South Wales Echo

Wizz Air passengers furious after being left ‘stranded’ on island

- JOHN JONES Reporter john.jones@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WIZZ Air passengers say they were left “stranded” on a Greek island for days after the airline cancelled two return flights to Cardiff.

Some holidaymak­ers have had to fork out thousands of pounds on extra accommodat­ion after being forced to extend their stay in Crete by nearly a week.

Passengers say they were given just a few hours’ notice that the latest flight back home from the island on Monday was cancelled.

Many were left with no option but to travel home via other airports, including Gatwick and Birmingham, due to uncertaint­y about when the next direct flight to Cardiff would be.

It comes after other Wizz Air passengers were denied compensati­on after their flight to Cardiff was diverted to Bristol and they had to make their own way home.

Having flown out to Crete with no issue on June 29, Gareth Bowen and his family were not expecting their return flight to be cancelled once, let alone twice.

After checking their flight’s status midway through their holiday, they realised they weren’t going to be able to get home last Friday, as originally planned.

With the next flight back to Wales not until Monday, former profession­al rugby player Gareth, from Mountain Ash, says he had to pay hundreds of pounds for extra accommodat­ion for him, his wife, his two children and his son’s girlfriend after having to extend their stay by an extra three nights.

During this time, he says, the only communicat­ion he had from Wizz Air was an email giving them the option of securing tickets for Monday’s flight.

However, the frustratio­n didn’t end there for Gareth and his fellow passengers.

With their suitcases packed to head to the airport and catch their replacemen­t flight, the family were stunned when they received a text early on Monday telling them that the afternoon’s flight had also been cancelled.

“When we had the first cancellati­on, we thought, ‘OK, it’s not the end of the world, we’ll just have to go back on the Monday’. But this morning when we got the text, firstly it was delayed and then we got one through at 7.30am that said it was cancelled again.

“They sent a link through to us to rebook or get a refund and even that didn’t work.

“We’ve been trying to get hold of someone from Wizz Air pretty much since last Wednesday, and we were unable to speak to them until this morning. We spent over 20 minutes on hold trying to get through to someone in the UK and they didn’t give us any sort of idea about how we would be looked after or how we would be compensate­d.

“My wife told him that we didn’t have enough money to stay another day and he said, ‘well that’s not my problem’.

“It’s appalling, absolutely appalling. How are they allowed to get away with treating people like this and leaving them in foreign countries? They’re prepared to take your money, but not to look after you.

“We’ve had no explanatio­n, not one, as to why we’ve had our flights cancelled, just an option to rebook or get 120% back in Wizz Air credits, which I think is a bit of an insult.”

Gareth says he is now about £2,000 out of pocket, while his sons are also worried about missing commitment­s back home.

After deciding to get a flight back to Birmingham yesterday, ahead of the next one to Cardiff today, he was also stuck with a long journey back to Mountain Ash.

“My son is getting very stressed because he’s training with Cardiff Rugby academy. I’m a coach with the under16s so I’m missing some sessions with those guys as well.

“My youngest son is missing school, our car is stuck at Cardiff Airport and I’ve had to pay £600 for new flights back to the UK on Tuesday. So yeah, it might seem great having another three or four days holiday, but not when you haven’t planned or budgeted to be away for that long.

“It’s all very frustratin­g. But I will be taking this up with the Civil Aviation Authority, and I’ve looked into compensati­on claims too. It’s disgusting how

It’s appalling, absolutely appalling. How are they allowed to get away with treating people like this and leaving them in foreign countries? They’re prepared to take your money, but not to look after you Gareth Bowen

they treat people, it’s just not right.”

Another passenger, Sean Glossop, was due to return from his fiveday holiday in Crete on Monday.

While he escaped staying for a few extra nights like Gareth and his family, he has had to fork out for alternativ­e tickets to Gatwick Airport with British Airways.

He said: “We had no trouble getting out to Crete with Wizz Air, our flight left on time. But we had a text message at around 7am today saying our flight back was cancelled.

“We made it to the airport this morning but there was almost no help. Myself and my friend had to book alternativ­e tickets and I’m getting back to Gatwick this evening.

“Some people are flying into Birmingham while others like myself are going to Gatwick. Another family is apparently flying to Athens to stay the night and getting a flight tomorrow. Those who arranged to fly later on Monday have been offered meal vouchers.”

Sean added that passengers have had to pay out of their own pockets for the new tickets, with the airline not offering to book them on an alternativ­e flight home. However, they have been offered a refund for the cancelled flight by the airline.

“The only communicat­ion we’ve had has been a text and an email offering to rebook the flight or a refund/Wizz credit,” he said.

“However, a simple check of SkyScanner shows that the next flight to Cardiff is on Wednesday. The customer service desk here run by

SwissPort has a “no info” sign on it with the blinds shut.”

He added: “There was a check-in desk open for a short while for another Wizz Air flight although we didn’t try speaking to them as we had already booked our replacemen­t flights by then and others seemed to have no luck.

“They did not offer to book us onto any other flights with other airlines.”

It comes as Wizz Air announced it is cutting flights to Crete’s capital Heraklion from Cardiff Airport as part of a further 5% reduction in its overall capacity.

The cut is part of efforts to avoid flight cancellati­ons and delays like these, with staff shortages at airports meaning operations are struggling to match soaring demand from holidaymak­ers now that Covid restrictio­ns have been lifted.

At Cardiff Airport, where it launched a base with nine routes in April, it is reducing the number of flights to Heraklion from three days a week to two.

The Friday service is being removed while flights on Mondays and Wednesdays will be maintained for its summer schedule.

Earlier this month, holidaymak­ers travelling on the Wizz Air flight from Corfu to Cardiff on July 3 saw their plane forced to divert to Bristol after an incident at Cardiff Airport meant they were unable to land there.

The incident, which saw a light aircraft go off the end of the runway, meant the airfield was closed for nearly an hour.

Those on the Wizz Air flight – which was due to arrive back in Cardiff just after 1pm – were then forced to wait on the plane on the Bristol Airport runway for several hours, before being told they would not be flying back to Cardiff at all and had to get off the plane.

Some of the “tired and upset” passengers on the flight have claimed they were declined any food or water by Wizz Air staff onboard as they waited on the runway and were given limited informatio­n about the flight’s status or whether they would be flying to Cardiff as planned.

Passengers were then faced with the challenge of getting back home, with many of them having left their cars at Cardiff Airport before jetting off to Greece.

This meant families were forced to pay hundreds of pounds for taxis to take them home, having waited in vain for alternativ­e transport to be arranged.

To make matters worse, some passengers then had their applicatio­n to get compensati­on rejected by Wizz Air.

Instead, the airline told them the closure of the airfield in Cardiff fell under “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces” and therefore no money was due to the passengers who were left on the plane for hours before having to make their own way home.

Wizz Air was asked to comment.

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 ?? SEAN GLOSSOP ?? Wizz Air passengers have been left “stranded” on a Greek island for days after the airline cancelled two return flights to Cardiff in the space of a week.
SEAN GLOSSOP Wizz Air passengers have been left “stranded” on a Greek island for days after the airline cancelled two return flights to Cardiff in the space of a week.

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