Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Traveler struggles to get $7,590 back when trip to Iraq canceled

- By Christophe­r Elliott | Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Contact him at elliott.org/help or chris@elliott.org.

I paid $7,590 for a Modern Mesopotami­a tour to Iraq through MIR Corporatio­n for last fall. I also purchased insurance from AIG Travel Guard at a cost of $766, which offered 100% coverage for trip interrupti­ons or cancellati­ons. Just 14 days before the trip was supposed to start, I received a letter from MIR Corporatio­n that they were canceling the trip because the U.S. government raised the security risks. They offered a voucher, which was only good for a trip to Iraq in the next two years — if there were any travel allowed to Iraq. I believe it is a worthless voucher.

I filed a claim with AIG Travel Guard, but it denied my claim. I also disputed the charge on my credit card, but my credit card company sided with MIR Corporatio­n. I’m very frustrated by this and hope you might be able to help me recover this money.

— Diane Gottlieb, Chicago

A: It doesn’t seem fair for a tour operator to cancel a trip and not offer a refund. But the terms of your tour say otherwise. They allow MIR Corporatio­n to keep your money and issue a voucher for a future tour, which is exactly what they did.

Let’s break this one down. MIR Corporatio­n specialize­s in tours of “under-explored destinatio­ns” (those are its words) like Mongolia, Saudi Arabia and Uzbekistan. The paper trail between you and the company shows that it warned you of the risks of traveling to Iraq and urged you to buy travel insurance. It also clearly disclosed its terms, which were that it offers an expiring voucher when it cancels a tour.

A representa­tive explained the reason why MIR Corporatio­n has this policy. The tour operator had already paid its vendors and could not get a refund.

But the arrangemen­ts between a tour operator and its vendors are none of your concern. The only thing that matters is the agreement you have with the tour operator.

MIR Corporatio­n did the right thing by recommendi­ng travel insurance. But the policy you bought through AIG Travel Guard, which MIR Corporatio­n helped facilitate, did not cover a cancellati­on by the tour operator. You could have bought a “cancel for any reason” policy, although it was considerab­ly more expensive. This would have given you a refund between 50% and 75% of your prepaid, nonrefunda­ble trip costs.

MIR Corporatio­n also did the right thing by canceling. The U.S. State Department had issued a warning against travel to Iraq. You wouldn’t want to be there during an armed conflict.

Your case is a reminder to always read the contract when you sign up for a tour, or any other travel product for that matter. It’s also a reminder to read the fine print in your travel insurance. Your policy did not offer “100% coverage” for a cancellati­on, as you stated. Rather, it was a policy with a named exclusion that did not include a cancellati­on for security concerns.

But there were special circumstan­ces. MIR Corporatio­n’s voucher had to be used within two years and was only valid for its Iraq tours.

At the time you contacted me, it didn’t look like there would be tours to Iraq for a while, so there was a good chance that your voucher would expire before you could use it. Also, you are 78 years old, and you suggested that you might not feel up to a tour of Iraq within the next two years.

You reached out to my advocacy team for help, and I contacted MIR Corporatio­n on your behalf. The company agreed to offer a credit to any of its destinatio­ns for two years, and you accepted its offer.

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