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Easyjet's French arm cabin crews call fresh strikes for New Year

The action on December 31st and January 1st over pay and working conditions follow Christmas stoppages that cancelled a quarter of flights.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Unions representing French cabin crews have called a new strike for December 31st and January 1st, reports Euronews.

It follows an initial stoppage on Christmas Day (December 25) and Boxing Day (December 26), which led to nearly 40 cancellations at the British airline's French operations on Friday.

Cabin crew unions are demanding a larger share of Easyjet’s profits for employees as well as improvements to working schedules and staff benefits.

Nearly 40 internal flights in France, out of a total of 185 operated by French crews, were cancelled on Friday.

“It was very surprising to get just an email to say ‘your flight has been cancelled, there you go, you can either be reimbursed or log in online’, and when you phone up you’re charged for the call,” said one young female passenger.

Unions claim that whereas operating profits have risen by over 20 per cent, staff are being denied benefits.

“Some rights for all French employees, such as “1% housing” (employers’ obligations towards housing costs), access to professional training and profit-sharing – despite the fact that Easyjet has had an agreement on this since 2009 – we are not getting these rights,” said Laurent Nicolas, a delegate from the SNPNC-FO union.

Easyjet argues its cabin crews are among the best paid in France after successive pay rises above inflation.

It said extra crews flown in from Britain had limited Friday’s disruption.

One union leader complained that it was a tactic designed to “break the strike”.

Read more of this report from Euronews.