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UK flight chaos continues with dozens more cancellations at Gatwick and Heathrow

Simon Calder’s Travel

For a fourth day, thousands of passengers flying to and from the UK have had their flights cancelled after a combination of bad weather and air-traffic control staff shortage led to hundreds of flights being axed.

Around 3,500 passengers expecting to fly to or from London Gatwick on 20 flights on Monday morning have been grounded. Most are booked on easyJet, which cancelled its first flight of the day, to Ibiza, and six others including links to Naples and Nice.

Passengers were told the cause was “air-traffic control restrictions” and outside the airline’s control.

Ground control: Passengers whose flights are disrupted have extensive rights
Ground control: Passengers whose flights are disrupted have extensive rights (Simon Calder)

The cancellations are in addition to 64 flights grounded by easyJet on Sunday due to short-notice staff shortage in Gatwick’s control tower.

At least 100 flights were cancelled on Sunday evening at Gatwick, and others ran extremely late – such as the Wizz Air flight to Rome that was due to arrive soon after midnight but actually arrived in the Italian capital shortly before 6am, and an easyJet departure to Lyon that ran four hours behind schedule.

It was the third incident of mass cancellations due to staff shortage in the Gatwick control tower in less than a year.

The tower is run by the air-navigation provider Nats, which said on Sunday night it was trying to “keep disruption to a minimum”.

A spokesperson said:“Temporary air-traffic restrictions are currently in place at London Gatwick Airport in order to maintain safety. These restrictions are due to short-notice staff absence at the air traffic control tower and in addition to existing restrictions already in place due to adverse weather across UK and Europe.

“We expect all restrictions to be lifted by the end of the day.”

But as cancellations continued into Monday, Ryanair once again called for the resignation of Martin Rolfe, chief executive of Nats. A spokesperson for Europe’s biggest budget airline said: “This is the latest in a long line of cock-ups by UK Nats, which has yet again disrupted multiple flights and thousands of passengers at Gatwick.”

The Independent has contacted Nats for a response.

EasyJet said on Sunday evening that it was “extremely disappointed that customers are once again being impacted by this”.

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