A Lufthansa plane parked at the airport at the airport in Munich on December 2, 2014. (Associated Press photo)
Berlin:
Pilots at German airline Lufthansa have extended their two-day strike to long-haul flights in an ongoing dispute over retirement benefits.
The airline, Germany's biggest, says a total of 1,350 of its 2,800 flights scheduled through the strike's end today at midnight have been cancelled, affecting 150,000 passengers.
On Monday, the strike was primarily focused on inner-Europe flights. Lufthansa said some of its cargo flights were rescheduled, but none had to be canceled.
Lufthansa says the other airlines in its group - Germanwings, Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines and Air Dolomiti - are not affected.
The strike follows failed talks with the Vereinigung Cockpit union, which is demanding Lufthansa keep paying a transition payment for those wanting to retire early. The airline wants to cut those payments, citing increasingly tough competition.
The airline, Germany's biggest, says a total of 1,350 of its 2,800 flights scheduled through the strike's end today at midnight have been cancelled, affecting 150,000 passengers.
On Monday, the strike was primarily focused on inner-Europe flights. Lufthansa said some of its cargo flights were rescheduled, but none had to be canceled.
Lufthansa says the other airlines in its group - Germanwings, Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines and Air Dolomiti - are not affected.
The strike follows failed talks with the Vereinigung Cockpit union, which is demanding Lufthansa keep paying a transition payment for those wanting to retire early. The airline wants to cut those payments, citing increasingly tough competition.
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