Court allows Ryanair British pilots to strike
Ryanair's British-based pilots will be allowed to strike as planned this week, the High Court in London ruled on Wednesday, but the High Court in Dublin blocked Ireland's pilots from joining in the walkout.
"The immediate industrial action (due Thursday and Friday) is restrained," Justice Denis McDonald told the court in Dublin.
A total 180 directly-employed Ryanair pilots -- members of the Irish Airline Pilots' Association (IALPA) -- had intended to match planned action by British pilots over pay.
The no-frills airline said the High Court's decision to impose an injunction against the strike in Ireland "will come as a huge relief to thousands of Irish passengers and their families".
The airline called on IALPA members -- working with parent union Forsa -- to return to mediation, but reiterated its hardline stance on pay negotiation.
"Small groups of workers, earning six-figure salaries should not be threatening to disrupt the holiday travel plans of Ryanair customers and their families," the carrier said in a statement.
But the Dublin-based airline lost its last-minute bid to cancel action by the British Airline Pilots Association (BALPA) in the High Court in London on Wednesday.
A five-day strike by Ryanair cabin crew in Portugal meanwhile began Wednesday, but disruption was limited after the country's government ordered workers to deliver at least a minimum service.
Ryanair cabin crew in Spain have called for ten days of strikes in September.
The Irish court dispute centred on a 2018 agreement between pilots and management.
Ryanair argued that was an "overarchingâ text which outlined how industrial action should not be taken until a mediation process had been completed.
The carrier also said Forsa had not outlined specific pay demands, had been hasty in their movement to strike and conducted the strike ballot improperly.
Forsa said the 2018 agreement was limited to matters of the time only and Ryanair had been "dismissive and showed no desire to engage in a reasonable manner with the pay proposal".
Justice McDonald said there was a "gap in the evidence" regarding the strike ballot, in which 61 percent of members voted.
His injunction was made on the condition that all parties return for a fuller hearing soon.
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