escalation of a long-simmering pay
dispute.
The stoppage, called by the
pilots' union Cockpit, affected Lufthansa flights at airports across Germany.
Out of its roughly 3,000
scheduled flights, 876 were cancelled due to the strike, "affecting some
100,000 passengers", the airline also said.
"Lufthansa has taken note,
with complete incomprehension, of the announcement the Cockpit pilots' union
will continue its strike on Thursday even before its start on Wednesday,"
the company said in a statement.It is the union's 14th strike since April 2014.
Cockpit had initially called
for a 24-hour stoppage but said late Tuesday that the strike would continue
into Thursday for both long- and short-haul flights leaving Germany.
Meanwhile a separate walkout by
cabin crew at Lufthansa's low-cost airline Eurowings led to the cancellation of
more than 60 flights at airports in Hamburg and Duesseldorf on Tuesday.
Lufthansa group's other
airlines-German wings, Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Air Dolomiti and Brussels
Airlines-are not impacted by the strike.
The industrial action was
called by Germany's biggest services union Verdi in a row over pay and working
conditions.
The Lufthansa pilots going on
strike are demanding a pay rise of an average of 3.66 percent per year,
retroactive for the past five years.
The union says pilots have
endured a wage freeze over that time and suffered a "significant loss of
purchasing power" due to inflation, while Lufthansa has made billions in
profits. It had offered a 2.5 percent wage hike.
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