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Jet airways

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Old 10th Sep 2009, 04:40
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Jet airways

Jet Airways Strike: Pilots' decision leave passengers in the lurch

Published by: Sudhir Kumar
Published: Tue, 08 Sep 2009 at 13:52 IST


New Delhi: Hundreds of passengers today faced inconvenience as the jet airways cancelled 115 flights scheduled for the day after its pilots went on mass casual leave to protest the sacking of their two colleagues.

The pilots decided to go on mass casual leave as the airline had sacked two of its seniormost pilots Captain Sam Thomas and Captain Balaraman last month after trade union body, National Aviators Guild was formed by them.

Jet Airways spokesman said that they decided to cancel 115 flights of our total 345 flights in the day in view of pilots going on mass casual leave.

The union gave a strike call on September 7 to protest the sacking. But the issue was put before the Regional Labour Commissioner for conciliation.

After going through the issue, he conducted the first conciliation proceedings between the management and union on August 31 and advised both the parties to adhere to the Industrial Dispute Act of 1947.

It said that since the matter was under conciliation, Jet pilots were legally bound to not to go on a strike.

Though the pilots withdrew the strike call yesterday as a part of their strategy, they decided to go on mass casual leave.

The Guild claims representation of 645 pilots of the total over 1000 pilots in Jet Airways.


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more: Current News | Latest News | Breaking News | Nagaland News - MorungExpress.com - Jet Airways sets up crisis centre
freightdog188 is offline  
Old 10th Sep 2009, 04:43
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Good to see some pilots still have some pride and dignity to stand up for what is right.

I wish them the best of luck.
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Old 11th Sep 2009, 10:23
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BS Reporters / New Delhi September 11, 2009, 0:33 IST

The Jet Airways management and National Aviators Guild (NAG) made a breakthrough tonight with a tentative draft which indicated the airline is likely to reinstate all the five pilots it had terminated, with some riders. However, a Jet spokesperson said: “Currently, we are not aware of any such move.”

“Jet management has agreed to take back all the four pilots,” Congress leader Sanjay Nirupam, told Business Standard, who said he was negotiating between the management and the pilots. It is expected that this draft agreement would be presented to the central labour commissioner tomorrow.

Earlier during the day, the Union Ministry of Labour stepped in as Jet Airways' protesting pilots hardened their stance over the dismissal of five employees and the right to form a union and took mass sick leave for the third day, forcing the airline to cancel over 160 domestic and 40 international flights.

WHAT HAPPENED ON THURSDAY
* Jet cancels 163 domestic and 35 international flights
* Chairman Naresh Goyal meets Labour Minister Malikarjun Kharge
* Executive Director Saroj Dutta holds meeting with Chief Labour Commissioner S K Mukhopadhyay
* Pilots’ union skips the meeting for reconciliation with the Labour commissioner. Labour commissioner to meet the pilots on Friday
* National Aviators Guild (NAG) files petition in Madras High Court, with a plea to take action against the management for hiring foreign pilots. Also asked court to monitor operations day-to-day and flight-wise operations since the airline is not considering passengers’ safety
* Jet Airways ground staff hold press conference to ask pilots to come back to work
* Late night negotiations led to a tentative solution to end the deadlock

It was a day of more drama with the NAG, representing 650 Jet pilots, drumming up support from labour unions across the political spectrum and the airline's cabin crew ground staff appealing to the pilots to return to work.

Indian Commercial Pilots Association (ICPA) and Indian Pilots Guild (IPG), the two commercial pilots’ union of Air India, are supporting the Jet pilots. Union representatives of both ICPA and IPG have said that in case Air India puts in additional flights to take the Jet Airways’ passengers, they are planning to tell their members not to pilot those flights. ICPA members today met NAG pilots in Delhi.

Chief Labour Commissioner S Mukhopadhyay and the Jet Airways management led by Executive Director Saroj Datta attended the first round of a reconciliation meeting today, in which the pilots were conspicuous by their absence. NAG Joint Secretary Sam Thomas alleged the pilots were not given notice to attend what he described as "management engineered talks".

The talks coincided with Jet Airways Chairman Naresh Goyal calling on Union Labour Minister Mallikarjun Kharge in Shram Shakti Bhawan, New Delhi, which ministry officials described as a “courtesy call”.

Kharge, however, made it clear that the pilots had every right to form a union. “No one can deny the pilots the basic right to organise themselves in a union,” he told reporters today.

Ministry officials added that sacking pilots — two were sacked on Monday for refusing to submit to examination by company doctors — in the middle of conciliation efforts was an unfair labour practice and would embarrass the management.

NAG today also submitted a plea in the Madras High Court for the court to take action against the Jet management for hiring foreign pilots when experienced and senior Indian pilots have been sacked — two pilots were sacked last month, the original cause of the pilots’ protest.

The guild also asked the court to monitor the airline’s day-to-day and flight, wise operations since it was not taking passenger safety into consideration.

The Jet management, however, stuck to its position that the pilots should return to work and dissolve the union before talks could be held.

In New Delhi, the airline’s cabin crew and ground-handling staff also held a press conference to appeal to the pilots to return to work. “Mr Goyal has said he will close the airline. What will happen to us? The pilots have a lot of money to feed their family but we don’t,” said a representative of the ground handling team.

They however denied that they were acting under management pressure. The airline’s bottomline losses would be over Rs 5 crore per day, according to Mahantesh Sabarad, an aviation analyst.

Meanwhile, in a letter to the CEO of Jet Airways, Wolfgang Prock Schauer, nine major trade unions said, “By preventing the pilots to form a union, you are violating their legal right to pursue legitimate trade union activities and infringing their fundamental right to freedom of association guaranteed to them and all citizens of India by the Constitution.”

The unions that signed the letter of support included the Hind Mazdoor Sabha, Centre for Indian Trade Unions, Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh, All India Trade Union Congress, Indian National Trade Union Congress, All India United Trade Union Centre, United Trade Union Congress, All India Central Council of Trade Unions and Self Employed Women’s Association.
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Old 12th Sep 2009, 00:36
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"...advised both the parties to adhere to the Industrial Dispute Act of 1947."

1947!!! Geez, same industrial advancement as Hong Kong, who'd a thunk it.
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Old 17th Sep 2009, 06:04
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BBC NEWS | South Asia | India airline pilots end strike
Jet Airways
Hundreds of flights were cancelled during the strike

A five-day strike by pilots at Indian airline Jet Airways which led to the cancellation of 800 flights has ended.

More than 400 of the company's pilots called in sick to protest after two of their colleagues were sacked for setting up a trade union.

The airline and pilots' union said they had agreed to hold talks. The sacked pilots will be re-instated.

The company's executive director reportedly said international flights would resume immediately.

"The [sacked] pilots will be taken back into service and flight operations are set to begin as early as tomorrow after the pilots' rostering is done," the United News of India agency reported, citing unnamed sources.

Hundreds of passengers were stranded at various airports during the strike leading to angry confrontations.

According to Indian media reports, the strike cost the airline -owned by Indian tycoon Naresh Goyal - some $8m (£4.79m) a day.

Jet Airways - which operates 365 domestic and 74 international flights daily - has been mired in controversies in recent months. Last year, it announced plans to lay off 1,900 staff to cut costs.

But after days of protests by employees, the government persuaded the airline to take them back.


India's once-booming aviation sector has been hard hit by soaring costs, mainly due to global fuel-price rises.
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Old 17th Sep 2009, 07:46
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Yes, and it also proves that the balls of the Indian Pilots are bigger that those of the Cathay Pilots (obviously not everybody). Might be a hard one to swallow eh boyz?? :
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