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Lufthansa’s Eurowings goes on hiring spree as travel rebound expected -Breaking

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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO – A logo for Eurowings was pictured at Cologne-Bonn Airport during the strike by cabin crew workers of German airline Germanwings, called UFO (German cabin crew union) in Cologne on December 30, 2019. REUTERS/Thilo Schmuelgen

BERLIN (Reuters), – Lufthansa’s subsidiary Eurowings anticipates a strong recovery in the coming year. They plan to create about 750 additional cabin and cockpit jobs during the following 12 months.

It was among the first to hire employees in 2021. The airline gained 750 additional employees many of whom were flight crew members who had been laid off by Lufthansa Group.

Eurowings said Monday, “Eurowings is preparing for a strong season with catchup effects despite current Omicron waves.”

Eurowings workers shrank from 3,350 prior to the coronavirus pandemic, to around 2,500 one year ago.

However, it had the same number employees by September 2021 as prior to the pandemic.

Condor’s German counterpart is growing its pilot staff with plans to add 150 flight attendants as well as 180 more pilots.

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