Travel News

Tui cancels flights and holidays as passengers wait at departure gates

Simon Calder’s Travel

Europe’s biggest travel firm, Tui, is cancelling more peak-season package holidays as it struggles to recover from the CrowdStrike chaos.

The firm’s crew rostering system was impacted by Friday’s IT outage. Tui grounded 64 holiday flights to and from the UK on Friday, with further delays and cancellations on Saturday and Sunday.

The company is taking the highly unusual step of cancelling entire package holidays to manage down the scale of its problems – which are particularly acute at Manchester airport.

A passenger who had been waiting for a Manchester-Lanzarote flight due out at 6am on Sunday morning learnt shortly before noon that her whole holiday had been cancelled.

She told The Independent she has now rebooked with Jet2 Holidays to go to Tenerife on Monday.

Passengers at Gatwick Airport as airlines continue to deal with the fallout from the global IT outage
Passengers at Gatwick Airport as airlines continue to deal with the fallout from the global IT outage (Luke O’Reilly/PA Wire)

Tui’s Manchester-Cancun flight due out at 12 noon on Saturday was eventually cancelled eight hours later.

The Boeing 787 Dreamliner was ready to go to the Mexican resort, but Tui decided to deploy it first to take passengers out to Palma de Mallorca and bring others home.

Passenger Lindsay Dawes said that at the departure gate for the Cancun flight, they were “told there’s no pilot as the crew have gone over their hours”.

She said: “We were then sent through security to arrivals where the staff basically couldn’t answer anything and told us to arrange our own hotels and transport for the night.”

Under air passengers’ rights rules, an airline that cancels a flight is obliged to provide hotels and meals if necessary.

A spokesperson for Tui said: “Due to the global IT issue at airports and airlines around the world on Friday, Tui’s overall service this weekend was heavily impacted and we would like to apologise to everyone affected.

“Whilst the original IT issue was outside of our control, the impact to our systems on Friday has meant that our flight programme has suffered continued delays that we have not been able to resolve.

“We therefore made the difficult decision to cancel a number of outbound flights and delayed a number of inbound flights returning to the UK on Friday 19 July and Sunday 21 July.

“We are very sorry to all those customers impacted as we understand how disappointing this would have been and recognise that many…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…