Air France passengers grounded by strike

Agence France-Presse

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Air France passengers grounded by strike
'Air France regrets this situation and is making every effort to minimize the inconvenience this strike action may cause to its customers,' it says in a statement

PARIS, France – Half of Air France’s long-haul flights out of Paris were cancelled on Thursday, February 22, due to a strike over pay by pilots, cabin crew and ground staff.

The airline said it expected only 28% of the staff to walk off the job, allowing it to maintain 75% of its service but only 50% of long-haul flights out of the French capital.

There were no reports of major disruptions at Charles de Gaulle or Orly airports Thursday morning.

Ahead of the strike the carrier advised travellers to postpone their trips until February 27 at no extra cost.

“Air France regrets this situation and is making every effort to minimize the inconvenience this strike action may cause to its customers,” it said in a statement.

Salaries at Air France have been frozen since 2011.

After years of job cuts and other cost-cutting measures the staff are demanding a 6% pay increase.

Management has said that such an increase would be “irresponsible” at a time when it is attempting to lower its costs to compete with low-cost carriers such as Ryanair and Easyjet.

It is offering a basic increase of 1% and a top-up for ground staff. 

A dozen trade unions representing various categories of workers have dismissed the offer as “small change” and threatened more strikes.

The Air France-KLM group, Europe’s second-biggest airline which is 17.6% owned by the French state, has been plagued by strikes and labour disputes in its French operations in recent years. 

Two French company executives had their shirts torn off in 2015 by workers protesting its plans to cut nearly 3,000 jobs.

In 2017, the airline’s fortunes improved dramatically, with operating profits soaring 42% to 1.49 billion euros ($1.84 billion), around one-third of which came from Air France.

Air France CEO Franck Terner said Wednesday that despite the improvement, the results still paled beside those of British Airways or Lufthansa and called for a “realistic balance” between rewarding staff for past sacrifices and setting aside money for ongoing investment. – Rappler.com

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