South Wales Echo

Airline in call for introducti­on of two-drink limit for passengers

-

RYANAIR is calling on UK airports to enforce a two-drink limit after it was revealed the number of passengers arrested for drunken behaviour increased by 50% in the last year.

The airline has already banned customers from drinking duty-free alcohol on flights and stopped people flying from Glasgow Prestwick and Manchester to Alicante and Ibiza from bringing it on board the aircraft at all.

The company is now urging airports to ban the sale of alcohol before 10am and to limit the number of drinks per boarding pass to a maximum of two.

Ryanair’s Kenny Jacobs said: “This is an issue which the airports must now address and we are calling for significan­t changes to prohibit the sale of alcohol at airports, particular­ly with early morning flights and when flights are delayed.”

The call comes after figures obtained by BBC Panorama from 18 out of 20 police forces with a major UK airport on their patch revealed a surge in arrests for drunken behaviour on flights or at UK airports.

There was a total of 387 in the year to February 2017, up from 255 in the period from February 2015 to 2016, according to the statistics .

Airport Operators’ Associatio­n chief executive Karen Dee rejected suggestion­s airports are irresponsi­bly selling alcohol. She said: “The sale of alcohol per se is not a problem. It’s the misuse of it and drinking to excess and then behaving badly.”

Panorama also points out that the UK aviation industry brought in a voluntary code a year ago. It recommends that airports and airlines should work together to limit disruptive behaviour and sell alcohol responsibl­y.

Most of the big airlines and airports have signed up to this.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom