Lufthansa bears brunt of Frankfurt airport strike

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FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — A strike by ground workers at
Frankfurt airport will be extended through to the middle of the week,
union officials said as another 231 flights, primarily operated by
national carrier Lufthansa, were canceled on Monday.
Representatives
of the air traffic controllers’ union GdF said their strike will last
through 5 a.m. (0400 GMT) on Wednesday. In their demand for better pay,
some 200 ground workers went on strike last Thursday and Friday. Though
hundreds of flights were interrupted, most traffic continued.
The
majority of the cancellations were flights operated by Lufthansa to
destinations within Europe. The airline has been scratching flights
ahead of time and listing them on its website to ease operations. It
said passengers who had entered their mobile phone numbers in their
online profiles were being notified by text message about future
cancellations.
Lufthansa said it called off about 100 round trips,
or 200 flights, on Monday and expected that number to fall to 80 round
trips on Tuesday. Passengers are being offered refunds or the
opportunity to rebook free of charge for flights canceled by the strike,
the airline said.
A spokesman for airport operator Fraport AG,
Mike Peter Schweitzer, said the cancellations Monday come out of 1,250
individual scheduled flights.
Schweitzer said that "from our side
we remain ready to talk with GdF but we are waiting for willingness to
compromise on their side." No talks are scheduled, he said.
The
GdF union, which also represents ground workers, has been locked in a
pay dispute with Fraport AG for months. The strike came after the
company rejected the result of an arbitration panel as excessive.
On the Web www.lufthansa.com
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — A strike by ground workers at
Frankfurt airport will be extended through to the middle of the week,
union officials said as another 231 flights, primarily operated by
national carrier Lufthansa, were canceled on Monday.
Representatives
of the air traffic controllers’ union GdF said their strike will last
through 5 a.m. (0400 GMT) on Wednesday. In their demand for better pay,
some 200 ground workers went on strike last Thursday and Friday. Though
hundreds of flights were interrupted, most traffic continued.
The
majority of the cancellations were flights operated by Lufthansa to
destinations within Europe. The airline has been scratching flights
ahead of time and listing them on its website to ease operations. It
said passengers who had entered their mobile phone numbers in their
online profiles were being notified by text message about future
cancellations.
Lufthansa said it called off about 100 round trips,
or 200 flights, on Monday and expected that number to fall to 80 round
trips on Tuesday. Passengers are being offered refunds or the
opportunity to rebook free of charge for flights canceled by the strike,
the airline said.
A spokesman for airport operator Fraport AG,
Mike Peter Schweitzer, said the cancellations Monday come out of 1,250
individual scheduled flights.
Schweitzer said that "from our side
we remain ready to talk with GdF but we are waiting for willingness to
compromise on their side." No talks are scheduled, he said.
The
GdF union, which also represents ground workers, has been locked in a
pay dispute with Fraport AG for months. The strike came after the
company rejected the result of an arbitration panel as excessive.
On the Web www.lufthansa.com
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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