British Airways flights resume after day of chaos but passengers could still face delays

Bonnie Christian8 August 2019

British Airways flights resumed this morning after a day of mayhem which saw more than 100 flights cancelled due to an IT meltdown.

Tens of thousands of passengers attempting to travel to or from Heathrow, Gatwick or London City were affected by issue on Wednesday. Some 117 flights due to depart or arrive at Heathrow were axed.

The airline said on Thursday morning that their schedule had returned to normal but that there could still be some delays.

On its website, around five flights appeared to be delayed by up to 90 minutes from Heathrow, but most flights from Gatwick appeared to be operating on time.

Some passengers reported that they still had trouble checking in online.

Responding to them on Twitter, a BA spokesman said the issues from Wednesday were resolved and advised checking in at the airport.

Gatwick and Heathrow said they were operating as normal but urged passengers to check their flight status before travelling to the airports.

BA could face a compensation bill in excess of £8 million if all those affected claim what they are entitled to under European Union rules.

British Airways Cancellations: August 2019 - In pictures

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The airline said in a statement on Thursday morning: "We have resolved the temporary systems issue from earlier today and apologised to customers who were affected.

"Any customers whose flights have been cancelled have either been rebooked or offered a refund.

"We plan to operate our normal schedule tomorrow, however there may be some knock-on disruption.

"We continue to ask customers to check ba.com before heading to the airport to get the latest status of their flight."

Passengers wait in the departures lounge at Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport yesterday after an IT glitch forced the cancellation of over 100 BA flights.
EPA

The airline earlier said it appreciated "how frustrating their (customers') experience has been" and said teams worked "tirelessly to get the vast majority" of travellers on their way.

On Wednesday, there were long queues of passengers at Heathrow and error messages on the BA app as some services lagged more than five hours behind schedule.

The airline was forced to use back-up and manual systems in a bid to cope with the problem.

Darren Rowe, from the Cotswolds, said his 10.20am flight to Hamburg from Heathrow for business meetings was cancelled before "all chaos let loose".

People queue inside Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport as IT problems caused delays.
REUTERS

He said: "There were massive queues, it was queue here, queue there, nobody was saying anything. The lack of information was just pathetic.

"You've got young families in that queue, people going to weddings, birthdays, on business. They could have had somebody come around with water updating people about what was going on."

BA's IT problems come after it suffered a major computer failure over the spring bank holiday weekend in May 2017, stranding tens of thousands of passengers and costing owner AIG around £80 million.

Passengers face the threat of future disruption after British Airline Pilots Association members at BA voted on Wednesday to take industrial action in a dispute over pay.

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