Berlin - AFP
Europe's biggest airline, Germany's Lufthansa, is set to be hit by its 11th pilots' strike of the year from Thursday after a leading union called for another stoppage to long-haul and cargo flights.
The Vereinigung Cockpit union scheduled the new strike to start at 3.00 am (0200 GMT) on Thursday and end at one minute to midnight (2259 GMT).
The announcement was made just as a 36-hour strike that began Monday was coming to an end. That stoppage caused more than one thousand flights to be scrapped, disrupting services to and from Germany's busy Frankfurt hub, and causing disruption at Lufthansa destinations including London, Buenos Aires, Dubai, Seoul and Tel Aviv.
Short-haul and medium-haul services and those operated by Lufthansa's low-cost subsidiary Germanwings will not be affected by Thursday's strike, the union said.
The latest talks between the airline and the pilots' representatives broke down on Friday, prolonging a dispute that centres on transitional pension arrangements for about 5,400 pilots.
At present, the pilots are allowed to retire at 55 and receive up to 60 percent of their pay until they reach the statutory retirement age of 65.
Lufthansa says the combined strike action this year has cost it about 170 million euros (about $210 million).
Pilots say they are also concerned about the airline's future strategy, including plans for a new long-haul budget subsidiary, as Lufthansa grapples with competition chiefly from low-cost carriers.