Berlin Airport in Crisis: 445 Flights Cancelled as Massive Strike Brings Chaos
Strike Storm Grounds Berlin Brandenburg
Chaos hit Berlin Brandenburg Airport today as a massive strike shut down all operations. Some 445 flights have been axed, stranding a staggering 57,000 passengers — including thousands of Brits caught in the mayhem.
The walkout involves roughly 2,000 Verdi service workers demanding higher pay. With staff off the job, every incoming and outgoing flight was forced to halt, grinding one of Germany’s key hubs to a standstill as airlines scramble for solutions.
UK Flights Worst Affected
- British Airways, easyJet, and Ryanair hardest hit
- Flights cancelled from London Heathrow, Gatwick, City, Luton, and Stansted
- berkshire999.co.uk/where/manchester/" title="Manchester" data-wpil-keyword-link="linked" data-wpil-monitor-id="6194">Manchester, Bristol, and Edinburgh flights also disrupted
Notable UK cancellations include:
- 9:50am easyJet from London Luton
- 10:05am British Airways from Heathrow
- 10:25am Ryanair from Stansted
- 11:15am easyJet from Gatwick
- 8:10pm easyJet from Edinburgh
- 8:50pm easyJet from Manchester
- 9:10pm Ryanair from Stansted
- Plus several others throughout the day
Passengers are urged to contact their airlines immediately for refunds or rebooking options. The airport confirmed: “No scheduled passenger flights will be possible today.”
More Disruption Looms as Talks Scheduled
The strike could drag on. Key wage talks are set for March 25, but Berlin airport chief Aletta von Massenbach slammed the action as “disproportionate,” citing tense international situations, including the Iran conflict, as a backdrop.
Europe’s Skies Already Turbulent
This latest blow adds to a storm of airline woes across Europe:
- Lufthansa wiped out 600 flights in a two-day strike earlier this month
- British Airways cancelled all Dubai flights until June due to the Iran crisis
- Air New Zealand slashed 1,000 flights amid soaring fuel prices
With Europe’s skies already a nightmare, travellers must brace for more travel chaos in the coming weeks.