Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Pandemic may create ghost towns around Heathrow airport

- Prasun Sonwalkar letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

WEST LONDON: Suburbs such as Southall, Hounslow, Slough and Hillingdon with large population Indian origin people face the prospect of becoming ‘ghost towns’ due to the coronaviru­s pandemic severely impacting the Heathrow airport and the aviation industry, MPs and industry leaders say.

Senior Labour MP Virendra Sharma (Ealing Southall) agreed on Thursday with Heathrow chief executive John HollandKay­e that areas around the airport risk the fate of mining towns in north England that saw much poverty and deprivatio­n when the coal industry was largely shut down by the Margaret Thatcher government amidst strikes in the 1980s.

He said: “Areas around Heathrow will become ghost towns if no urgent measures are taken. Tens of thousands of people, many of Indian and Asian origin who have worked in Heathrowli­nked roles directly or indirectly for at least three generation­s, have lost jobs”.

“This is not scare-mongering. This government does not have a seriously thought-out plan to deal with the crisis not only in Heathrow but also other airports such as Gatwick. I and over 25 MPs wrote to chancellor Rishi Sunak about this in July,” he added.

Sharma said he was already seeing the impact of Heathrowli­nked job losses in his constituen­cy. In Hounslow alone, the council estimates that at least 11,000 residents are employed at Heathrow, while up to 27,000 jobs in the borough are said to be linked to the airport.

According to Holland-Kaye, the collapse of air traffic has put at risk tens of thousands of jobs. He wants the Boris Johnson government to allow testing at airports so that traffic could begin to return to 2019 levels and enable the crippled aviation industry to slowly recover. Heathrow estimates that it has suffered a loss of £1.1 billion in the first half of 2020 due to the pandemic.

The Hounslow council said: “Independen­t research carried out by Oxford Economics forecasts the borough will be the second hardest hit in London, with a possible 40 per cent decline in output and thousands of jobs likely to be lost”.

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