Strike halts flights across Spain

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  • xman
    Admin
    • Sep 2006
    • 24007

    Strike halts flights across Spain

    4 December 2010 Last updated at 05:13 ET A major walkout by Spain's air traffic controllers has grounded flights across much of the nation, stranding hundreds of thousands of travellers.

    About half of the controllers showed for their shift on Saturday morning but most refused to work, in a dispute over hours and conditions.

    The army has been called in but cannot direct air traffic.

    The government is meeting to decide whether to declare a "state of alert" and compel controllers to work.

    There are huge crowds of passengers at Spain's airports, many hoping to get away at the start of a national holiday, many of them frustrated and angry, says the BBC's Sarah Rainsford in Madrid.

    Legal threat Spain's national carrier, Iberia, said it was cancelling all flights until 0500 GMT on Sunday.

    Flights were operating to some parts of Spain, including the Canary Islands and Majorca.

    Deputy Prime Minister Alfredo Rubalcaba threatened legal action against the controllers if they did not return to work.

    "If the situation doesn't normalise, the government will declare a state of alert," he said early on Saturday.

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    Madrid's Barajas airport, the busiest in Spain, was one of the first to be affected


    "The controllers will be mobilised and if they don't get back to work, their cases will be passed immediately to the judiciary and they will be accused of a crime which could mean a prison sentence."

    The controllers' unsanctioned action began Friday afternoon in Madrid, with staff calling in sick.

    It spread across the nation, forcing travellers to find last-minute hotel rooms or sleep on airport floors. Some passengers were taken by coach to their destinations.

    The controllers were already involved in a dispute about their working hours, but were further angered by austerity measures passed by the government on Friday which would partially privatise AENA.

    "We have reached our limit mentally with the new decree approved this morning obliging us to work more hours," said Jorge Ontiveros, a spokesman for the Syndicate Union of Air Controllers.

    "We took the decision individually, which then spread to other colleagues who stopped work because they cannot carry on like this. In this situation we cannot control planes."

    'Hostages' The head of AENA, Juan Ignacio Lema, said the strike was "intolerable", and told the controllers to "stop blackmailing the Spanish people".

    Spanish Transport Minister Jose Blanco has also condemned the strike, saying those involved were "using citizens as hostages".

    Hundreds of national and international flights have been cancelled across the country, leaving angry passengers left stranded in airports.

    Some were left stranded on runways as their planes had to turn back. Others had to travel by bus to regional destinations.

    "All flights are blocked, there's a huge lot of people here, sitting around everywhere. Right now everyone is calm, but we don't know what's happening," said one traveller at Barajas airport.

    "The captain came out to say Spanish airspace had suddenly shut, with no prior warning," another passenger stuck in a plane at Palma told Spanish radio.

    One woman at Barajas airport said it was "a disgrace". "How can a group of people be so selfish as to wreck the plans of so many people?"

    Are you at any of the striking airports in Spain? Has the disruption affected your travel plans? Send us your comments using the form below.


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