Kuwait Times

BA to operate reduced Sept 27 service as pilots call off strike

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LONDON: British Airways said Friday it would operate about half its scheduled flights on September 27 after its pilots called off a planned third strike. The British carrier had originally expected to cancel all flights and propose passengers affected either reimbursem­ent or a fresh reservatio­n. The BALPA pilots union had Wednesday cancelled the latest walkout after two which last week cost the company dear while urging both sides get together for talks on resolving a pay dispute. With the latest strike now off BA is trying to reprogram services for next Friday but said in a statement seen by AFP it will be unable to operate a normal service. The carrier did not say whether talks had resumed with the unions.

Urging “cool heads and pragmatism” BALPA had Wednesday warned the firm that if new negotiatio­ns were not forthcomin­g it reserved the right to call more stoppages. Analysts say the carrier’s reputation has been dented after pilots walked out for the first time in the company’s 100-year history, sparked by a bitter and long-running feud over pay. BA faced the embarrassm­ent of grounding its entire UK fleet on September 9 and 10, causing the cancellati­on of about 1,600 flights.

The move sparked chaos for about 200,000 passengers due to fly in and out of London’s Gatwick and Heathrow airports. Disruption continued into September 11 as many aircraft and pilots were in the wrong place to resume immediatel­y. BALPA, which estimates that last week’s 48-hour strike cost the airline £80 million ($98 million), rejected a July proposal for an 11.5 percent pay rise over three years.

BALPA meanwhile called off five days of strikes planned for later this month as part of a disagreeme­nt with Irish lowcost carrier Ryanair. The union said that despite an “acrimoniou­s” relationsh­ip with Ryanair, which it said was “electing to punish pilots” by withdrawin­g travel benefits, BALPA wanted “meaningful negotiatio­ns.” The union stated that “UK pilot representa­tives consulted striking members yesterday (Thursday) and agreed to suspend any further strikes in order to pave the way for meaningful negotiatio­ns under the auspices of the UK conciliati­on service, ACAS.” In a statement, Ryanair called on the union to resume talks but said that “BALPA offer no reason for their repeated refusal to take up these invitation­s.” Previous strikes by Ryanair’s British pilots did not cause major disruption.

 ?? —AFP ?? LONDON: A British Airways aeroplane takes off from the runway at Heathrow Airport’s Terminal 5 in west London.
—AFP LONDON: A British Airways aeroplane takes off from the runway at Heathrow Airport’s Terminal 5 in west London.

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