Gulf Today

BA resumes services after IT meltdown

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LONDON: British Airways said its flights were returning to normal ater passengers had to endure cancellati­ons, delays and long queues at London airports as the airline suffered its third major computer failure in a litle more than two years.

Wednesday’s woes are the latest in a string of problems at BA, which was fined $230 million last month for a huge customer data breach and is bracing for potential strikes in a pay dispute with its pilots.

BA, owned by Internatio­nal Airlines Group, apologised to customers for Wednesday’s disruption and warned it would take time for operations to return to normal.

More than 60 flights to and from Heathrow and Gatwick were cancelled and more than 100 were delayed, according to the departure boards at the two airports. The problems started when people tried to check in for the first flights of the day and lasted for about 12 hours.

BA would not confirm how many people have been affected but said it had experience­d a “systems issue” affecting check-in and flight departures at Heathrow, Gatwick and London City airports.

Customers could not check in online, while others complained of being stuck on planes unable to take off for hours. Passengers from as far away as Japan and India complained of delays.

Stuart Jackson, a photograph­y business manager, said he was stuck on a grounded plane at Heathrow and had missed his connecting flight, disrupting months of planning and wasting thousands of pounds.

“When I do arrive, I will have to just fly home again,” he said on Twiter. “BA is a complete catastroph­e and I will never fly with them again.” The IT failure occurred as tens of thousands of people in Britain prepared to jet off for summer holidays on what is one of the busiest weeks of the year for the country’s airports.

‘NEVER AGAIN’ A litle more than a year ago BA was forced to cancel flights at Heathrow, Europe’s biggest airport, ater problems with a supplier’s IT system. And in May 2017 a massive computer system failure because of a power supply issue let 75,000 customers stranded.

BA Chief Executive Alex Cruz vowed ater that incident that the airline would take steps to ensure that computer system failures would never happen again.

 ?? Reuters ?? ↑ People queue inside Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport in London.
Reuters ↑ People queue inside Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport in London.

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