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Oct 25, 2025

Brussels Airlines staff protest after dismissals but flights run on schedule

Brussels Airlines staff protest after dismissals but flights run on schedule
Trade-union members at Brussels Airlines staged an early-morning demonstration on Saturday 25 October at Brussels Airport following the dismissal of three cabin-crew members who refused to operate a flight to Accra because cleaning staff had reported insects on board. About 50 employees distributed leaflets outside crew report centres, accusing management of ignoring legitimate health-and-safety concerns. The airline maintains the infestation alert was a false alarm.

The action, described as a “last warning” by the white-collar union BBTK, did not disrupt departures or arrivals. Nevertheless, the protest highlights lingering labour tension at Belgium’s flag carrier only two years after a cost-cutting plan that saw 780 redundancies and salary freezes. Crew representatives argue that disciplinary firings risk chilling the ‘stop-the-clock’ safety culture that European Aviation Safety Agency rules are designed to foster.

For corporate travel managers the key takeaway is that contingency planning remains advisable throughout the winter season. While Saturday’s protest was symbolic, unions hinted that strike notices could follow if the dismissals are not rescinded. Any future industrial action would affect a network that carries a high share of Belgium-bound business traffic to West Africa and North America.

Passenger rights advocates also remind employers that EU261 compensation rules apply even to work-to-rule disruptions that the airline might classify as “extraordinary circumstances”. Companies should therefore brief travelling staff on claim procedures and duty-of-care hotlines.

In the meantime, Brussels Airlines continues normal operations, but the episode serves as a barometer of job-security anxiety in an industry still recalibrating after COVID-19 and rising fuel costs.
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