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posted by martyb on Monday September 23 2019, @07:33PM   Printer-friendly
from the grounded dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Thomas Cook, a 178-year-old British travel company and airline, declared bankruptcy early Monday morning, suspending operations and leaving hundreds of thousands of tourists stranded around the world.

The travel company operates its own airline, with a fleet of nearly 50 medium- and long-range jets, and owns several smaller airlines and subsidiaries, including the German carrier Condor. Thomas Cook still had several flights in the air as of Sunday night but was expected to cease operations once they landed at their destinations.

Condor posted a message to its site late Sunday night saying that it was still operating but that it was unclear whether that would change. Condor's scheduled Monday-morning flights appeared to be operating normally.

About 600,000 Thomas Cook customers were traveling at the time of the collapse, of whom 150,000 were British, the company told CNN.

The British Department for Transport and Civil Aviation Authority prepared plans, under the code name "Operation Matterhorn," to repatriate stranded British passengers. According to the British aviation authority, those rescue flights would take place until October 6, leading to the possibility that travelers could be delayed for up to two weeks.

Initial rescue flights seemed poised to begin immediately, with stranded passengers posting on Twitter that they were being delayed only a few hours as they awaited chartered flights.

The scale of the task has reports calling it the largest peacetime repatriation effort in British history, including the operation the government carried out when Monarch Airlines collapsed in 2017.

Costs of the flights were expected to be covered by the ATOL, or Air Travel Organiser's License, protection plan, a fund that provides for repatriation of British travelers if an airline ceases operations.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 2) by janrinok on Tuesday September 24 2019, @06:10PM (1 child)

    by janrinok (52) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday September 24 2019, @06:10PM (#898233) Journal

    I know that such things have happened elsewhere but, in this instance, everything that should be done seems to be being done. I'm sure the press will latch on to a handful of outlying cases - and there will be some problems in moving hundreds of thousands of people - and make mountains out of molehills but I can't think of how it could be improved. There will be lessons learned - this is the biggest repatriation of people by air since WW2 - but the lessons learned from the Monarch event seem to have been fixed (so far) this time around.

    As for the press interpretation of events - well, I suppose that '600,000 stranded' sounds better from their point of view than 'all holiday makers will return home on time without any additional costs'.

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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday September 24 2019, @08:26PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Tuesday September 24 2019, @08:26PM (#898263)

    I'm sure the press will latch on to a handful of outlying cases

    Sure, with 600,000 people affected, 1% of 1% is still 60 people, and way more than that were going to miss their regularly scheduled flights for some reason or another.

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