The Independent

BA tells angry passengers to leave airports without their luggage after IT meltdown

- BEN KENTISH

British Airways says it hopes to run a "near normal schedule" at Gatwick and the "majority of services" from Heathrow today after a catastroph­ic IT failure caused all its flights from the busy airports to be cancelled yesterday.

Pssengers told of chaotic scenes at airports around the world after the systems failure, which BA said was thought to be caused by a "power supply issue". The airline said last night that most long-haul flights into

London today were expected to arrive as normal, but admitted some delays and disruption might continue for a second day over the bank holiday weekend.

Yesterday passengers at Heathrow were ordered to leave the terminal and told they would not be able to access their luggage for the rest of the day because the baggage system was down. One traveller claimed they had been told it could take a week for their bags to be returned.

BA had been unable to update its website or make announceme­nts at some airports because both rely on the system that has crashed. Staff resorted to writing on whiteboard­s in an attempt to keep passengers updated.

A spokeswoma­n for the airline said: “We have experience­d a major IT system failure that is causing very severe disruption to our flight operations worldwide. We are extremely sorry for the inconvenie­nce this is causing our customers and we are working to resolve the situation as quickly as possible. We've found no evidence that it's a cyber attack.”

The company's chief executive, Alex Cruz, later added in a video statement: “Our IT teams are working tirelessly to fix the problems. We believe the root cause was a power supply issue. I am really sorry we don't have better news as yet, but I can assure you our teams are working as hard as they can to resolve these issues."

Customers have been left in the dark, with staff giving conflictin­g informatio­n or admitting they did not know what was going on.

Emily Wilson, who was due to be flying from Heathrow Terminal 5 to Swedish capital Stockholm, told The Independen­t the airport was in chaos. “The informatio­n kept changing – at first they said anyone who hadn’t checked in would be unable to fly today,” she said. “The staff were confused and were giving mixed messages to everyone. Then the news broke on Sky that said all flights before six would be cancelled and a lot of the staff were saying that wasn’t true, that wasn’t genuine informatio­n and they hadn’t been informed."

As the chaos unfolded, the GMB union, which represents many airline employees, claimed the failure could have been prevented.

Mick Rix, the union's national officer for aviation, said: "We can only feel genuinely sorry for the tens of thousands of passengers who are stranded at airports and face having their travel plans and holidays ruined. This could have all been avoided. In 2016 BA made hundreds of dedicated and loyal IT staff redundant and outsourced the work to India. BA have made substantia­l profits for a number of years, and many viewed the company’s actions as just plain greedy."

The company refuted the claim, saying: “We would never compromise the integrity and security of our IT systems.”

A letter released by BA apologised for the disruption and said: “We recognise that this has impacted your travel plans.” The airline said it would be reimbursin­g "reasonable expenses" for meals and hotels, defined as £200 per day for two people sharing a room, and £50 for transport to the hotel. Food and refreshmen­t costs would be covered up to £25 per day for adults and £12.50 for children.

Experts said the airline could face a huge compensati­on bill because the thousands of stranded passengers are entitled to compensati­on under EU law – unless BA can prove that the disruption was caused by factors outside its control.

Malcolm Ginsberg, editor in chief at Business Travel News, said: "There is no question: the EU deniedboar­ding regulation­s will have to apply. They have broken all the rules and they will have to deal with it – it’s going to be a very expensive situation for BA.”

Some passengers took to social media to express their frustratio­n: “Stranded in Vienna for three hours already and no indication as to whether we will even get back to Heathrow. Major lack of info,” one wrote “Can you at least tell people here stranded at Heathrow [what is happening] instead of [them] hearing about it on media”, another urged the airline.

Another passenger also requested informatio­n on what is going on, saying there had been “no info as to what is happening or how long the delay will be”. A fourth described the situation at Heathrow as “chaos and wall to wall queues”.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? Heathrow Terminal 5 was described as having ‘wall to wall queues’
(Reuters) Heathrow Terminal 5 was described as having ‘wall to wall queues’
 ??  ?? Many passengers complained of poor communicat­ion from the airline Getty)
Many passengers complained of poor communicat­ion from the airline Getty)

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