French Pilots Bring Legal Action Against Ryanair
Posted: Wednesday, February 03, 2010
by David Yeates
French-property.com
French pilots and cabin crew have filed a legal action against the labour practices of Ryanair, which follows on a recent similar condemnation of Easyjet in the French courts.
The French unions, the UNAC (L'Union des navigants de l'aviation civile) and SNPL (Syndicat national des pilotes de ligne), filed the complaint to the prosecuting authorities in Aix-en-Provence as they consider Ryanair is not applying French labour laws, even though it has a base in Marseilles.
According to the aircrew unions, Ryanair benefits from the subsidies it receives from local councils to run flights from Marseilles, but does not pay French employer social charges, or apply French workplace laws.
They consider this to be a distortion of competition in relation to French companies. Air France, in particular, has set up it's own low-cost airline Transavia, which it is seeking to use more widely in France and Europe.
The unions have urged the French government to 'finally take responsibility in this case' and they have asked the prosecutor to bring the labour practices of Ryanair into line with French law.
Ryanair made Marseilles its first base in France in 2006, and runs four aircraft from a low cost terminal at the airport.
In 2007 Ryanair made a formal complaint to the European Court of Justice, complaining that French labour laws breach the free movement of labour. The outcome of this complaint is still awaited.
This Article has been viewed 126 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
No comments yet.We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.