London - Deutsche Lufthansa cabin crew called off a strike originally planned for later this week, a step toward ending a labour dispute that has already brought on the airline’s longest-ever disruption.
To avoid further protests, the UFO cabin crew union said it needs to reach a deal with Lufthansa by December 2, the date of a so-called employment summit between the airline and unions including representatives of pilots and ground crew.
Arbitration is planned on cabin-crew topics, and themes that affect multiple categories of workers will be discussed in a mediation process, the union said in an emailed statement on Wednesday.
“We need to seek consensual, modified solutions,” said Nicoley Baublies, head of the UFO union. Lufthansa has moved in the direction of workers on pension questions, he said.
Flight attendants and pilots are fighting chief executive officer Carsten Spohr’s efforts to overhaul Lufthansa. The CEO is seeking to stave off Ryanair and EasyJet by developing Lufthansa’s Eurowings into a low-cost division.
The airline cancelled almost 5 000 flights during a week-long walkout by flight attendants earlier this month.
Lufthansa has declined to estimate how much the flight attendants’ strike has cost. A parallel dispute with pilots that led to 12 800 cancellations over an 18-month period amounted to a financial hit of €352m.
The shares rose 2.1% to €13.185 at 11:00.