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Airport chaos as luggage ‘abandoned’ and passengers ‘forced to sleep on floor’

Travel meltdown comes as Britons warned to brace for summer of ‘massive disruption’

Emily Atkinson
Monday 27 June 2022 06:11 BST
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Chaos at Heathrow Airport as a baggage system malfunction causes pile-up

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Airport mayhem gripped terminals again on Sunday as images emerged of customers forced to sleep on floors, surrounded by snaking passenger queues and mountains of abandoned luggage.

Britons have been warned to brace for a summer of “massive disruption” after British Airways ground staff voted in favour of strike action at the carrier’s Heathrow hub.

But despite warnings of a looming crisis, photographs taken on Sunday in at UK airports appear to show the country’s travel hubs already in the eye of the storm.

Airport workers stand next to lines of passenger luggage arranged outside Terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport
Airport workers stand next to lines of passenger luggage arranged outside Terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport (REUTERS)
A passenger rests before her flight at Manchester Airport Terminal 3
A passenger rests before her flight at Manchester Airport Terminal 3 (Ioannis Alexopoulos/LNP)

The images showed piles of bags cordoned off by ground staff at Heathrow terminal 2, and passengers being forced to sleep on the floor of Manchester Airport.

More images in The Sun showed people trying to sleep the floor at London’s Stansted airport with their luggage in tow.

Complaints regarding enormous queues at both airports were flooding Twitter, with one user describing the scenes at the former as “chaotic”.

The incoming strike action will involve an estimated 700 workers, which the GMB Union said was “likely to be during the peak summer holiday period”.

“Holidaymakers face massive disruption thanks to the pig-headedness of British Airways,” it said.

Meanwhile, No 10 said further strikes will “only add to the misery being faced by passengers at airports”. A spokesman promised “to look at what contingency measures BA could put in place” to get around the action.

Passengers queue for check-in desks at Heathrow airport’s Terminal 5 in London
Passengers queue for check-in desks at Heathrow airport’s Terminal 5 in London (REUTERS)
People face travelling disruption and long queues at airports amid the industry's ongoing staffing crisis
People face travelling disruption and long queues at airports amid the industry's ongoing staffing crisis (AP)

The current airport chaos, which has seen flight delays and cancellations, is “completely to do with Brexit”, the boss of the Ryanair airline said earlier this week.

Michael O’Leary said Brexit has been an “abject failure” and claimed labour shortages were behind the disruption at UK airports – adding: “This government couldn’t run a sweet shop.”

It came in response to remarks made by transport secretary Grant Shapps, who denied Brexit was to blame for ongoing travel woes, instead accusing airlines of “seriously overselling” flights since the Covid pandemic.

Asked about the minister’s comments, the outspoken Ryanair chief executive told Sky News: “It’s completely to do with Brexit. A lot of these pinch points would be solved very quickly if we could bring in European workers.

“We are hide-bound and hamstrung by a government so desperate to show Brexit has been a success, when it’s been an abject failure. It won’t allow us to bring in EU workers to do these jobs.”

People queue at Manchester Airport, as Tui announced a “small number” of flight cancellations and delays in a blow to travel plans at the start of the half-term brea
People queue at Manchester Airport, as Tui announced a “small number” of flight cancellations and delays in a blow to travel plans at the start of the half-term brea (PA)
Passengers queue for security screening in the departures area of Terminal 2 at Manchester Airport
Passengers queue for security screening in the departures area of Terminal 2 at Manchester Airport (REUTERS)

He added: “If we can’t attract people to do those jobs, like baggage handling like security at the airports we’re going to have to bring in workers from Ireland or the continent to do them – and Brexit is one of the big bugbears in the system.”

Mr O’Leary warned that delays and cancellations will continue “right throughout the summer” as airports suffer amid staff shortages.

He pointed to a lack of staff across air traffic control, baggage handling and security.

The airline boss said passengers should brace for a “less than satisfactory experience”, with flight delays due to last across the peak season and some airlines cancelling between 5 per cent and 10 per cent of flights.

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