Pilots, flight attendants demand flights to China stop as virus fear
mounts worldwide
CHICAGO/PARIS (Reuters) - Pilots and flight
attendants are demanding airlines stop flights to China as health officials
declare a global emergency over the rapidly spreading coronavirus, with American
Airlines' pilots filing a lawsuit seeking an immediate halt.
FILE PHOTO: An American Airlines Airbus A321 plane
takes off from Los Angeles International airport (LAX) in Los Angeles,
California, U.S. March 28, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
China has
reported nearly 10,000 cases and 213 deaths, but the virus has spread to 18
countries, mostly, presumably, by airline passengers.
The United States
has advised its citizens not to travel to China, raising its warning to the same
level as those for Iraq and Afghanistan.
U.S. airlines, which have been
reducing flights to China this week, were reassessing flying plans as a result,
according to people familiar with the matter.
It is possible the White
House could opt to take further action to bar flights to China in coming days,
but officials stressed that no decision has been made.
The Allied Pilots
Association (APA), which represents American Airlines pilots, cited "serious,
and in many ways still unknown, health threats posed by the coronavirus" in a
lawsuit filed in Texas, where the airline is based.
American said it was
taking precautions against the virus but had no immediate comment on the
lawsuit. On Wednesday, it announced flight cancellations from Los Angeles to
Beijing and Shanghai, but is continuing flights from Dallas.
APA
President Eric Ferguson urged pilots assigned to U.S.-China flights to decline
the assignment. In a statement, the American Airlines' flight attendants union
said they supported the pilots' lawsuit and called on the company and the U.S.
government to "err on the side of caution and halt all flights to and from
China."
Pilots at United Airlines, the largest U.S. airline to China,
concerned for their safety will be allowed to drop their trip without pay,
according to a Wednesday memo from their union to members.
United
announced on Thursday another 332 U.S.-China flight cancellations between
February and March 28, though it will continue operating round trip flights from
San Francisco to Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong.
The American Airlines
pilot lawsuit came as an increasing number of airlines stopped their flights to
mainland China, including Air France KLM SA, British Airways, Germany's
Lufthansa and Virgin Atlantic.
Other major carriers have kept flying to
China, but protective masks and shorter layovers designed to reduce exposure
have done little to reassure crews.
'COUNTDOWN'
A U.S. flight
attendant who recently landed from one major Chinese city said a big concern is
catching the virus and spreading it to families, or getting quarantined while on
a layover."I didn't understand the gravity of the situation until I went there,"
she said on condition of anonymity, describing general paranoia on the return
flight, with every passenger wearing a mask.
"Now I feel like I'm on a
14-day countdown."
Thai Airways is hosing its cabins with disinfectant
spray between China flights and allowing crew to wear masks and
gloves.
Delta Air Lines is operating fewer flights and offering food
deliveries so crew can stay in their hotels. The carrier is also allowing pilots
to drop China trips without pay, a memo from its union to members
said.
Korean Air Lines Co Ltd and Singapore Airlines are sending
additional crew to fly each plane straight back, avoiding overnight
stays.
The South Korean carrier also said it was loading protective suits
for flight attendants who might need to take care of suspected coronavirus cases
in the air.
Airlines in Asia are seeing a big drop in bookings along with
forced cancellations because of the coronavirus outbreak, the head of aircraft
lessor Avolon Holdings Ltd said, adding the impact could last for some
months.
The outbreak poses the biggest epidemic threat to the airline
industry since the 2003 SARS crisis, which led to a 45% plunge in passenger
demand in Asia at its peak in April of that year, analysts said.
Fitch
Ratings said airlines with more moderate exposure to China and the Asia-Pacific
region were likely to be able to re-deploy capacity to alternative routes to
mitigate the effect on traffic, but that could increase competition on those
routes and reduce airfares.
Air France, which maintained China flights
throughout the SARS epidemic, suspended its Beijing and Shanghai flights on
Thursday after cabin crews demanded an immediate halt.
"When the staff
see that other airlines have stopped flying there, their reaction is 'Why are we
still going?'," said Flore Arrighi, president of UNAC, one of the airline's four
main flight attendants' unions.
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