FRANKFURT, Wednesday
Pilots
of German airline Lufthansa began a strike Wednesday, forcing the
carrier to cancel most of its flights for the next three days and
grounding as many as 425,000 passengers.
The country's
biggest airline has said it will cancel around 3,800 flights on
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, as a result of the walkout by pilots who
are demanding better pay and retirement conditions.
In
addition to Lufthansa's passenger services, the strike, which began at
midnight (2200 GMT on Tuesday) and will last until 11:59 pm (2159 GMT)
on Friday, will also affect the airline's Germanwings subsidiary and its
freight carrier Lufthansa Cargo.
PASSENGERS STRANDED
Lufthansa
said it has informed passengers via text message or email about the
flight changes and offered to re-book them onto other airlines.
Around
60 flights were already cancelled on Tuesday so that passengers
changing planes in Germany would not find themselves stranded.
Germanwings
said Tuesday it planned to uphold around 600 connections over the
three-day period by leasing capacity from other airlines.
The head of the pilots' union Cockpit, Joerg Handwerg, told the local daily Neue Passauer Presse
that the walkout was "the only means to force management to compromise"
and was a direct consequence of the company's aggressive stance, which
is seeking to extend pilots' retirement age beyond 55 at present.
ANGERED POLITICIANS
But
the industrial action has angered many politicians, even in government,
with Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt complaining in a newspaper
interview that "every day of strike is impairing the mobility of
hundreds of thousands of people."
And the deputy head
of the parliamentary faction of the conservative CDU party, Michael
Fuchs, slammed the action as "irresponsible."
There has also been criticism of the pilots from the centre-left Social Democrat party.
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