The pilots’ union Cockpit on Saturday offered to meet with the chief of Lufthansa AG to try to head off a four-day strike beginning today that could cause headaches for thousands of travelers.
The union offer to meet with Lufthansa chief executive Wolfgang Mayrhuber came after Germany’s transport minister urged the two sides to return to talks and avoid a strike that could damage the country’s economy.
Lufthansa said in a statement that it is willing to talk with the pilots under certain conditions.
However, it was not immediately clear if the meeting would take place.
FLIGHTS CANCELED
Lufthansa has already canceled some 600 flights ahead of the strike and was scrambling to rebook travelers on partner airlines or trains.
“Lufthansa is doing everything in its power to inform its customers as soon as possible and offer them alternative travel options,” the company said on its Web site.
Travelers who are unable to reschedule are being reimbursed for their tickets, Lufthansa said.
The airline, Germany’s largest, estimates the strike could cost it as much as 100 million euros (US$135.19 million).
The union is urging 4,500 pilots who fly for Lufthansa, Lufthansa Cargo and Germanwings to walk off their jobs from today through Thursday to press the airline for increased job security for pilots in Germany and abroad.
‘UNREASONABLE’
“We can talk immediately about the issue of job security for Lufthansa pilots when Cockpit drops its unreasonable and legally impossible demand for the extension of German labor conditions abroad,” Lufthansa board member Christoph Franz said in a statement.
Cockpit accuses the airline of outsourcing more and more flights to pilots employed by other companies, who work for less pay and under worse conditions.
Also on Saturday, German Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer said that the strike could seriously damage the German economy.
“It can not be that the largest German air fleet is grounded for four days,” Ramsauer told the Bild am Sonntag weekly.
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