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Thousands of BA flights canceled as crew on strike

LONDON -- British Airways was scrambling to deal with a three-day strike launched by cabin crew Saturday, throwing the plans of tens of thousands of travelers into chaos and risking harm to the Labour government before a tough general election.

BA chartered planes from rival airlines, drafted in volunteer crew from its other work force and rebooked some passengers on other services in a bid to keep as many passengers happy as possible -- but it was still forced to cancel thousands of flights.

Chief Executive Willie Walsh issued a direct apology to passengers via YouTube for the walkout, the airline's first in almost 15 years, saying it was a "terrible day for BA."

The Eurostar train service between London and continental Europe and Virgin's rail services between London and Scotland were expected to be busy as passengers sought alternate routes.

BA also warned Saturday that the disruption would likely last several days beyond the three-day strike, because of a knock-on effect on flights that would carry through to the end of a second strike planned for March 27-30.

"We're in limbo land," said Susan Danby, a school worker from the northern English city of Hull. She is due to fly March 29 to Las Vegas with friends to celebrate their 50th birthdays. "This is our dream trip, we booked it last August and we've been planning it for years."

"We all want more money and better conditions, but people shouldn't ruin other people's holidays," Danby said.

As protesters were readying picket lines Saturday outside London's Heathrow international airport, analysts estimated BA has already lost more than 25 million pounds (more than $37 million) because of canceled tickets and contingency costs.

The two planned strikes combined could cost the airline more than the 63 million pounds ($95 million) that Walsh is trying to save through the disputed changes to workers' pay and conditions.

The Unite union has gathered some support from unions in the United States, Germany and Spain for its action, but they have so far stopped short of pledges for coordinated activity that would disrupt BA's ability to refuel and service the planes it is operating over the walkout.

Aside from hurting BA financially, the strike is also an unwelcome event for Britain's governing Labour Party before national elections expected before June.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown irritated Unite, a major political donor, by calling the union "deplorable," and as late as Friday evening was urging it to call off the strike.

Britain faces even more possible travel chaos in the run-up to the April 2-5 Easter break, as railway signal workers voted last week to join rail maintenance workers in a strike. The Rail Maritime and Transport union has not called dates for the walkout, but refused to rule out the long Easter weekend.

And over this weekend, engineering works on the London Underground were forcing closures between central London and Heathrow, though the Heathrow Express train service was operating as normal.

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 Thousands of BA flights canceled as crew on strike 
A British Airways (BA) passenger jet taxis near stationary BA planes at Heathrow Airport in west London March 19. (Reuters/AFP)

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