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After Terror Attacks, Labour Dispute Cripples Brussels Airport 

A labour dispute led to flight cancellations to or from Brussels airport just after it reopened after March’s attacks

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A labour dispute sparked flight cancellations to or from Brussels airport for a second day on Wednesday, just after it reopened in the wake of last month’s deadly jihadist bombings.

Some 200 flights were cancelled– about half of the total scheduled for the day– after around a hundred flights were axed yesterday. The airport said in a tweet that it was “still unclear” whether there would be more cancellations into tomorrow.

Staff from Belgium’s air traffic control organisation Belgocontrol were protesting the terms of a labour contract, including the decision to delay the effective retirement age to 58 instead of the existing 55.

Belgocontrol spokesman Dominique Dehaene told the Belga news agency that the organisation had a full team working until 2200 GMT on Wednesday, but “we expect new problems” after that.

Controllers “said they were sick” and unable to work, according to a statement from Belgocontrol, which said it “was looking for operational solutions”.

Prime Minister Charles Michel told Belga “a handful” of workers were “taking the country hostage” just when “the image and economy of the country is under threat” following the jihadist attacks that hit the airport and Brussels’ metro.

Belgian authorities have been the subject of international criticism for their failure to prevent the coordinated suicide bombings on March 22 that killed 32 people.

The airport reopened on April 3 for the first time since two Islamic State attackers blew themselves up in the departure hall in coordinated blasts that also struck the Maalbeek metro station near the city’s EU headquarters.

It will take months to repair the departure hall and full operations are not expected to resume for weeks.

Condemning the strike, Geneva said it was a “kick in the teeth for all the airline and airport staff who have worked so hard to reconnect Brussels to the world”.

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