Lufthansa cancels most flights over 1-day strike
All but 32 of German airline's 1,700 flights cancelled Monday
Ground staff at Lufthansa, Germany's biggest airline, have walked off the job on a one-day strike that prompted the company to cancel most of the today's scheduled flights and left it complaining of "excessive" union tactics.
The strike by airline technicians and service personnel across Germany started in the early hours. Lufthansa moved in advance to head off chaos, announcing on Saturday that it was cancelling almost all scheduled short-haul flights and the majority of long-haul services.
In all, the airline planned to operate only 32 of more than 1,700 scheduled flights.
All three of Lufthansa's flights into Canada today — two from Frankfurt, another from Munich — have been cancelled. The flights were scheduled to arrive this afternoon and evening in Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal, according to each airport's web site.
Lufthansa's three departing flights from those same airports are still on the schedule.
A Lufthansa spokesperson was not available for further comment.
The Ver.di union announced the "warning strike" — a tactic commonly used to raise pressure in wage talks — on Friday. Lufthansa last week rejected its demand for wage increases of 5.2 per cent over the next year and job guarantees, countering with a complex offer that foresees smaller raises over a 29-month period. Ver.di, which is negotiating for some 33,000 workers, argued that the offer would mean wages falling in real terms.
"We demand that we definitely get a pay rise … and we are not willing to accept increased working hours," said Brigitte Scheffler, a Lufthansa employee at Berlin's Tegel airport.
Ver.di official Gerold Schaub told n-tv television that the union had "no other possibility" to exert pressure on Lufthansa management, and noted that it was the airline itself that decided to scrap more than 1,600 flights.
Lufthansa is trying to cut costs to cope with high fuel prices as well as vigorous competition from European discount carriers and the big Gulf airlines such as Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways. Last year, the airline and a union representing cabin crews called in an arbitrator to settle a pay dispute after a series of short-term stoppages.
Lufthansa charged that Ver.di, Germany's biggest service workers' union, was motivated by a desire to shore up its position in an increasingly fragmented union landscape in which assertive smaller groups representing individual professions have become more and more powerful. Monday's strike followed a smaller walkout last month.
"This time it is a strike ... with a massive impact, completely excessive, that has only one aim — to position itself as a union at Lufthansa against many other unions and groups," Lufthansa's chief personnel officer, Stefan Lauer, told ARD television. He put the number of passengers affected at 150,000.
Lauer complained that "the transport sector has mutated into a strike sector" and said that "we as Lufthansa now have to suffer strikes every three months," often by unions representing non-Lufthansa workers such as air traffic controllers and airport security staff.
The German national employers' association has called for government action to rein in the problem of companies facing demands from competing unions but, while Chancellor Angela Merkel has expressed sympathy for their concern, little has happened.
The airline allowed passengers with flights scheduled Monday to rebook for free, and said those booked on cancelled German domestic flights could convert their tickets into vouchers to travel by train.