Hundreds of Lufthansa flights cancelled as pilots strike again over pay

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Lufthansa airplanes are seen parked on the tarmac during a strike of cabin crew union (UFO) at Frankfurt airport, Germany November 7, 2019.

The last pilots’ strike at Lufthansa took place in mid-March.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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FRANKFURT - Hundreds of Lufthansa flights were cancelled on April 13 as pilots kicked off a strike over pay and pensions, the latest walkout at the German aviation giant this year.

Half of all long-distance flights and two-thirds of short-haul services were cancelled at Lufthansa, the group’s main airline, on the first day of the two-day industrial action, the company said.

Pilots at its CityLine and Eurowings subsidiaries are also participating in the walkout.

Pilots’ union Vereinigung Cockpit said on the afternoon of April 13 that more than 700 flights had been cancelled, adding in a statement that it was “ready for discussions at any time” so long as “realistic offers” were on the table.

The most recent strike by pilots, before the current walkout, took place in mid-March.

On April 11, a Lufthansa spokesman had denounced the strike, calling the union’s demands for higher pay and pensions “absurd and unfeasible”.

But the union’s president, Mr Andreas Pinheiro, said the airline had “shown no tangible willingness to find a solution during several rounds of negotiations”.

“Although we deliberately refrained from any strike action during the Easter holidays, no serious proposal was made,” he added.

Lufthansa cabin crews went on strike on April 10, forcing the cancellation of around 90 per cent of flights at Lufthansa and CityLine, the UFO cabin crew union said. AFP


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