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As pilots and cabin crew walkout, hundreds of Lufthansa flight are cancelled

On Thursday, hundreds of Lufthansa flight cancellations were made as 'pilots and attendants' went on strike.

According to the company, the industrial action over pensions and other grievances caused about 800 flights to be canceled, disrupting travel plans for approximately 100,000 passengers.

The company stated that this "affects our customers extremely harshly and in a disproportionate manner". It added that they expect a return to the 'normal' schedule on Friday.

The departure boards in Frankfurt and Munich show that most Lufthansa flight cancellations for the day have been made, including many overseas destinations.

STRIKES Called as FILM FEST and SECURITY CONFERENCE Open

Frankfurt Airport, Germany's biggest airport, was quiet in the morning, because many Lufthansa customers, who were notified about the cancellations, didn't show up.

Jonathan Ruf, who flies with Condor, Lufthansa’s domestic competitor, said that he considered booking on Lufthansa, but would not likely do so for his subsequent flight due to the possibility of another strike.

Another passenger, Marvin?Kleist in Frankfurt, who was not booked on any Lufthansa flights, said that the walkout will make things a little more expensive because of the union's demands.

He said, "If that was the case everywhere then nothing would be affordable at some point."

Lufthansa had earlier stated that it would attempt to rebook customers on other airlines and partner airlines.

The walkout by the pilots' union VC, and the flight attendants' 'union UFO', coincides with the Berlinale Film Festival, which begins in Berlin on Thursday. Politicians and military officials will also be gathering for the Munich Security Conference on Friday.

Pensions is the issue that has caused a dispute between Lufthansa’s main airline and its cargo division.

After a vote last year, their union declared its readiness to strike in order to press the company to grant more generous retirement benefits. Since then, intermittent talks have been held without success.

Lufthansa has said that it cannot afford to meet the demands.

Separately the UFO union called for its members to strike at Lufthansa CityLine's subsidiary over the planned closure of its flight operations and the "employer's refusal to negotiate?a collective social plan".

Harry Jaeger, a union representative for UFO, said: "The simultaneous industrial actions by pilots are a coincidence but one we welcome."

He added, "We don't want to annoy passengers. We just want to annoy the management." Reporting by Klaus Lauer and Tilman Blshofer, Frankfurt; writing by Thomas Seythal, Ludwig Burger and Anil D'Silva; editing by Anil d'Silva and Joe Bavier

(source: Reuters)