German Ryanair pilots to join European strikes on Friday

AFP  |  Frankfurt 

Germany's pilots will join a wave of strikes against the across on Friday, escalating a row over pay and conditions at the height of the summer season.

Germany's powerful Cockpit union said it had asked its 400 pilots to walk off the job for 24 hours from 03:01 am (0101 GMT) on Friday, affecting all of the airline's outbound flights.

"We are extremely sorry for the affected passengers. The responsibility lies with management," told a press conference today.

The move piles pressure on the Irish budget after pilots in Ireland, and also vowed to strike on August 10, promising major disruptions for thousands of

Europe's second biggest has been grappling with staff unrest since it recognised trade unions for the first time in December 2017, in a bid to ward off widespread strikes over the period.

But unions say their calls for better wages and fairer contracts have gone unheard, and no progress has been made despite months of negotiations.

Germany's Cockpit union said Ryanair management had failed to respond to a yesterday deadline for an improved offer, leaving them with no choice to go on strike.

"There can be no improvements without increasing staff costs," Locher said, but this has been "categorically" rejected by Ryanair.

"At the same time, Ryanair has at no stage signalled where there might be leeway to find solutions. Ryanair alone is responsible for the escalation we are now seeing."

Ryanair pilots have long claimed that they earn less than their counterparts at rival budget airlines.

Another big complaint of workers based in countries other than is the fact that Ryanair employs them under Irish legislation, arguing most of its employees work on board Irish planes and are therefore covered by Irish law.

But staff counter that this creates huge insecurity for them, blocking their access to state benefits in their country.

Ryanair is due to hold its own press conference in at 1:30 pm (1130 GMT).

The was already hit by a round of strikes last month affecting 600 flights in Belgium, Ireland, Italy, and

It said the 100,000 affected passengers had all been put on alternative flights or would receive refunds.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 16:15 IST