British Airways Pilots Call Off Strike
British Airways Pilots Call Off
Strike
The British
Airline Pilots Association union confirmed this in a statement issued on
Wednesday, a week after two walkouts.
“Someone has
to take the initiative to sort out this dispute and with no sign of that from
BA the pilots have decided to take the responsible course,” BALPA General
Secretary Brian Strutton said.
The union
chief added that the airline’s “passengers rightly expect BA and its pilots to
resolve their issues without disruption and now is the time for cool heads and
pragmatism to be brought to bear.
“I hope BA
and its owner IAG show as much responsibility as the pilots,” he added.
It was now
“time for a period of reflection before the dispute escalates further and
irreparable damage is done to the (BA) brand.”
However the
union added that should the airline “refuse meaningful new negotiations, BALPA
retains the right to announce further strike dates”.
British
Airways, which likes to call itself “the world’s favourite airline”, flew into
turbulence last week as pilots staged a costly and historic two-day strike,
tarnishing its global reputation according to aviation analysts.
Pilots
walked out for the first time in the company’s 100-year history, sparked by a
bitter and long-running feud over pay.
BA faced the
embarrassment of grounding its entire UK fleet on September 9 and 10, causing
the cancellation of about 1,600 flights.
The move
sparked travel chaos for about 200,000 passengers who had been due to fly in
and out of London’s Gatwick and Heathrow airports.
The
disruption continued into September 11 because half of BA’s 300 aircraft and
more than 700 pilots were mostly in the wrong place.
As a result,
BA was forced to cancel approximately ten percent of its daily 850 flights in
and out of Britain that day.
BALPA and
its members are demanding a bigger share of British Airways profits.
The airline
has offered a salary increase of 11.5 percent over three years, which it argues
would boost the annual pay of some captains to £200,000 ($250,000 or 226,000
euros).
However, the
union has rejected the proposal made in July.
BALPA
meanwhile estimates that last week’s 48-hour strike cost the airline £80
million.
BA is owned
by IAG, which was formed in 2011 with the merger of British Airways and Spain’s
Iberia. IAG has since added other carriers, including Austria’s Vueling and
Ireland’s Aer Lingus.
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