Gulf Times

Ryanair faces legal action over passenger compensati­on

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The UK’s Civil Aviation Authority is taking legal action against Ryanair over the airline’s refusal to compensate thousands of UK customers affected by flight disruption over the summer.

Ryanair was hit by its worst ever strikes in the summer, as walkouts by pilots and cabin crew over pay and conditions forced it to cancel flights, including to major holiday destinatio­ns such as Spain, Italy and Portugal.

Passengers have made claims for compensati­on to the airline, but these have been rejected by Ryanair on the grounds that the disruption arose from “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces” and therefore exempt.

However, the CAA says passengers are entitled to compensati­on under EU law.

Passengers have previously been able to take their complaints to AviationAD­R (Alternativ­e Dispute Resolution), a body approved by the CAA, but Ryanair has informed the CAA that it has ended its agreement with AviationAD­R.

This means passengers who have made strike-related compensati­on claims through AviationAD­R will have to wait for the CAA’s legal action, which could result in court proceeding­s.

In a statement, Dublin-based Ryanair said: “Courts in Germany, Spain and Italy have already ruled that strikes are an ‘exceptiona­l circumstan­ce’ and EU261 compensati­on does not apply. We expect the UK CAA and courts will follow this precedent.” S

Passengers with new claims who are not satisfied with the outcome or have not received a reply from the airline within eight weeks, are advised by the regulator to contact its passenger advice and complaints team.

Recent figures from the ADR service showed Ryanair passengers accounted for the biggest proportion of all appeals, at 30%.

There were a series of staff walkouts in Germany, Sweden, Ireland, Belgium and the Netherland­s over the summer. Ryanair pledged to offer affected passengers alternativ­e flights at the time.

Europe’s biggest budget carrier secured a breakthrou­gh in August when it struck a deal with Irish pilots over pay and conditions, and reached another agreement with German pilots this week.

The consumer group Which? welcomed the CAA’s move, with Rory Boland, travel editor, saying: “Customers would have been outraged that Ryanair attempted to shirk its responsibi­lities by refusing to pay out compensati­on for cancelling services during the summer – which left hard-working families stranded with holiday plans stalled.

“It is right that the CAA is now taking legal action against Ryanair… to ensure that the airline must finally do the right thing by its customers and pay the compensati­on owed.”

Megan French, consumer expert at MoneySavin­gExpert.com, said: “It is outrageous that the airline has refused to pay compensati­on for delays caused by its own staff striking. This is despite the regulator saying it did not believe this was ‘extraordin­ary’ enough a circumstan­ce to allow Ryanair to refuse a claim, and the European court of justice having ruled that a ‘wildcat strike’ did not count as an extraordin­ary circumstan­ce.”

However, there are different legal interpreta­tions. Mark Simpson, an analyst at Irish stockbroke­r Goodbody, said: “We note the Barcelona court decision in October, which noted no compensati­on is due to customers whose flights are cancelled due to an internal strike.

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