The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Stranded pair home from Africa

Perthshire couple forced to fork out for repatriati­on flight after extended stay in The Gambia

- ROSS GARDINER rogardiner@thecourier.co.uk

A Perthshire couple have arrived back in Scotland on a repatriati­on flight after nearly two months in West Africa.

Peter and Fatou Halcrow, from Birnam, had flown to The Gambia for a three-week holiday at the beginning of March.

Their return set them back a staggering four-figure fee but the duo are relieved to be back home safely.

The couple had been due to fly back before the start of this month but when the Gambian government declared a state of emergency, Banjul Internatio­nal Airport was closed to almost all air traffic.

Tesco café manager Peter and Fatou, who works at Dunkeld House Hotel, were left stranded at their accommodat­ion in Busumbala.

With their return flight cancelled and the airline with which their flights home were booked not responding to emails, the couple made their way to the Foreign Office to seek advice, where they met scores of other Brits who were also trapped.

As the Foreign Office directed the group to their social media channels, the stranded Brits created an online messenger group and managed to track

“There’s another flight this week but a lot of people are really upset and medicine is running out. PETER HALCROW

down seats on a repatriati­on flight from Dakar in neighbouri­ng Senegal.

At £800 per seat, around the same as what Peter and Fatou paid for their combined original return flights, the couple were priced out but luckily landed seats on an oversubscr­ibed repatriati­on flight from Banjul on Friday.

The eleventh hour seats cost more than £550 each, so Peter and Fatou were forced to use a credit card.

The Gambian government are not set to review lockdown measures until the middle of next month and the couple had feared being stuck abroad for months.

Peter said: “The tickets we had to get were spotted by other people in the Whatsapp group we’ve created.

“We had a nine-hour flight from Banjul to Stansted, with a one-hour refuelling and crew change stop in Gran Canaria. Then it was a train to Manchester where the car was parked and a drive home from there.

“The two seats on the plane alone cost £1,106 and then the train tickets and diesel on top. Those flights would normally have cost about £250 each. It’s criminal, really.

“There were about 300 people on board and more left behind. There’s another flight this week but a lot of people are really upset and medicine is running out.

“It’s upsetting as I had already paid for return tickets.”

Now home safely, Peter is preparing to return to work and is continuing to chase up refunds on his cancelled flights.

“Supermarke­t staff all have PPE in The Gambia and hand-washing is mandatory before you go inside. I’m still getting used to the measures here.”

 ?? Picture: Steve Macdougall. ?? Peter and Fatou Halcrow are relieved to be back home in Birnam.
Picture: Steve Macdougall. Peter and Fatou Halcrow are relieved to be back home in Birnam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom