New Delhi:
The strike by a section of Air India pilots will on Monday enter the 57th day,
to attain the notorious distinction of becoming the second longest strike in
the country's aviation history.
The
Indian Pilots Guild (IPG), the union of Air India pilots, had also struck work
in 1974 against cost cutting measures when fuel prices shot up alarmingly.
The
1974 strike lasted for well over 90 days. In 1993-94, a strike by Air India
flight engineers lasted for 56 days.
Before the 1993-94 strike, the distinction of
the second longest strike was held by AI's sister organisation Indian Airlines,
whose pilots went on a five-week stir in 1991-92 demanding more wages.
The current strike started on May 8 when
pilot members of the IPG went on mass sick leave, protesting the move to
provide Boeing-787 Dreamliner training to pilots from the erstwhile Indian
Airlines.
After putting forth an original list of 14
demands, the aviators are now asking for reinstatement of their 101 sacked
colleagues.
The airline has maintained that pilots must
first end their strike and the sacked pilots will be reinstated on a
case-by-case basis.
Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh said
earlier: "Sacked pilots will be taken back on a case-by-case basis. But
for this to happen, they must end the illegal strike."
The airline has suffered estimated revenue
losses of more than Rs 610 crore. Grounded fleet of Boeing 777s, unused
manpower and absence from key routes have hit the airlines' chances of a
financial turnaround.
The strike has crippled Air India's
international operations, stranding thousands set to fly to East Asia and the
Middle East.
The striking pilots have started an indefinite
hunger strike since June 24. Nearly five of 11 fasting pilots have been
hospitalised.
Officials at Airlines House, Air India's New
Delhi-based headquarters, are confident of resolving the situation by hiring
new pilots.
The current strike is the longest since Air
India and Indian Airlines merged in 2007.
There have been five major strikes since the
merger. The longest was by ICPA which lasted 10 days (April 27 to May 6, 2011)
to demand pay parity.
Though there is no exact figure on how much
the airline has lost since 2007 due to strikes, a blame game is on between Air
India and Indian Airlines cadres.
"Estimated revenue losses depend upon
the nature of strike, as factors like ticket cancellations, loss of routes and
unused contractual obligations have to be factored in," an Air India
official said.
According to him, a stir by cabin crew may
not be as potent as that of pilots.
Besides revenue and reputation loss, strikes
also provide opportunities to other employee unions to add pressure to get
their demands fulfilled, he added.
"Each strike inspires other industrial
actions. A stir by one union will prompt the members of other unions to force
their leadership to get them a sweet deal as well," he said.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/ai-pilots-strike-2nd-longest-in-aviation-history/268889-3.html
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