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Flights cancelled over safety fears at airport

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Published Date: 07 January 2007
HUNDREDS of Scottish passengers had their travel plans ruined yesterday after flights to Bristol Airport were cancelled over concerns for the safety of its runway.
EasyJet cancelled eight flights between Bristol and Scotland yesterday, including all those to and from Edinburgh. Meanwhile, British Airways rerouted eight of its services to Birmingham.

Although airlines switched many of their routes to Birming
ham or Cardiff, nearly all flights to Scotland were cancelled altogether rather than being diverted.

EasyJet's route from Belfast was diverted to Cardiff, but a spokesman urged Scottish passengers not to be upset that the airline had cancelled their flights completely.

She said: "We've moved 60% of flights to Cardiff, but we can't move the whole operation there. We had to make a decision. We chose to operate longer-distance flights from Cardiff, because it's easier for people to get to Edinburgh or Glasgow by other means than to get to Malaga.

"Around 500 passengers have been affected. We ask them for their patience and to look at this issue logically. We have to give priority to those who have no other way of getting to their destination. All passengers will be entitled to full refunds."

Bristol Airport said it expected 98 flights to be diverted to other airports yesterday and 28 flights to be cancelled. The problems began after it announced £17m runway resurfacing plans last October, with work scheduled to last for five months.

Airlines were last night due to decide on their Scottish schedules for today and will decide this afternoon how many flights will take off tomorrow, depending on the weather conditions.

Seven other airlines decided not to use the airport yesterday, because of worries about the ability of planes to brake in wet weather after the resurfacing work. They were XL, Thomsonfly, Thomas Cook, Balkan Airlines, First Choice, Air Malta and SN Brussels.

Yesterday both Edinburgh and Glasgow had two arrivals and two departures cancelled. All passengers are advised to contact their airlines and tour operators directly or to check information online at www.bristolairport.co.uk



The full article contains 348 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 06 January 2007 6:59 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Scotland's airports
 
1

Liam,

Edinburgh 07/01/2007 09:48:18

The sorry state of affairs that is domestic flying in the United Kingdom continues. First we had all the security scares, long queues, luggage restrictions and big delays. Then we had the fog in which Heathrow Airport managed to lose thousands of bags and banish some people to ten hour bus rides. Now we're told our runways aren't safe to land on!!

The rail companies must be laughing. This is surely the nail in the coffin for domestic flights.

2

bill, england,

07/01/2007 13:49:15

Take note that it is not Bristol aiport and the CAA who are concerned about safety; it is the airlines who are looking after the welfare of their staff and passengers.

There should be a full enquiry into why the Airport and the CAA have failed to protect us.

3

Swilly Tisher,

Loch Maree 07/01/2007 15:06:06

#2 Well done , Bill of England. You've taken the very words out of my PC. Again, though , full credit to EasyJet for leading the safety charge against Bristol International Airport. They get my vote - every time.


 

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