THE Ryanair cabin crew pictured lying on a Spanish airport office floor last month after becoming stranded by bad weather have been sacked, union chiefs have claimed.

The image was “staged” by six crew members in protest at their treatment at Malaga Airport in the early hours of October 14.

The Sun reports they were part of a group of eight pilots and 16 cabin crew based in Portugal who said they were forced to spend several hours in the room after landing at the southern Spanish city just after midnight following diversions caused by Hurricane Leslie.

Luciana Passo, the head of the Portuguese cabin crew union SNPVAC, promised a swift response to the airline’s “awful” decision.

This is a Ryanair 737 crew based in Portugal, stranded in Malaga, Spain a couple of nights ago due to storms. They are sleeping on the floor of the Ryanair crew room. RYR is earning €1.25 billion this year but will not put stranded crews in a hotel for the night. @peterbellew ? pic.twitter.com/lILWZVqqGj — Jim Atkinson (@Jimbaba) October 14, 2018

“Ryanair thinks it was harmed by the publication of that photograph when it was no more than a show of the crew members’ justified feeling of indignation,” he said.

“The union’s legal team are now dealing with the matter.”

Ryanair confirmed the workers’ dismissal in a statement to Sun Online Travel.

“All six cabin crew members in Porto were dismissed on Monday, November 5 for breach of contract on grounds of gross misconduct, after staging a fake photograph to support a false claim (widely reported in international media outlets) that they were ‘forced to sleep on the floor’ of the Malaga crew room,” the Irish airline said.

“(This) was behaviour which damaged their employer’s reputation and caused an irreparable breach of trust with these six persons.”

Ryanair exposes fake photo of cabin crew sleeping in crew room. Watch video here: pic.twitter.com/tzTn6EHsKH — Ryanair (@Ryanair) October 17, 2018

The budget airline complained the photo had been staged after union representatives claimed last month 24 crew members spent more than seven hours in the office sharing seven chairs and the floor before they were taken to a VIP area to sleep on shared sofas.

It released CCTV video footage showing how the crew laid down on the floor to pose for the picture that went viral on social media.

But the video backfired, with members of the public attacking the airline for leaving the crews at the airport.

One commenter, Jim Atkinson, wrote on Twitter: “Everyone already KNEW it was a protest picture you knuckleheads! The fact remains: you stranded FOUR CREWS in an airport terminal for the night and made no discernible attempt to find them proper lodging or even food and water!”

A GROUP of fed-up flight attendants have shared an image on social media claiming to show the “disgusting” way they are treated by their airline.



The shocking photograph shows Ryanair cabin crew members sleeping on the floor of an office at Spain’s Malaga Airport on Sunday mo pic.twitter.com/KSiwJZF87y — Crewiser (@Crewiser) October 18, 2018

Everyone already KNEW it was a protest picture you knuckleheads! The fact remains: you stranded FOUR CREWS in an airport terminal for the night and made no discernible attempt to find them proper lodging or even food and water! — Jim Atkinson (@Jimbaba) October 17, 2018

And then back to their ‘comfortable’ chairs (how many?) for their well deserved sleep? What is the message @Ryanair? Crew room good accommodation for layover? Started disciplinary procedures already no doubt? Spy cams in every crew room? — Evert van Zwol (@68evz) October 17, 2018

Steve Lemmens said: “If you would have provided hotel accommodation to crew, they wouldn’t have to do such things. Shame on you once more, Ryanair.”

Ryanair admitted the crew had spent “a short time” in the room because a bank holiday in Spain meant nearby hotels were full, but refuted claims anyone had slept on the floor.

But Fernando Rikote, a Malaga-based delegate for SITCPLA, the Spanish union for airline employees, said the crews flew back to Porto at 11.30am the following day “without proper rest, without sleeping at all.”

He claimed that when the crew asked the operating captain of the plane that flew them back to Portugal if they could open the aircraft bar and heat up some sandwiches and have some soft drinks, he called the operation room in Dublin for permission and was told: “No they can’t.”

Another union rubbished the idea Ryanair couldn’t find room for the crew in one of the 88,000 hotel beds in Malaga.

This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission.