Gulf News

France strike grounds over 2,000 flights in Europe

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Thousands of flights were cancelled in France and Europe yesterday as a strike by French air traffic controller­s over pay caused stoppages not seen in decades.

Airlines cut more than half their normal flight schedules at Paris’s two main airports, Orly and Roissy Charles-deGaulle, with many flights in the southern city of Marseille also grounded.

Short and medium-haul flights were the worst affected, while long-haul services faced the least disruption.

Budget airline Ryanair reported 300 cancellati­ons yesterday, and easyJet and Transavia 200 each.

A total of some 2,300 flights arriving at or departing from French airports were forecast for yesterday, against 5,200 the day before, civil aviation authority DGAC told AFP.

Across Europe, some 2,000 more flights were cancelled and another 1,000 forced to change routes to avoid French airspace, the Airlines for Europe trade body said.

Record cancellati­ons

Cancellati­on numbers were at their highest “in 20 years”, said Augustin de Romanet, CEO of ADP, the company operating the capital’s airports.

On Wednesday, De Romanet had warned that “several tens of millions of euros” were at stake for airlines and airports “every strike day”.

Air traffic associatio­n IATA accused the French controller­s of “blackmail” and of making exorbitant demands.

A decision by the biggest air traffic controller union SNCTA on Wednesday to withdraw their strike call after a deal with management came too late to alleviate the mayhem as the DGAC had already ordered airlines to cancel most of their flights.

Three smaller unions, meanwhile, maintained their strike call. Delays for flights authorised to operate were moderate, DGAC said, with many only around 30 minutes late.

Across Europe, some 2,000 more flights were cancelled and another 1,000 forced to change routes to avoid French airspace, the Airlines for Europe trade body said.

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