Rash of sick pilots grounds Air Berlin flights

Flyers call in with illness in unusually large numbers leading to numerous cancellations

Flight passengers crowd in front of the desk of German airline Air Berlin at the airport in Duesseldorf, western Germany, on September 12, 2017, after the troubled airline had to cancel flights due to "operational reasons". / AFP PHOTO / dpa / Roland Weihrauch / Germany OUT
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Insolvent Air Berlin said it has cancelled around 70 flights so far on Tuesday, affecting both its own operations and flights it carries out for Lufthansa’s Eurowings, after pilots called in sick in unusually high numbers.

The cancellations come as a deadline approaches for investors to bid for the assets of Germany’s second largest airline, with Lufthansa seen in pole position to acquire large parts of its rival.

Departures information on Air Berlin’s website showed flights cancelled from a range of German airports including Berlin Tegel, Duesseldorf, Hamburg and Cologne.

A spokesman for Eurowings, which leases 33 crewed planes from Air Berlin, said it also expected short-haul flight cancellations as a result of the sickness-related absences.

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However, the budget carrier expects to carry out the majority of its 650 planned flights for today because it would take measures such as rebooking customers on to other flights or trains and using standby planes and crews.

TUIfly was also forced to cancel flights last year after many pilots called in sick, with their union saying staff were concerned that merger talks, since failed, could lead to job and pay cuts.

Representatives from pilots’ union Vereinigung Cockpit were not immediately available for comment.

Air Berlin, Germany’s second-largest airline, filed for bankruptcy protection last month after shareholder Etihad Airways withdrew funding following years of losses.

Bidders have until September 15 to submit binding offers, with a decision possible as early as September 21, three days before a German national election.