Scottish Daily Mail

Pop star Pixie’s plea over Alps airport travel chaos

- By Ben Wilkinson

HUNDREDS of British skiers have been stranded in an airport by heavy snow in the French Alps.

Holidaymak­ers including pop star Pixie Lott were given emergency beds, food and drink after being trapped for more than 30 hours as mountain routes to and from resorts were blocked.

Travellers criticised tour operators for failing to prepare for the crisis which saw families left sitting on buses for up to ten hours without a toilet.

Scores of passengers were given beds by the French Red Cross at Chambery Airport and a nearby sports centre. Skiers went online to complain to package firm Crystal Ski Holidays, claiming they were told nothing about when they could return home or get to their resort.

Mother-of-two Claire Nicholas, 46, said it took more than 48 hours to get from Les Arcs back home to Wiltshire – including an eight-hour bus trip during which passengers were stopped by the driver from using the toilet.

She said: ‘It was absolutely outrageous. It was just a fiasco.’

In all 4,000 were delayed by the snow and one skier was killed in an avalanche.

Singer Miss Lott, who was travelling to Val d’Isere with model boyfriend Oliver Cheshire, appealed for help online.

She wrote to fans on Twitter: ‘Heyyy can anybody help pick up 7 people from Chambery Airport?! Can’t find any taxi so cold!’

Other travellers complained they had been promised travel but it had failed to arrive. Beezy Marsh, a mother of two, said her family had been dumped at Chambery Airport with no coach to take them to Val Thorens. They eventually spent £220 on a hotel and £500 on a taxi to the resort.

The writer, who also travelled with Crystal Ski Holidays, said: ‘It was just chaos, but it was not organised chaos.

‘It is like a Third World situation. The Red Cross are there to help earthquake and disaster victims.’

Heavy snow had been forecast to fall in the region on Saturday. Tour operator Ski Famille was among the companies to put out travel warnings on Thursday. Crystal Ski Holidays, which is supported by the TUI group, was bombarded with complaints.

Emma Lloyd-Williams said: ‘I can’t understand how a company that arranges ski holidays throughout the season now fails to support and arrange details when heavy snowfall!’

Ski firm Inghams was also hit with complaints. Karen Collinge said: ‘Our friends have been left in a sports hall with no heat or food, they’ve just been given beds for the kids but no blankets.’

On the roads, 3,500 drivers were forced to spend Saturday night in emergency shelters after the snow made roads impassable. A further 500 tourists who landed at Chambery had to sleep in shelters.

The mountain rescue service said a 22-year-old man had died when an avalanche swept him away on Saturday in Val d’Isere.

Crystal Ski Holidays spokesman Marion Telsnig said: ‘The safety of customers and staff is of paramount importance and we’ve been working closely with local authoritie­s and TUI Airways to ensure guests travel home or to their resort at the earliest convenienc­e.’

‘Like a Third World situation’

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