British Airways in talks over Christmas strikes

British Airways aircraft taxi at Heathrow Airport near London

British Airways aircraft taxi at Heathrow Airport near London

Published Dec 19, 2016

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London - British

Airways and cabin crew representatives are set to hold talks on Monday

aimed at stopping strikes that would hit thousands of passengers flying in and

out of the UK over Christmas, as Prime Minister Theresa May’s government

clashes with unions over a wave of industrial action.

The Unite

trade union and BA agreed to meet in London in an attempt to resolve a row over

pay and work conditions before as many as 4 500 workers based at the city’s

Heathrow Airport walk out on December 25 and 26, the conciliation service Acas said

in an e-mailed statement.

It is one

of a number of industrial disputes that have hit the UK this holiday season,

with strikes scheduled for the railway network, mail service and airport

baggage handling.

Politicians

have urged unions to reconsider what’s being called the “Christmas of

discontent” strike action, while members of May’s cabinet have reacted with

dismay to reports that the unions’ real target is not employers in private

transport firms but the Tory government. Ministers said they sensed that the

strikes were motivated by politics, as unions are major funders of the main

Opposition Labour Party.

“Labour’s

refusal to condemn their union paymasters shows how out of touch they are with

ordinary working people,” said Patrick McLoughlin, the chairman of May’s

Conservative Party and a member of her cabinet, in a post on Twitter on Sunday.

Read also:  Comair strike grounded

A report in

The Sunday Times newspaper claimed that the president of the RMT rail union

vowed to use strikes on southern England trains to topple the Conservative

government, a claim which the union has denied. David Gauke, chief secretary to

the Treasury, said the allegation was “more evidence” that unions were

“motivated by political objectives not passenger safety.”

Mick Cash,

the RMT union’s general secretary, said his members would rather be at work but

had genuine concerns about safety. “We are a serious industrial trade union,

and we are not part of some conspiracy to bring the government down. We are

focusing on the concerns our members have over safety on the railways,” Cash

told Pienaar’s Politics on BBC Radio 5 live.

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