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Ryanair: now Irish pilots join the British strike

Around 400,000 passengers are now at some risk of their flights being cancelled because of pilots’ strikes at Europe’s biggest budget airline

Simon Calder
Travel Correspondent
Wednesday 14 August 2019 15:23 EDT
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Dublin bound? Flights across the Irish Sea could be grounded
Dublin bound? Flights across the Irish Sea could be grounded (Simon Calder)

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Thousands of passengers booked on Ryanair between the UK and Ireland on 22 and 23 August may find their flights cancelled.

Pilots employed by Ryanair in Ireland have just announced a strike on 22 and 23 August, coinciding with industrial action by UK pilots.

The Irish Airline Pilots’ Association (Ialpa) served strike notice on the airline on Wednesday evening. It added that Ryanair pilots would notify the company of further strike days in due course.

British pilots employed by Ryanair are also due to walk out on 2, 3 and 4 September.

The action is part of a long-running dispute over pay and working conditions. Earlier, the union had demanded “a substantive counter-proposal from Ryanair management” which was not forthcoming.

The airline said the pilots had made “unrealistic and unimplementable pay proposals,” accusing them of seeking to double annual pay of up to €172,000 (£159,000).

Ryanair’s chief people officer, Eddie Wilson, said: “We have done everything in our power to avoid disruption to our flights and our customers’ holidays.

“However, no company can concede to grossly unreasonable demands from its highest-paid workers.”

Around 180 pilots directly employed by Ryanair are members of Ialpa. There are many other Ryanair pilots who are employed by agencies, or have so-called “self-employed” status, who cannot be balloted under Irish employment law.

Pilots employed by Ryanair in the UK who belong to the British Airline Pilots’ Association (Balpa) are also in dispute with Europe’s biggest budget carrier on a range of issues from pensions to maternity benefits.

No-one knows yet whether the strikes will go ahead and, if they do, what the effects will be. But The Independent now calculates that, of the two million passengers booked to travel on Ryanair on those days, 400,000 are at potential risk of having their flights cancelled.

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