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Oct 27, 2025

Brussels Airlines cabin-crew dispute triggers strike threat for Paris and Lyon routes

Brussels Airlines cabin-crew dispute triggers strike threat for Paris and Lyon routes
Belgian carrier Brussels Airlines faces a fresh wave of labour unrest after cabin-crew unions filed a 15-day strike notice on 27 October, protesting the dismissal of three flight attendants who refused to operate what they called an “unsafe” Tel Aviv rotation.

If mediation fails, industrial action could begin as early as mid-November, affecting up to 250 daily flights, including the high-frequency Brussels–Paris CDG and Brussels–Lyon services used heavily by corporate travellers shuttling between EU institutions and French headquarters.

French travel-management companies estimate that 35 % of passengers on these routes connect onward to long-haul Star Alliance flights, meaning disruption could cascade across transatlantic itineraries. Lufthansa Group, the airline’s parent company, said contingency planning includes wet-leasing aircraft and re-accommodating passengers on Air France-KLM where possible, but warned capacity is tight ahead of the Christmas peak.

The dispute also revives the broader question of ‘right to refuse’ in conflict-zone operations, an issue many multinationals track closely for duty-of-care compliance. French HR directors with staff based in Brussels are being advised to activate remote-work options or rail travel plans should flights be grounded.

Negotiations resume on 30 October under Belgium’s national conciliatory procedure; unions say they will strike “for as long as necessary” unless the dismissals are rescinded and fatigue-management rosters improved.
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