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UK air traffic control says it has fixed a technical problem that sparked delays and cancellations

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LONDON, Aug 29: Thousands of airline passengers faced delays on Monday after Britain's air traffic
control system was hit by a breakdown that slowed takeoffs and landings across the U.K. on one of
the busiest travel days of the year.
More than three hours after it reported the “technical issue,” flight control operator National Air
Traffic Services said it had “identified and remedied” the problem and flights could begin to return to
normal. But scores of flights were canceled, and Heathrow Airport said its schedules would be
“significantly disrupted” for the rest of the day.
Lyudmila Hristova said she and her husband had planned to attend a niece's wedding in Bulgaria, but
their flight from Heathrow was canceled.
“Now we are looking for some information on how we can arrange another flight,” she said. “It is so
difficult, they just got us out of the airport, it was very rude. There was no information, just some
leaflets and that's it.”
NATS said the outage had hit its ability to process flight plans automatically, meaning the plans had
to be input manually, a much slower process. It did not disclose the cause of the problem.
The service said it had “applied traffic flow restrictions to maintain safety" but that U.K. airspace
remained open.
After fixing the problem, NATS said it was “working closely with airlines and airports to manage the
flights affected as efficiently as possible. Our engineers will be carefully monitoring the system's
performance as we return to normal operations.”
Monday was a holiday for many in the U.K. and a date when many families return from vacations
before the start of the school year.
European air traffic authority Eurocontrol warned of “very high” delays, and airports both inside and
outside the U.K. told passengers to expect waits and cancellations. Passengers scheduled to fly to
Britain from European airports said they were being told to expect delays of several hours or more.
Dozens of flights were canceled at Heathrow, Europe's busiest air hub, which urged passengers “to
only travel to the airport if their flight is confirmed as still operating.”
“Teams across Heathrow are working as hard as they can to minimize the knock-on impacts and
assist those whose journeys have been affected,” it said in a statement.
British Airways said it had to make “significant changes" to its schedule and advised passengers
booked on short-haul flights Monday not to go to airports without confirming their flight status.
Aviation analyst Alastair Rosenschein, a former BA pilot, said the air traffic system appeared to have
suffered “some kind of patchy failure as opposed to a total shutdown.”
He told Sky News that “the disruption will be quite severe at some airports" and some U.K.-bound
flights would likely have to land in other European countries in order to reduce the flow of inbound
planes. (AP)

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