French air traffic controllers plan strike for Sept 18

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A strike by air traffic controllers in France in early July 2025 brought chaos to European skies.

A strike by air traffic controllers in France in early July 2025 brought chaos to European skies.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • French air traffic controllers, led by SNCTA, will strike on Sept 18 over pay and working conditions due to "fruitless dialogue".
  • SNCTA demands pay adjustments for inflation, criticising French authorities for widening the gap with European counterparts.
  • Unions also denounce "toxic management practices" and "chronic understaffing", heightening fears of political and financial instability.

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PARIS - French air traffic controllers are planning to launch a new strike on Sept 18 for better pay and conditions, the main union in the sector, the SNCTA, said in a statement.

“On numerous occasions, the SNCTA has favoured social dialogue and made concrete proposals,” said the union, which represents around 60 per cent of workers.

“It is clear that this fruitless dialogue is now blocking any prospect of progress and reform,” said the statement, released this week and seen by AFP on Aug 28.

The union called for “a profound change in the management of operations”, complaining of “mistrust, punitive practices and humiliating management methods”.

The announcement follows

a strike by French air traffic controllers in early July

that brought chaos to European skies. Then, flights booked by hundreds of thousands of people were cancelled at the start of the summer vacation period.

The industrial action in July was launched by smaller unions, while the SNCTA abstained.

The SNCTA union said in this week’s statement that pay for air traffic controllers must be adjusted for inflation.

“Authorities are widening the gap with their European counterparts and undermining the purchasing power of French air traffic controllers,” the group said.

UNSA-ICNA, the second biggest labour group in the sector, which launched the industrial action in July, has decried “toxic management practices”.

The union has also criticised “chronic understaffing” and outdated equipment.

The timing of the new strike is acute, with many fearing that France risks a new period of prolonged political and financial instability.

The French government may fall

in a budget standoff in September, and an anti-government campaign dubbed “Bloquons tout” (“Let’s block everything”), backed by the left, has urged the French to stage a nationwide shutdown on Sept 10. AFP

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