The Free Press Journal

TECH CRASH HITS HEATHROW AIRPORT

- AGENCIES

LONDON: More than a third of British Airways flights from Heathrow Airport have been cancelled, leaving thousands of passengers stranded for the second day on Sunday following a global computer failure for which a workers’ union blamed outsourcin­g to India.

British Airways (BA) warned of further delays and cancellati­ons as it resumed flights on Sunday following a major IT failure that saw most services cancelled from London’s Heathrow and Gatwick airports on Saturday.

The unions blamed the airline’s decision last year of outsourcin­g IT jobs to India as causing the disruption­s.

Between 6 am and 9 am, 91 British Airways flights were scheduled to depart from both the airports, the BBC reported. So far, 42 flights have left Heathrow and 29 have been cancelled. At Gatwick, 19 planes have departed and one flight to Amsterdam was cancelled.

More than 1,000 flights were affected.

The IT failure affected check-in and operationa­l systems, including customer service phone lines.

BA said although some of its IT systems were back on line, “there will be some knock-on disruption to our schedules as aircraft and crews are out of position around the world”.

Meanwhile, the Guardian newspaper reported here that British Airways GMB union has said the airline’s decision to outsource hundreds of IT jobs to India last year was behind the flight disruption­s.

The GMB union, which had cautioned last year against outsourcin­g jobs, said BA laid off hundreds of IT staff outsourcin­g the work to India, and blamed cost cutting for the travel chaos.

“We are reposition­ing some aircraft during the night to enable us to operate as much of our schedule as possible throughout Sunday,” the BBC quoted the airlines as saying.

A BA spokesman said: “We are extremely sorry for the huge disruption caused to customers throughout Saturday and understand how frustratin­g their experience­s will have been.” -IANS

 ?? AFP ?? Canadian PM Justin Trudeau (L) and his wife Sophie Gregoire (C) are escorted by officials during a visit in earthquake-devastated village Amatrice on Sunday.
AFP Canadian PM Justin Trudeau (L) and his wife Sophie Gregoire (C) are escorted by officials during a visit in earthquake-devastated village Amatrice on Sunday.

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