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Cologne/Bonn Airport: Almost all takeoffs canceled

Photo: Marc John / IMAGO

Airline passengers have to have strong nerves this Thursday: the Ver.di union began its aviation security warning strikes late on Wednesday evening. The start was in Cologne/Bonn, where, according to Ver.di, the night shift of passenger control did not show up for work. Participation there is one hundred percent, said the responsible union secretary Özay Tarim. "That was a successful start to the strike."

Around 80 percent of the flight movements that were planned in Cologne/Bonn for Thursday were canceled there, as the airport website showed early on Thursday morning. Ver.di man Tarim expected that this share would increase over the course of the day.

The consequences are even more serious at Berlin, Hamburg and Stuttgart airports, where all takeoffs have been canceled. In Düsseldorf, however, it was only a third, two thirds of the flight movements were supposed to be carried out.

Anger over strikebreaking bonuses

The employees at the checkpoints at eleven larger airports outside Bavaria are called upon. If they stop working completely, no passengers from outside will come to the aircraft in the security area.

In Frankfurt am Main, the main customer Lufthansa wants to maintain the majority of its program including long-distance flights. Flights for those transferring will also be offered. Lufthansa warned that there could be longer waiting times for passengers in the transit area.

According to estimates by the airport association ADV, around 1,100 flights will be canceled or delayed. Around 200,000 passengers are affected. Normal flight operations should not be possible again until Friday. Then the next Ver.di warning strike is already planned – nationwide in local public transport.

Trade unionist Tarim said they wanted to send a clear signal. "We will now put pressure on employers with employees so that we can finally make progress at the negotiating table." The employee representative criticized the fact that a security company at Düsseldorf Airport had offered an extra payment of 200 euros gross so that employees could come to work despite the warning strike. He sees such a “strikebreaking bonus” as a provocation. The problem should be solved at the negotiating table instead of dragging it out with bonuses, he complained.

Ver.di is demanding 2.80 euros more wages per hour, higher functional bonuses and overtime bonuses from the first overtime hour for the around 25,000 industry employees nationwide. The new collective agreement should run for twelve months. According to the employers, these demands would mean additional costs of 250 million euros in the current year alone.

mik/dpa AFX