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Airplanes of German airline Lufthansa are parked at the Franz-Josef-Strauss airport in Munich, southern Germany. Pilots at German flagship carrier Lufthansa stayed away from work for a second straight day, forcing the airline to scrap 912 flights and grounding 115,000 more passengers. Image Credit: AFP

Franfurt: German pilots union VC should resume talks with Lufthansa to find a compromise over a long-running pay dispute rather than repeatedly going on strike, a board member at the airline told a German weekly.

Lufthansa cancelled nearly 2,800 flights during a four-day strike from Wednesday that affected more than 350,000 passengers, the 14th walkout in a dispute running since early 2014 that has cost the airline hundreds of millions of euros.

“We have to talk,” Bettina Volkens, Lufthansa’s board member in charge of human resources told Bild am Sonntag. “I hope very much that [VC] finally changes its uncompromising stance. This cannot be forced via strikes.”

Lufthansa said via Twitter that all flights would start on schedule on Monday, November 28, as there was no strike call from VC so far.

VC rejected the latest pay offer from Germany’s biggest airline late on Friday but lifted the threat of extending its strike beyond Saturday.

It said on Saturday that more strikes were possible, and would be announced at least 24 hours in advance.

Lufthansa has offered to increase wages by 4.4 per cent in two instalments, plus a one-off payment worth 1.8 months’ pay.

The union wants an average annual pay rise of 3.7 per cent for 5,400 pilots over a five-year period backdated to 2012.

Pilot strikes cost Lufthansa €222 million ($235 million; Dh863.24 million) in 2014, according to the IW Cologne Institute for Economic Research while in 2015, walkouts by pilots and cabin crew cost the airline €231 million.

Lufthansa said it had taken another €20 million hit over the first two days of the latest strike.