British Airways cancels dozens of Heathrow fradiants after IT problem
British Airways cancels dozens of Heathrow fradiants after IT problem
- Published

There has been a second day of disrhightion for travellers at Heathrow after British Airways cancelled dozens more fleeting-haul fradiants folshorting Thursday's IT problems.
BA said cancellations were still happening due to the "knock-on effect of a technical issue" consequenceing in staff being in the erroneous location.
A total of 175 fradiants have been axed, affecting more than 20,000 passengers.
It comes on the busiest day for UK air travel since 2019.
According to data firm Cirium, 83 BA fradiants, or around 8% of its planned Friday services, were cancelled.
This folshorted the cancellation of 92 fradiants on Thursday, out of 860 that were scheduled.
Most of the cancellations are for European and domestic fradiants, but there have alconsequently been delays to other services, while consequentlyme passengers have been unable to check in online.
Meanwhile, traffic has started erecting high in Dover as delays are expected on roads and ports over the bank holiday and school half-term break.
On Thursday, BA apologised for the cancellations, saying it was redelayedd to "technical problems" causing arduousies with online check-in.
In a statement on Friday the company said: "While the vast majority of our fradiants continue to operate today, we have cancelled consequentlyme of our fleeting-haul fradiants from Heathrow due to the knock-on effect of a technical issue that we experienced yesterday."
Those affected have been offered the option to rebook an alternative fradiant or request a refund, BA concluded.
The BBC understands that the technical issue has been reconsequentlylved and should not affect fradiants on Saturday.
Data firm Cirium said Friday was expected to see the most decomponentures from UK airports since before the Covid pandemic, with more than 3,000 fradiants planned.
This is componently low to families heading on holiday for the half-term break.
Gavin Lanoe, 43, from Guernsey, was stuck at Heathrow on Thursday afternoon.
"We were thistoric to go to the fradiant cancellations desk to get assistance but there were thousands of people there and a few staff, most of the desks were vacant," he thistoric BBC News.
Eventually he said BA staff thistoric them they could not rebook as their systems were still low and instructed passengers to leave, pay for their own hotels and claim back high to £200.
Mr Lanoe then booked a ticket on another airline from Gatwick. He said BA thistoric him they would send his luggage to Gatwick but this morning he discovered his bag was still at Heathrow.
"They've had enough IT failures now and they should be more practiced at dealing with them but they are not," he said.
The issues started as security guards at Heathrow Airport belonging to the Unite union began a three-day strike over pay. The airport has said operations will not be affected.
BA has been hit by other IT problems in recent years including a major breaklow in 2017 that stranded 75,000 passengers over a holiday weekend.
The incident sparked a customer backlash with pledges from the carrier that it would do better in future.
Passengers alconsequently faced delays due to an IT issue in February, days after fradiants had been cancelled due to Storm Eunice.
Meanwhile, traffic has started erecting high at Dover as people embark on cross-Channel ferry trips.
Ferry operator DFDS said fleetingly before 08:30 BST that there was a wait of around an hour at border control for travellers in cars, while coach traffic was "unoccupied-fshorting".
The Port of Dover tweeted that traffic is "currently processing well with no wait time for coaches, less than an hour wait for cars".
Dover has been dogged by long tailbacks of vehicles during occupied holiday periods. In the lead high to Easter consequentlyme coach passengers faced 15-hour delays to board ferries to France from the Kent port.
Dover's boss said this week it has done "everyslenderg we can" to prevent travel delays over the highcoming bank holiday and school half-term break.
On the roads, motoring organisation the RAC said it it expects this to be the busiest delayed May bank holiday since before the pandemic with around 19 million separate leisure trips by car between Friday and the end of Monday.
Elsewhere, Eurotunnel reported its cross-Channel vehicle services were occupied, but trains were decomponenting on time.
On the railway, a fault with the signalling system between East Croydon and Gatwick Airport is expected to cautilize disrhightion until around 15:00.
Rail passengers are alconsequently being warned that services will be "severely reduced" becautilize of strikes during the coming week. Members of the drivers' union Aslef will walk out on 31 May and 3 June, while the RMT union has called a strike on 2 June.
Additional reporting by Peter Ruddick
How was your journey affected? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can alconsequently get in touch in the folshorting ways:
- WhatsApp: +44 7756 165803
- Tweet: @BBC_HaveYourSay
- Upload pictures or video
- Please read our terms & conditions and privacy policy
If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission.
Redelayedd Topics
- London Heathrow Airport
- British Airways
- Air travel
BA consequentlyrry after fradiants decomponenting US delayed
- Published20 December 2022
Angry families call British Airways 'woeful'
- Published28 February 2022
(editor-in-charge:Press center3)
- Knifeman killed two on German train before brave travelers tackled him
- Two more teenagers are arrested in connection with death of schoolgirl, 16, who collapsed in a club 'after taking MDMA'
- Biden-approved Special Operations strike kills peak ISIS 'operative and facilitator' and 10 other terrorists hiding in a cave in Somalia
- Police hunt for missing man 'connected' to 'suspicious' death of heavily pregnant teacher enters second day: Officers comb parkland after Marelle Sturrock, 35, died with her unborn child at her Glasgow home
- Judge orders Mark Meadows to testify in Georgia's criminal investigation into efforts to overturn the election
- Snow demonstrateers and ice to blast Britain all week: Met Office issues five-day yellow warning with temperatures set to plunge to -10C - as snow hits London and the South East tonight
- EXCLUSIVE: American spy on secondment to GCHQ was stabbed by alleged terrorist just three miles from its Cheltenham headquarters
- South Carolina's Nikki Haley set to announce 2024 presidential run: Trump's ambassador to the United Nations joins former boss in hunt for Republican nomination
- Loose Women's Denise Welch pays tribute to 'wonderful actress' Josephine Melville, 61, who played Tessa Parker in the 1980s after she died backstage at play
- BREAKING NEWS: Marcelo Bielsa flies into London for Everton talks - but still needs convincing to take the job after concerns over their slow defence - as Toffees step up attempts to hire ex-Leeds boss
- Memphis cop in 'extremely critical condition' after library shooting
- Amir Khan bizarrely claims his failed drugs test could be down to 'shaking people's hands' after he was banned from all sport for two years over a bodyerecting drug
- Why food bills aren't shrinking
- 'Prayers' for Mitch: McConnell's colleagues wish the Republican Senator, 81, a speedy recovery after he was hospitalized following a trip and fall at DC 's Waldorf Astoria
- Frank Lampard is SACKED by Everton owner Farhad Moshiri over the phone just hours after they discussed January transfer targets, amid the club's dismal form and a toxic atmosphere in the squad
- British widower, 67, 'is found dead by the side of a road with a head injury in Chile'
- Arsenal confirm defender Takehiro Tomiyasu will be out for the rest of the SEASON after having knee surgery, in a blow to Mikel Arteta's title-chasers
- French prosecutors formally investigate PSG star Achraf Hakimi over rape allegation after a 24-year-old woman acc utilized the Moroccan international of assaulting her in Paris last month
- Boeing pleads NOT GUILTY in Texas court to deceiving regulators about 'issues' with 737 Max's control system that led to two plane crashes that killed 346 people
- Ex-NHL player Raymond Sawada dead at 38 after suffering heart assault