The Phnom Penh Post

Pilot strike grounds 18 China Airlines flights

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A ST R I K E by pi lot s ha s forced China Airlines (CAL), one of Ta iwa n’s t wo major carriers, to cancel 18 internatio­na l f lig hts, t he of f icia l Central News Agency reported early on Friday.

Among the destinatio­ns which will see flights to or from Taiwan cancelled are Los Angeles, Manila, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Bangkok, the agency reported. Informatio­n on affected flights is also posted on the airline’s website.

It is t he f irst t ime t hat air t ravel in Ta iwan has been disrupted by a strike during a Chinese New Year holiday, according to Centra l News Agency. Taiwan’s nine-day break for Chinese New Year will end on Sunday.

The main bone of contention between China Airlines and its pilots is workload, the report said. Pilots demanded on Friday that the company beef up crews to address the problem, otherwise they will go on strike indefinite­ly.

“We are asking the company to remove factors that cause pilots fatigue and threaten flight safety,” Pilots Union Taoyuan chairwoman Lee Hsin-yen told a news conference.

She said CAL should assign four pilots and co-pilots instead of the usual three to all flights of more than 12 hours and three cockpit crew instead of two for flights of at least eight hours. The pilots also want CAL to establish a transparen­t promotion system and hire more Taiwanese instead of foreign pilots.

More than 100 of the union’s 900 members – representi­ng 80 per cent of CAL’s pilots – were on strike and the number was growing, Lee said.

In a separate news conference, CAL said current staffing is legal and that the proposed move would significan­tly increase operationa­l cost of the company and reduce its competitiv­eness.

The airline said the strike has so far only affected 18 flights, or 10 per cent of its transport capacity, urging passengers not to panic as it will work with other airlines to send them to their destinatio­ns.

The issue of over work for t he a v i at ion s e c t or h a s a lways been a trick y one in Taiwan, as under its Aircraft F l ig ht Operat ion Reg u lat ions (AOR) – which a re aligned wit h global av iation industr y standards – a cabin crew may not perform more than 14 hours of work within a 24-hour period on internatio­na l f lights.

Taiwan’s Labour Standards Act stipulates, however, that no worker can work for more than 12 hours per day, even with overtime.

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