They announce 12 new strike days for July at Ryanair

Date:

The company suffered 10 cancellations and 123 delays this Saturday, while easyJet canceled 5 flights and 52 were delayed

USO and SICTPLA unions announced 12 new strike days for Ryanair crew members in Spain in July.

Specifically, the 24-hour interruptions will take place from 12 to 15 July, from 18 to 21 July and from 25 to 28 July at the ten Spanish airports where Ryanair operates.

After six days of strike, they are demanding a change of attitude from the airline and are resuming negotiations on a collective agreement that includes decent working conditions and Spanish legislation for its employees, they said in a statement.

USO spokeswoman Laura Arrasanz has asked the government and Labor Minister Yolanda Díaz to mediate in this situation due to the airline’s “illness”. “We are not outside workers,” he emphasized.

For this reason, they have demanded that the USO take action against “a company that does not comply with court orders, violates the law and uses fear, coercion and threats against its employees”.

Arrasanz has slipped on next calls will also be 24-hour days and has called on all Ryanair workers in Spain to support this strike. For example, he trusts that the company is listening to its employees and returns to the negotiating table.

So far, these strike days have forced the cancellation of more than 200 flights and caused more than 1,000 delays across the country. He has criticized the company’s preference for leaving thousands of passengers “on the ground” before negotiating with its employees under Spanish law.

Ryanair suffered 10 cancellations and 123 flight delays until 1pm on the sixth day of the cabin crew strike this Saturday.

The cancellations correspond to the routes between Berlin and Ibiza, Malaga and Aberdeen, London and Ibiza, Marseille and Santiago de Compostela and Glasgow and Malaga, round trip.

On the other hand, easyJet has canceled 5 flights and 52 were delayed until 1pm next Saturday. For example, the cancellations have had an impact on the routes between London and Malaga. Geneva and Malaga, round trip, and the route between Malaga and Bristol.

USO general secretary at easyJet Malaga, Miguel Galán, has said that the strike call for July 2 is supported by the vast majority of cabin crew at the bases in Barcelona, ​​​​​Palma de Mallorca and Malaga.

The strike in particular is supported at the Malaga base, he said, where 50% of the operation has been canceled “despite the abusive minimum services imposed by the easyjet company.”

Source: La Verdad

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related