Lufthansa cabin crew extends strike, disrupting 58,000 travellers

NULL

Deutsche Lufthansa AG cabin crews extended their strike into Saturday, disrupting the plans of an estimated 58,000 passengers flying from Frankfurt and Dusseldorf. Following a nine-hour walkout in both cities on Friday, the flight attendants began a 17-hour work stoppage at the two airports that led to the cancellation of 520 flights, company spokesman Boris Ogursky said by phone. Those on strike are responding to a call by the UFO union that’s disputing retirement changes for crews sought by Lufthansa to save money. With the union announcing its strike plans with little notice, Lufthansa scrambled to inform passengers of cancellations, Ogursky said. The company sent 27,000 short texts or e-mails to fliers, he said. “We’re prepared operatively,” said the Frankfurt-based spokesman. Lufthansa has sought to re-book flights with partner airlines, offer train tickets, waive cancellation fees and arrange hotel accommodation. Talks between Lufthansa and UFO broke down on Nov. 3. The union said on its website that the carrier is on track to have its most successful year ever. Stoppages will continue through Nov. 13, it said, while no strike is planned for Sunday. Munich will be unaffected by walkouts through the weekend because of local travelers returning at the end of school vacations in southern Germany. The strike could become the longest by Lufthansa’s cabin crews. The flight attendants’ previous large-scale walkout was a three-day protest in 2012 that cost the carrier 33 million euros ($35 million) after 1,500 flights were scrapped. That compares with the 352 million euros and 9,700 cancellations tied to a series of pilot strikes since last year. UFO has agreed to a switch of Lufthansa’s pension system to a defined-contribution program from defined benefits. The airline said this week that the union is seeking to maintain payments at previous levels, while Lufthansa wants employees to work additional years to reach that figure. Ogursky said Lufthansa’s only long-haul cancellation on Saturday is a Dusseldorf-Newark, New Jersey, flight. Almost all European flights from Frankfurt, the carrier’s biggest airport hub, will be dropped except a few to Munich and three serving London Heathrow. The strike doesn’t extend to Lufthansa’s CityLine, Germanwings, Eurowings, Air Dolomiti, Austrian Airlines, Swiss or Brussels Airlines divisions, said Ogursky. (By Brian Parkin/Bloomberg)

More from Business

  • 16% growth in new economic licences in Abu Dhabi during 2024

    The Abu Dhabi Registration and Licensing Authority (ADRA), which develops and regulates the business sector, on Monday revealed significant growth in business licences and compliance indicators in the Emirate's mainland and non-financial economic free zones during 2024.

  • DEWA updates billing on water consumption

    Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA) has announced that it will adopt the cubic metre as the standard unit for measuring water consumption starting from the March 2025 billing cycle.

  • UAE, Japan to complete CEPA by end of year

    The UAE Minister of State for Foreign Trade, Dr. Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, has said negotiations for the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the UAE and Japan will be completed before the end of 2025.

  • US judge blocks Musk's DOGE from accessing payment systems

    A federal judge temporarily blocked a Trump administration panel led by billionaire Elon Musk from accessing government systems used to process trillions of dollars in payments, citing a risk that sensitive and confidential information could be improperly disclosed.

  • Du services interrupted due to 'technical issue'

    UAE telecom operator Du confirmed a technical error led to the disruption of its services on Saturday as users were left without internet or landline services.