Khaleej Times

Pilots’ strike causes more turbulence at Ryanair

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frankfurt — Ryanair pilots across Europe staged a coordinate­d 24-hour strike on Friday to push their demands for better pay and conditions, plunging tens of thousands of passengers into transport chaos at the peak of the busy summer season.

The Irish no-frills airline was forced to scrap some 400 out of 2,400 scheduled European flights as pilots in Ireland, Germany, Belgium, Sweden and the Netherland­s walked off the job.

Around 55,000 passengers are affected by the strikes, said Ryanair, which has offered customers refunds or the option of rebooking their journeys.

Ryanair has slammed the stoppages as “unnecessar­y” but pilots counter that the carrier has refused to engage in meaningful dialogue about collective labour agreements since it began recognisin­g unions in December 2017.

Germany is worst hit by the industrial action, with 250 flights scrapped at 10 airports. The country’s powerful Cockpit union said it had called on Ryanair’s roughly 480 Germany-based pilots to walk out from 03:01am (0101GMT) until 02:59am on Saturday.

“There needs to be a rethink at the Dublin company headquarte­rs on how employees are treated,” said Ingolf Schumacher, who heads Cockpit’s salary policy division.

“Ryanair said there is not one extra cent for personnel costs,” he added. “Therefore, no improvemen­t is possible.”

In Belgium, around two dozen pilots protested at Charleroi airport, wearing mock badges with slogans like “Ryanair must change” or “Respect us”.

In the Netherland­s, Ryanair lost a bid to obtain an urgent court order to try to prevent Dutch pilots from joining the industrial action, but the airline said flights to and from the country would not be cancelled.

Belgian passenger Stephane Levens, who had to cancel several business meetings after her return flight from Italy was scrapped, was sanguine about the disruption.

“You know what to expect when you’re a Ryanair customer, they’re the cheapest,” she told Belgian broadcaste­r RTBF. Belgian consumer protection group Test Achats meanwhile announced it was taking Ryanair to the European Court of Justice to demand compensati­on for affected passengers.

The organisati­on rubbished Ryanair’s claim that the strikes were a case of force majeure, and said under EU legislatio­n passengers were entitled to between €250 and €600 ($285-$690) in compensati­on payouts.

The unpreceden­ted cross-border strike action is the biggest escalation yet in Ryanair’s long-simmering dispute with cockpit and cabin crews. The airline already suffered a round of strikes by cockpit and cabin crew last month that disrupted 600 flights in Belgium, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain, affecting 100,000 travellers.

Ryanair, which carries some 130 million passengers annually, averted widespread Christmas strikes last year by agreeing to recognise trade unions for the first time in its 33-year history. —

ryanair said there is not one extra cent for personnel costs. therefore, no improvemen­t is possible Ingolf Schumacher,

 ?? AFP ?? Cancelled Ryanair flights are seen on the announceme­nt board as passengers catch up on sleep in the terminal at Schoenefel­d Airport in Berlin on Friday. —
AFP Cancelled Ryanair flights are seen on the announceme­nt board as passengers catch up on sleep in the terminal at Schoenefel­d Airport in Berlin on Friday. —

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