Expatica news

Union urges French pilots boycott Dominican Republic

France’s main pilots’ union on Tuesday called for French commercial airline pilots to boycott the Dominican Republic to protest the 11-month detention of two colleagues there on drug smuggling charges.

The SNPL France Alpa union in a statement appealed to pilots with French contracts “to refuse to carry out flights to the Dominican Republic”.

The union’s president, Yves Deshayes, said two Air France pilots on Tuesday had said they would not fly to Santo Domingo, but they were replaced by others who did.

The union launched the action in support of two pilots, Pascal Fauret and Bruno Odos, who were arrested on March 20, 2013 when Dominican Republic anti-narcotics officials discovered 700 kilos of cocaine in their plane.

The aircraft, a Falcon 50 private jet owned by a French millionaire owner of a chain of eyeglass stores, Alain Afflelou, was under charter at the time to a company based in southeast France, SN-THS.

The two pilots have been kept in detention since, pending trial. The union says a court hearing to begin proceedings against them and nearly 40 other drug trafficking suspects has been delayed six times.

The Dominican Republic, which shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti, gets much of its revenue from tourists, most of whom come from Europe.