The Malta Business Weekly

Ryanair calls for restricted airport alcohol sales

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Ryanair has called for more restrictio­ns on alcohol sales at airports.

The airline proposed a two-drink limit for passengers and a ban on alcohol sales in airports before 10am.

This move comes after a flight from Dublin to Ibiza had to land unexpected­ly in Paris on Saturday after three passengers became disruptive.

The three passengers were removed from the plane when it touched down at Paris Beauvais and detained by French police.

“It is incumbent on the airports to introduce these preventati­ve measures to curb excessive drinking and the problems it creates, rather than allowing passengers to drink to excess before their flights,” said Ryanair in a statement.

The airline added: “It’s completely unfair that airports can profit from the unlimited sale of alcohol to passengers and leave the airlines to deal with the safety consequenc­es.”

Referring to its own policy on alcohol sales in-flight, Ryanair said very little alcohol was actually sold on board as all of its flights were short haul.

The carrier is Europe’s largest low-cost airline, transporti­ng 130m passengers a year, with more than 2,000 flights a day from some 215 airports across Europe and North Africa.

“Our cabin crew are fully trained to deal with customers’ alcohol sales and intake,” added the airline.

A Dublin airport spokesman said that while the behaviour of some individual­s on Saturday’s Ryanair flight was “clearly unacceptab­le”, the airline’s suggested alcohol restrictio­ns were “draconian”.

These would “affect all passengers because of the behaviour of a very, very small minority of airline travellers”, said the spokesman.

Last month, Ryanair reported record annual results, with profits after tax rising by 10% to €1.45bn.

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