BA wins injunction to halt strike
Relevant offers
World
British Airways won a court ruling to prevent a 12-day cabin crew strike that threatened to strand hundreds of thousands of passengers over Christmas.
BA cabin crew had said they would walk out from December 22, escalating a dispute over job losses and changes to working practices. About 13,000 BA staff were balloted by the Unite union, 92.5 percent of whom backed the strike.
However, the High Court in London upheld BA's complaint that Unite had breached industrial relations law by balloting around 1,000 staff who had left the company or were in the process of leaving.
BA welcomed the ruling, but the Unite union called it a "disgraceful day for democracy."
Judge Laura Cox said the timing of the strike would have been particularly painful for passengers and company alike.
"A strike of this kind over the 12 days of Christmas is fundamentally more damaging to BA and the wider public than a strike taking place at almost any other time of the year."
Her ruling is a relief for passengers who were facing disappointment over ruined Christmas and New Year holidays.
"We are delighted for our customers that the threat of a Christmas strike has been lifted by the court," BA said in a statement. "It is a decision that will be welcomed by hundreds of thousands of families in the UK and around the world."
BA said it believed that the union now had a better understanding of its position but warned that "old style union militancy" would not help to move it back to profitability.
Analysts estimated that the strike would have cost the airline around 30 million pounds a day, with around 1 million passengers affected and 7,000 flights grounded.
BA shares, which have slumped 10 percent in the past month, were down 3.5 pence at 193.5 pence by 1625 GMT, valuing the airline at 2.3 billion pounds ($3.8 billion).
The Unite union, the ruling Labor party's biggest financial backer, said it expected to hold another ballot.
"It is a disgraceful day for democracy when a court can overrule such an overwhelming decision by employees taken in a secret ballot," Unite joint general secretaries Derek Simpson and Tony Woodley said in a statement.
"Given the clear mood of cabin crew about management's imposition of changes on their working lives, this means that the specter of further disruption to the company's operations cannot be removed," they added.
BA wants three quarters of its crew to accept pay rises of 2-7 percent this year and a pay freeze in 2010, and for 3,000 staff to switch to part-time working, along with a reduction in onboard crewing levels from 15 to 14 on long-haul flights from London's Heathrow airport.
The average pay for BA cabin crew is 29,900 pounds, compared with an average of 20,200 pounds at easyJet and 14,400 pounds at Virgin Atlantic Airlines, according to the UK's Civil Aviation Authority.
Thousands of passengers were facing disruption after Scottish airline Flyglobespan fell into administration on Wednesday, leaving passengers stranded.
British train drivers on Eurostar services will strike on Friday and Saturday in a dispute over meal allowances, but the company said it did not expect problems for travelers because Belgian and French drivers can step in.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Second week-long strike for port
No Kiwi jobs lost in call centre move: Orcon
Debt crisis may stymie surplus by 2014
Consumer confidence up, but caution urged
Westpac posts A$1.5b quarterly profit
Meridian sees profit slip, gives weather warning
Kiwi down on Greek deal disappointment
NZ stocks down, Goodman Fielder plummets
Council signs off on St Lukes mall plans
American Airlines posts US$1.1b quarterly loss
Goodman Fielder interim profit tanks
Mallard offers ticket cash back
Men in court after raid on Auckland apartment
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
Second week-long strike for port
Jacob Oram out of first T20 against South Africa
No Kiwi jobs lost in call centre move: Orcon
Apple mobile apps stealing private data
Dragons deny wrongdoing as wee row erupts
15-minute-old newborn gets heart pacemaker
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Bookies favour Crusaders to win Super Rugby
From TV to a tent: Family of eight evicted
Men in court after raid on Auckland apartment
Mallard offers ticket cash back
Suppression lapses for kidnap accused
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Star claims Home and Away racism
Sonny Bill Williams finds rugby boring: mate
Robyn Malcolm lays it all bare
Mallard offers ticket cash back
China 'will see Crafar ruling as racist'
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Should you take your groom's name?
Cyclist: Don't fine us, fix the road
Marryatt skips council debate to play golf
Govt says asset sales will cut debt