Albuquerque Journal

Germany airport strikes set to force flight cancellati­ons

- BY BRYAN PIETSCH THE WASHINGTON POST

Airport staff across northern Germany are set to strike on Monday, forcing the cancellati­ons of hundreds of flights, with tens of thousands of passengers expected to be impacted.

Verdi, the regional trade union, called for staff to strike at airports in Berlin, Hamburg, Hanover and Bremen. At Berlin Brandenbur­g Airport, security staff are striking because of unsuccessf­ul collective bargaining over pay for night and weekend shifts.

The collective action is the latest in a number of labor demonstrat­ions across Europe this winter.

The strike at Berlin’s airport has forced 200 departing flights to be canceled, affecting 27,000 passengers, a notice on the city’s website said.

Hamburg Airport warned that “no regular departures will be possible” from 10 p.m. Sunday to 11 p.m. Monday. Arriving flights “will still be possible,” but they may be delayed or canceled, the airport said. At least 123 departing f lights scheduled for Monday will be impacted, with an additional 121 arriving flights potentiall­y delayed or canceled, the airport said. It noted that more than 30,000 passengers could be affected.

Flights were “heavily booked” for Saturday and Tuesday to make up for the canceled f lights, the airport said.

Lufthansa said in an email that it was expecting “massive disruption­s to flight operations and a significan­t number of flight cancellati­ons” on Monday in Germany.

The airline was notifying customers, offering alternativ­e flight paths and, when possible, rebooking them on trains, a Lufthansa spokespers­on said, noting that the strike was over a dispute between the union and the airports, not with the airlines. Operations were expected to be back to normal as early as Tuesday, the spokespers­on said.

Germany is not alone in being disrupted by strikes this winter. About a halfmillio­n workers — from teachers to bus drivers to airport staff — walked off the job in Britain last month during disputes over pay and working conditions. .

Thousands of French workers last week protested a plan by French President Emmanuel Macron to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. The French Senate passed the measure Saturday evening.

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