Times Colonist

Stranded Greece airline passengers need help: activist

- ROSS MAROWITS

The Canadian Transporta­tion Agency is being asked for an emergency order to protect and compensate stranded passengers of SkyGreece Airlines, which ceased operations on Thursday after more than a week of disrupted service.

A claim filed Friday by passenger rights advocate Gabor Lukacs says the federal agency has broad powers and should use them now to protect an estimated 1,000 passengers affected by recent flight cancellati­ons by SkyGreece Airlines.

Lukacs is calling on the agency to order SkyGreece to rebook its stranded passengers on other airlines within 24 hours and put up $8.7 million of security to cover passenger claims.

The agency didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. But on its website, it said unused tickets may be eligible for refunds from travel agencies, credit card companies and travel agencies in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia.

Quebec’s consumer protection agency said passengers from the province who purchased flights from a licensed travel agency can be reimbursed for returning flights and costs such as accommodat­ion and food. It has appointed accounting firm Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton to manage such claims and help passengers return to Canada.

Messages to Sky- Greece were not returned. The company said in a statement the flight disruption was due to technical issues and financial setbacks resulting from the Greek economic crisis shortly after it launched internatio­nal service in May.

“Unfortunat­ely, as a result of recent technical issues, the company is now facing a systemwide, multi-day delay and significan­t additional expenses.”

The company didn’t specify what technical issues it was experienci­ng. However, it said that a European regulation governs the rights and method of claims for cancelled flights operated by SkyGreece Airlines SA.

SkyGreece also called the flight cancellati­ons a temporary situation, with operations expected to resume soon.

The owner of a Toronto travel agency that specialize­s in travel to Greece said she’s struggling to help people who have called seeking one-way flights out of that country.

“It’s pretty chaotic,” Fotoula Kakagianni­s of National Travel Service said, adding that there is limited space on the flights that are available and prices were rising.

The airline was founded in 2012 and started operations in 2014 with one plane, which is now parked at Toronto’s Pearson Internatio­nal Airport. Lukacs said SkyGreece’s main asset is its only plane and passengers would be left without any remedy if the airline is allowed to dispose of the aircraft.

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