|      IAG airline holding company has accepted a government-appointed    mediator's compromise proposal to end a labor    conflict over mass layoffs at Spanish flagship airline    Iberia, the company said on Sunday. "The board has    decided to accept the proposal," the company said in a statement. International Airlines Group, or IAG, is the holding company for Iberia and British Airways. The mediator proposed    Iberia lay off 3,141 workers, instead of the 3,807 the airline had planned to    let go, with severance pay of 35 days per year worked, rather than 20. The unions have not said    yet whether they accept the proposal and it was not immediately possible to    reach union representatives on Sunday. Union workers had previously rejected    a company offer to soften its initial plan for firing staff. The mediator is scheduled    to meet with worker representatives on Monday. Iberia workers went on    strike February 18-22 and March 4-8 and are planning a third one-week strike    for March 18-22. They have also threatened to strike again during Easter    week. Struggling to compete    with low-cost competitors, loss-making Iberia also had also announced plans    for 20 percent salary cuts for its remaining 16,000 workers. The mediator has    proposed 15 percent reductions in salaries. During the two week-long    strikes by pilots, air stewards and ground staff, Iberia canceled about 10    percent of flights to the United States and Latin America and 50 percent of    flights within Spain. The company has said it    was losing 3 million euros a day during the strikes.  |    
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