France air controllers' strike disrupts European travel
Passengers wait at Paris Orly airport,  where half of domestic flights were cancelled on Wednesday
     BBC., 21 July 2010  Last updated at 10:25  GMT   
A strike by air traffic  controllers in France is causing serious disruption to domestic and  European flights.
In Paris, one in five flights from Charles de Gaulle airport  were cancelled on Wednesday, while half of flights from Orly are  grounded.
Air France said the flights affected are short and medium  haul only. Long haul should take off as normal.
Disruption is expected at most French airports due to the  strike, according to the civil aviation authority DGAC.
The action - the third major airport strike in France  this year - is scheduled to run until Thursday morning.
Stranded overnight        Unions representing air traffic controllers called the strike  to protest against plans to merge France's 4,000 controllers and 8,000  other DGAC personnel into a European-wide system.
Budget airline Easyjet has cancelled about a third of its  departures from Charles de Gaulle and Orly to destinations across  Europe, according to its website.
Queues began forming on Tuesday evening at Orly, where Simone  Battaglia, 30, was stranded overnight after his Easyjet flight home to  Naples was scrapped.
"The company is just offering us a flight for Milan  tomorrow," he told the AFP news agency. "But Milan is hundreds of  kilometres from Naples. That means we will have to take the train. It is  a waste of time and money."
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