The Phnom Penh Post

Fliers grounded in strike-hit Germany, France

- Tom Barfield

TENS of thousands of air passengers were stranded on Tuesday as aviation giants Lufthansa and Air France were hit by strikes that crippled traffic at several major European airports.

Germany’s biggest carrier Lufthansa was forced to cancel 800 out of 1,600 scheduled flights, including 58 long-haul flights, as German public sector workers including ground crew and airport firefighte­rs walked out between 5am and 6pm.

Tuesday’s “warning strike” hit Germany’s biggest airport Frankfurt as well as other regional hubs such as Munich, Cologne and Bremen.

Other airports such as Hamburg, Leipzig and Hanover were hit with knock-on effects. Half of the flights at Munich were delayed or cancelled according to the union Verdi, reported national news agency DPA.

Beyond airports, local transport, kindergart­ens, rubbish collection and hospitals were also affected as civil servants walked out to demand a 6 percent pay raise for the 2.3 million people working for Germany’s federal, state and local government­s.

Warning strikes lasting a few hours are a familiar ploy by worker representa­tives ahead of sector-wide talks on pay and conditions.

Given the country’s economic strength, “when if not now should there be significan­t pay increases for workers, including those in the public sector?” asked Verdi leader Frank Bsirske at Frankfurt airport. “We’re determined to achieve this.”

But the ADV airport operators’ associatio­n accused unions of “lacking all proportion­ality” with the strike disrupting tens of thousands of journeys – 90,000 at Lufthansa alone – and whose costs they said would run into the millions.

In unrelated industrial action in France, air traffic was also severely disrupted as the country’s biggest airline Air France was forced to cancel one in four flights, in the sixth round of strikes launched by its employees since February.

Around 65 percent of longhaul flights will depart as planned, the carrier said, with higher proportion­s on schedule among medium- and short-haul services from Paris and other French airports.

The group said the strikes between February 22 and April 11 were estimated to cost € 170 million ($210 million).

However, several Air France unions have called four further days of industrial action in April as they also seek a 6-percent pay raise.

Managers say the company is not growing solidly enough to justify such salary boosts, which they reckon would cost 240 million euros per year.

Air France’s labour woes come at the same time as disruption for French state rail operator SNCF. Workers are staging repeated walkouts in a bid to scare the government off a planned reform to the national icon and to the special status its employees enjoy.

 ?? CARMEN JASPERSEN/AFP ?? Workers hold placards reading ‘We are worth it’ during a warning strike called by German union Verdi on Tuesday outside Bremen’s airport, northern Germany.
CARMEN JASPERSEN/AFP Workers hold placards reading ‘We are worth it’ during a warning strike called by German union Verdi on Tuesday outside Bremen’s airport, northern Germany.

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