<p>German airline giant <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/lufthansa" target="_blank">Lufthansa</a> said Wednesday its operations were resuming hours after it was forced to cancel or delay flights over <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/lufthansa-hit-by-major-it-outage-flights-cancelled-1191482.html" target="_blank">a major IT outage</a> caused by construction work in Frankfurt.</p>.<p>Frankfurt airport, Lufthansa's main hub, had earlier stopped most planes from landing to avoid overcrowding as thousands of passengers were unable to board flights.</p>.<p>The breakdown was resolved after several hours, with flights starting to return to normal in the afternoon, Lufthansa said.</p>.<p>The IT systems failure had been caused by construction work in the Frankfurt region that had damaged broadband fibre-optic cables, the airline said.</p>.<p>Lufthansa is Europe's biggest airline group. It also owns Eurowings, Swiss, Brussels and Austrian Airlines.</p>.<p>The group did not immediately specify how many flights or passengers were impacted globally but Frankfurt and Munich airports appeared among those most affected.</p>.<p>Deutsche Telekom said four of its cables had been damaged during construction work ordered by state-owned rail operator Deutsche Bahn in Frankfurt a day earlier.</p>.<p>German newspaper Bild reported there had been "chaos" at Frankfurt and Munich airports because of problems with Lufthansa's check-in and boarding systems.</p>.<p>The airline group had urged passengers on domestic flights to book train journeys instead.</p>.<p>The turmoil comes as Germany is bracing for a full-day strike at seven airports on Friday, including at Munich and Frankfurt.</p>.<p>The stoppage has been called by the Verdi trade union, which is currently leading negotiations for better pay for public sector workers, airport ground crew and aviation security staff.</p>.<p>The one-day walkout is expected to lead to flight disruptions for thousands of passengers.</p>
<p>German airline giant <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/lufthansa" target="_blank">Lufthansa</a> said Wednesday its operations were resuming hours after it was forced to cancel or delay flights over <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/lufthansa-hit-by-major-it-outage-flights-cancelled-1191482.html" target="_blank">a major IT outage</a> caused by construction work in Frankfurt.</p>.<p>Frankfurt airport, Lufthansa's main hub, had earlier stopped most planes from landing to avoid overcrowding as thousands of passengers were unable to board flights.</p>.<p>The breakdown was resolved after several hours, with flights starting to return to normal in the afternoon, Lufthansa said.</p>.<p>The IT systems failure had been caused by construction work in the Frankfurt region that had damaged broadband fibre-optic cables, the airline said.</p>.<p>Lufthansa is Europe's biggest airline group. It also owns Eurowings, Swiss, Brussels and Austrian Airlines.</p>.<p>The group did not immediately specify how many flights or passengers were impacted globally but Frankfurt and Munich airports appeared among those most affected.</p>.<p>Deutsche Telekom said four of its cables had been damaged during construction work ordered by state-owned rail operator Deutsche Bahn in Frankfurt a day earlier.</p>.<p>German newspaper Bild reported there had been "chaos" at Frankfurt and Munich airports because of problems with Lufthansa's check-in and boarding systems.</p>.<p>The airline group had urged passengers on domestic flights to book train journeys instead.</p>.<p>The turmoil comes as Germany is bracing for a full-day strike at seven airports on Friday, including at Munich and Frankfurt.</p>.<p>The stoppage has been called by the Verdi trade union, which is currently leading negotiations for better pay for public sector workers, airport ground crew and aviation security staff.</p>.<p>The one-day walkout is expected to lead to flight disruptions for thousands of passengers.</p>