Western Daily Press

Flights cancelled as travel chaos worsens

- NEIL LANCEFIELD Press Associatio­n

TUI Airways has cancelled nearly 200 flights due to serve Manchester Airport between now and the end of June as the chaos faced by UK holidaymak­ers worsens.

The airline made the announceme­nt after passengers suffered long delays in recent days due to staff shortages.

It will cancel six daily flights up to June 30, including to destinatio­ns such as Spain’s Canary Islands.

Other airlines are continuing to axe flights, and passengers are being forced to wait in long queues at airports such as Manchester, Heathrow, Gatwick and Bristol.

Airline passengers have been hit by disruption for several months, with the situation worsening this week due to the rise in demand sparked by the half-term school holiday and the Platinum Jubilee bank holiday period.

The aviation industry is suffering from staff shortages after letting thousands of people go during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Airlines and airports repeatedly called for more financial support during the Covid-19 crisis as Government travel restrictio­ns suppressed demand. They are now struggling to recruit new workers and have their security checks processed.

Shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh accused the Government of being “missing in action”. “Tory ministers can’t even get the basics right,” she said. “They should show some responsibi­lity, do their job, and take concrete steps to tackle the chaos growing on their watch.”

Last month, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps introduced legislatio­n to allow new aviation recruits to begin training before passing security checks to reduce the time it takes for them to start work.

A Government spokeswoma­n said airports are “busier than usual” due to “an exceptiona­lly high number of people travelling” this week.

She continued: “The aviation industry is responsibl­e for making sure they have enough staff to meet demand and we have been clear that they must step up recruitmen­t to make sure disruption is kept to a minimum.

“In addition, using our post-Brexit freedoms, we have changed the law to provide the sector with more flexibilit­y when training new employees, which will help it to fill vacancies more quickly.

“We have also worked with Border Force to ensure preparatio­ns meet passenger demand.”

Aviation data firm Cirium said 291 departures from major UK airports have been cancelled between May 25 and Tuesday.

Tui Airways said in a statement: “Unfortunat­ely, due to ongoing challenges in our operation, we have had to announce a small number of planned cancellati­ons between now and 30 June from Manchester Airport only. We are directly contacting all impacted customers in departure date order and they will automatica­lly receive a full refund.”

EasyJet cancelled at least 31 flights at Gatwick on Tuesday.

British Airways is continuing to cancel dozens of flights each day, although the airline said passengers are being told several days in advance.

Passengers are reporting long delays at several airports.

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