• last year
Simon Calder explains your rights if flight is cancelled by global IT outage
Transcript
00:00On Friday, as a result of the IT outage around the world,
00:04we saw 350 flights, two from and within the UK, grounded.
00:11That means 50,000 people woke up on Saturday
00:15where they didn't expect to be.
00:17On top of that, there's yet more disruption.
00:20On Saturday, I'm counting at least 45 flights cancelled,
00:25most of those as a knock-on effect of all the problems we saw on Friday.
00:31The largest number of cancellations is on British Airways,
00:34to and from London Heathrow,
00:36with flights to places such as Brussels, Rome, Houston,
00:40Mumbai and Washington DC grounded.
00:44Also from London City to Nice and Ibiza.
00:48If your flight has been hit,
00:51whether with a very long delay, and there's a lot of those around,
00:54or indeed with a cancellation,
00:57then it's very clear what your rights are.
01:00The airline has to provide you with a hotel and meals,
01:05and if your flight's grounded and you've got to get to your destination,
01:08they cannot simply say,
01:10oh, we've got another flight in three days' time.
01:13They have to buy a ticket on another airline, if necessary,
01:17in order to get you where you need to be.
01:21Having said that,
01:23knowing the rules and getting the airlines to obey them
01:26are two different things,
01:29and therefore it could be that you're going to have to rely on
01:32having a robust credit card to pay for your hotel,
01:36your meals, by the way, keep itemised receipts,
01:39and indeed any new flights or travel arrangements that you are obliged to get.
01:45This was always going to be a miserable weekend,
01:49with Friday expecting the highest number of flights
01:52for five years from UK airports.
01:55It's turned out worse than anybody feared,
01:58but over the coming weeks,
02:00hopefully the pressure will ease off a bit
02:03and you will get to your destination.

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