The two sides in the British Airways cabin crew pay dispute have been invited to hold fresh talks in a bid to break the deadlocked row.

Members of Unite union working in BA's so-called mixed fleet have staged a series of strikes since the start of the year in protest at "poverty" pay.

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BA says all its customers have flown to their destinations on strike days.

Talks were held at the conciliation service Acas at the end of last year but failed to resolve the row.

An Acas spokesman said: "Acas has today extended an invitation to both BA and Unite to attend conciliation talks in respect of the current mixed fleet cabin crew dispute."

The two sides have clashed over pay, with Unite saying the cabin crew earned an average of £16,000 a year, including allowances, but BA insisting no-one was paid below £21,000.

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Staff on the mixed fleet, who work on short and long-haul flights, joined BA since 2010.