
Italy’s nationwide general strike on 29 May shut down air-traffic control towers, ground-handling crews and rail services for most of the day, leaving thousands of passengers—including many outbound from India—scrambling for alternatives. Air Traveler Club’s operational bulletin shows that all flights not protected by the country’s minimum-services law between 07:00–10:00 and 18:00–21:00 local time were at risk of cancellation. Indian leisure and business travellers heading to Milan Design Week and end-of-quarter client meetings in Rome bore the brunt, with both ITA Airways and Vistara’s codeshare partners cancelling connections ex-Doha and Abu Dhabi. Under EU261 rules, airlines are exempt from paying cash compensation for strike-related cancellations, but they must still rebook passengers at the earliest opportunity and provide meals and hotels. Travel advisors in Mumbai reported that rerouting through Frankfurt and Zurich remained feasible early on Thursday but seats tightened rapidly as the strike drew closer.
For travellers suddenly rerouting through additional Schengen hubs or extending their stay because of the strike, VisaHQ’s India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) can fast-track new or upgraded multi-entry Schengen visas, arrange secure courier pick-up of passports and deliver real-time status updates—ensuring your paperwork keeps pace with last-minute itinerary changes.
Travellers who bought the cheapest ‘Light’ fares faced hefty differences in fare if they opted to switch to unaffected dates. Companies with marine and project personnel rotating via Italian ports were urged to issue “fit-for-travel” letters so that seafarers could board alternative flights via Paris or Istanbul. The walkout extended to Trenitalia and Italo high-speed trains, complicating surface transfers. Freight forwarders warned of potential knock-on effects on pharmaceuticals shipped from Lombardy to Indian markets, as warehouse staff also joined the strike. Indian chambers of commerce in Florence and Turin broadcast WhatsApp alerts advising members to keep electronic copies of Schengen visas and hotel bookings handy in case police checks delayed overland detours. Looking ahead, unions have threatened further action in July if wage-indexation talks fail. Indian corporates with sizeable Italian footprints—Tata Consultancy Services, Mahindra Automotive and Dr Reddy’s Laboratories among them—are reviewing contingency clauses in their travel insurance and supplier contracts to cover strike disruptions. For now, experts recommend avoiding Italian transit points on 29 May, checking luggage-interline rules when rebooking through third-country hubs, and retaining boarding-pass stubs as evidence should reimbursement claims arise.
For travellers suddenly rerouting through additional Schengen hubs or extending their stay because of the strike, VisaHQ’s India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) can fast-track new or upgraded multi-entry Schengen visas, arrange secure courier pick-up of passports and deliver real-time status updates—ensuring your paperwork keeps pace with last-minute itinerary changes.
Travellers who bought the cheapest ‘Light’ fares faced hefty differences in fare if they opted to switch to unaffected dates. Companies with marine and project personnel rotating via Italian ports were urged to issue “fit-for-travel” letters so that seafarers could board alternative flights via Paris or Istanbul. The walkout extended to Trenitalia and Italo high-speed trains, complicating surface transfers. Freight forwarders warned of potential knock-on effects on pharmaceuticals shipped from Lombardy to Indian markets, as warehouse staff also joined the strike. Indian chambers of commerce in Florence and Turin broadcast WhatsApp alerts advising members to keep electronic copies of Schengen visas and hotel bookings handy in case police checks delayed overland detours. Looking ahead, unions have threatened further action in July if wage-indexation talks fail. Indian corporates with sizeable Italian footprints—Tata Consultancy Services, Mahindra Automotive and Dr Reddy’s Laboratories among them—are reviewing contingency clauses in their travel insurance and supplier contracts to cover strike disruptions. For now, experts recommend avoiding Italian transit points on 29 May, checking luggage-interline rules when rebooking through third-country hubs, and retaining boarding-pass stubs as evidence should reimbursement claims arise.