Indias Jet Airways Pilots Strike (Sick out)

v1valarob

Well-Known Member
Pilots strike cancels hundreds of flights in India
Posted: 03:22 AM ET
By Harmeet Shah Singh
CNN
NEW DELHI, India (CNN) — A pilots strike forced one of India’s largest airlines to cancel most of its domestic flights Wednesday, the airline said.
“A majority of our 270-280 [domestic] flights have been canceled,” said spokeswoman Ragini Chopra of Jet Airways, which is India’s largest carrier by market value.
The airline was operating normally on long-haul international routes, she said.
Since Monday night, more than one-third of Jet Airways pilots had reported sick, in what the company called a simulated strike over their demand for reinstatement of two colleagues fired in August.
The airline fired them for internal conduct, Chopra said without elaborating.
Jet Airways sacked two more pilots Tuesday on disciplinary grounds, she added.
The striking pilots were not immediately available for comment.
“We are open to conversation,” Chopra said of the stalemate.
Meanwhile, state-run Air India said it was accommodating Jet Airways’ stranded passengers on flights.
On Wednesday, Air India flew the country’s cricket team, originally booked on Jet Airways, to a three-nation tournament in Sri Lanka, according to Air India spokesman Jitender Bhargava.
http://cnnwire.blogs.cnn.com/2009/09/09/pilots-strike-cancels-hundreds-of-flights-in-india/
 
NEW DELHI: At least 130 flights of Jet Airways were on Tuesday cancelled from the four major metros after a large chunk of pilots failed to

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4984847.cms

More Videos » report for work protesting against sacking of two of their colleagues, a step termed as "sabotage of operations" by the airlines. ( Watch Video )

Passengers in Mumbai were the worst hit with 115 flights out of the total 345 failing to take off while at least 10 flights of Jet Airways and its subsidiary JetLite were cancelled in Delhi. In Chennai, six flights were cancelled, including three international, and four in Kolkata.

However, the morning flight of the private carrier from Kolkata for Dhaka took off as scheduled, Jet Airways officials said.

Hit by the crisis, Jet Airways chairman Naresh Goyal met civil aviation secretary Madhavan Nambiar on Tuesday morning for about half-an-hour and is understood to have discussed the situation.

Ministry officials said the government was closely monitoring the situation.

Jet Airways in a press statement said that a section of the pilots have resorted to a "simulated strike by reporting sick".

"This organised activity is a planned sabotage of operations that will damage the airline's operations and inconvenience the travelling public," it said.

Jet Airways said all affected guests can get a full refund or rebook themselves on an alternate date without any cancellation or reissue charges, but passengers were not amused.

"The least the airline people could have done is informed me that my flight was being cancelled," complained VS Sharma who was to fly to Mumbai from Delhi. "I could have made alternative arrangements. Really, this is very, very bizarre."

The pilots have been demanding the reinstatement of two of their colleagues, who were sacked recently. The airline has some 700 pilots on its rolls.

"Regrettably, a section of the pilots who were rostered for operations have resorted to a simulated strike by reporting sick," a Jet Airways spokesperson said in a statement on Tuesday morning.

"Jet Airways is taking all steps to minimise the inconvenience to its guests. The airline will make all efforts to operate the maximum number of flights," the statement said.

"However, perforce, some flights may have to be combined or cancelled; we will try to accommodate our guests on alternate flights."

The newly formed National Aviators Guild, a union of some Jet Airways pilots, has called the strike. They are protesting the sacking of two of their colleagues earlier this month. The airline has declined to recognise this union.

Girish Kaushik, the president of the guild, said they had issued the mandatory 14-day notice to the airline, adding the sacking of the two pilots was an act of vendetta for starting a new union and totally unjustified.

The two sacked senior pilots, Balaraman and Sam Thomas, were told of their termination by e-mail. The pilots claim that they were given the pink slip as they were instrumental in forming the new union.

"My sincere apologies to passengers. All we want is that the management takes the two pilots back. That is our only demand," Kaushik said. "We are not on strike. This is an individual decision by each pilot," Kaushik said.

Jet Airways said it has had been in conciliatory talks with the union and the regional labour commissioner had warned that any strike during this period would be deemed illegal as per the Industrial Disputes Act.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-on-mass-casual-leave/articleshow/4984594.cms
 
Well, they did can a BUNCH of expatriate pilots recently so perhaps the ones that stayed on the seniority list realized how much they're valued?
 
Big news on this side of the planet. Basically two senior pilots were fired for starting the union and about half of the pilot workforce is calling in sick. The funny thing is basically the CEO is threatening to shut down the company because the pilot's have lost their "discipline". Pretty typical attitude for this country. A CEO would rather shut down a company than have to look inferior.

=Jason-
 
Hang together or certainly hang separately.

(rough rough paraphrase, but I'm hungry and about to go dig around in the fridge)
 
If only pilots here in the U.S were this united.

Its illegal to do this over here.

Reading more into it, apparently over in India they are allowed by law to have 2 casual days that can be used at anytime. These pilots who are calling out are using the casual days at all at the same time, so its completely legal.
 
If only pilots here in the U.S were this united.

From my traveling within India and talking to numerous crews I agree the pilots there seem to be much more united. They don't seem to fight/hate each other like we often do here. There's a certain respect they have for each other as pilots.
 
We're a little weird over here.

Instead of coming together as a single unit, when 9/11 hit and "CutsAPalooza" came down, instead of coming together and beating down the ATA as a single cohesive unit, it was:

"Hey, UAL's going down. If they go down, we're all going to be OK"

"Oh, USAir's going down. If they go down, we're all going to be OK"

"That pilot group might strike, good, then they'll go down and we'll all be OK"

and so on, and so on.
 
We're a little weird over here.

Instead of coming together as a single unit, when 9/11 hit and "CutsAPalooza" came down, instead of coming together and beating down the ATA as a single cohesive unit, it was:

"Hey, UAL's going down. If they go down, we're all going to be OK"

"Oh, USAir's going down. If they go down, we're all going to be OK"

"That pilot group might strike, good, then they'll go down and we'll all be OK"

and so on, and so on.

Unfortunately for Americans I think if 2 guys were given the boot over something unfair most would be looking to see how their seniority number was affected.
 
Quote from todays The Times of India:
"They are behaving like terrorists. They cannot hold the country, passengers, and the airline hostage."

So there you have it, if you strike, you're a terrorist.

=Jason-
 
The person who was quoted was a leeeeeeeeeeeeettle melodramatic.

Well, a lot melodramatic.
 
Its illegal to do this over here.

Reading more into it, apparently over in India they are allowed by law to have 2 casual days that can be used at anytime. These pilots who are calling out are using the casual days at all at the same time, so its completely legal.

Regardless whether it is legal or not, you have half of the pilot group of Jet Airways risking all of their jobs, and the entire company, for 2 wrongfully sacked pilots. Now THAT, is impressive. :clap:

Pilots here in the U.S don't respect eachother NEARLY as much as they do abroad, and in a sense therefore arent respected nearly as much, either.
 
From my traveling within India and talking to numerous crews I agree the pilots there seem to be much more united. They don't seem to fight/hate each other like we often do here. There's a certain respect they have for each other as pilots.

This is true, and it is not only in India, but virtually world-wide, other then in the U.S.
 
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