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Lufthansa consents to pay US $4 million charge over treatment of Jewish travelers

Lufthansa has actually consented to pay a $4 million penalty for allegedly victimizing Jewish travelers who were trying to board a linking flight in Frankfurt in May 2022, the U.S. Transportation Department said on Tuesday.

Lufthansa restricted 128 Jewish passengers, nearly all of whom used garments typically worn by Orthodox Jewish guys, from boarding a connecting flight in Germany on the basis of declared misbehavior by some travelers, the Transportation Department said.

Although a number of the passengers did not know each other or were not traveling together, travelers spoken with by DOT investigators mentioned that Lufthansa treated them as if they were a single group and denied all of them boarding for the alleged misdeed of a couple of, DOT stated.

The travelers, who had flown from New york city to Frankfurt, were attempting to board a linking flight to Budapest.

Under the approval order, Lufthansa consented to pay $2 million and the Department of Transport said it will credit the airline company with $2 million that it paid in settlement to passengers.

Lufthansa did not confess to any infractions under the permission order and it denied that any of its workers discriminated against guests It contended as numerous as 60 travelers. onboard at any offered time were ignoring crew guidelines.

The airline said it was sorry for and has publicly asked forgiveness on numerous events for the scenarios surrounding the choice to deny boarding, USDOT said in the authorization order.

The airline company stated the occurrence arised from an unfortunate series of unreliable communications, misconceptions, and errors throughout the decision-making procedure, the Transportation Department stated.

Lufthansa said in a declaration Tuesday that given that the 2022 event, it has actually fully cooperated with the DOT and stays focused on many efforts including partnering with American Jewish Committee to curate a first-of-its kind training program in the airline industry for our supervisors and employees to address antisemitism and discrimination.

USDOT said the penalty is the largest it has ever released versus an airline for civil liberties violations.

Nobody should face discrimination when they take a trip, and today's action sends out a clear message to the airline market that we are prepared to investigate and act whenever passengers' civil liberties are broken, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said.

(source: Reuters)