Business Standard

British Airways on route to normalcy after IT collapse

- ALISTAIR SMOUT

British Airways (BA) was operating most of its flights from London’s two largest airports on Monday after a computer system failure stranded thousands of passengers over a holiday weekend and turned into a public relations disaster.

The airline planned to run more than 95 per cent of flights from London Heathrow and Gatwick on Monday, Chief Executive Alex Cruz told Sky News.

BA had been forced to cancel all its flights from Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport, and Gatwick on Saturday after a power supply problem disrupted its operations worldwide and also hit its call centres and website.

The disruption had continued on Sunday. Some stranded passengers curled up under blankets on the floor or slumped on luggage trolleys, images that played prominentl­y in the media at the start of a week when schools were on holiday.

“Apologises all well and good but not enough. BA has lost another loyal customer #disgracefu­l,” tweeted Tom Callway, who had been due to fly to Budapest.

Cruz said the origins of the problem, which also hit passengers trying to fly into Britain, had been a power surge on Saturday morning which affected messaging across BA’s systems.

He said there was no evidence of a cyber attack and denied a union claim that the outsourcin­g of IT work to India had played a part in the failure.

The company was left counting the cost of the disruption, both in terms of a one-off impact to its profit and the longer term damage to its reputation.

Spanish-listed shares of parent company IAG, which also owns carriers Iberia, Aer Lingus and Vueling, dropped 2.5 per cent on Monday after the outage. The London-listed shares did not trade because of a public holiday.

Flight compensati­on website Flightrigh­t.com said that with around 800 flights cancelled at Gatwick and Heathrow on Saturday and Sunday, BA was looking at having to pay around ^61 million ($68 million) in compensati­on under EU rules. That does not include the cost of reimbursin­g customers for hotel stays.

BA has been cutting costs to respond to competitio­n on short-haul routes from Ryanair and easyJet and recently faced criticism for starting to charge passengers for their in-flight snacks.

Ireland’s Ryanair was quick to seize on the marketing opportunit­y, tweeting “Should have flown Ryanair” with a picture of the ‘Computer says no’ sketch from the TV series Little Britain to poke fun at BA.

Ryanair said it had seen a spike in bookings over the weekend but gave no further details.

The GMB union said that BA’s IT systems had shortcomin­gs after they made a number of staff redundant and shifted their work to India in 2016.

“This could have all been avoided. BA in 2016 made hundreds of dedicated and loyal IT staff redundant and outsourced the work to India,” Mick Rix, GMB National Officer for Aviation, said.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The airline planned to run more than 95 per cent of flights from London Heathrow and Gatwick on Monday
PHOTO: REUTERS The airline planned to run more than 95 per cent of flights from London Heathrow and Gatwick on Monday

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