Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Most Thomas Cook holidaymakers back in UK

MORE THAN half of of the 150,000 holidaymakers left stranded abroad after the collapse of travel firm Thomas Cook have been repatriated to Britain, the Civil Aviation Authority regulator said Saturday (28).

The CAA said 76,000 people had been returned in the first five days of Operation Matterhorn- Britain's biggest peacetime repatriation.


Debt-plagued Thomas Cook, which struggled against fierce online competition for years and blamed Brexit uncertainty for a drop in bookings, declared bankruptcy Monday (23) after failing to secure fresh funds.

The CAA said 95 per cent of passengers were coming home on the day they were originally scheduled to return.

The operation will continue until October 6, with more than 1,000 flights planned in total.

Some 76 flights were scheduled Saturday, bringing 16,700 people back to Britain.

"After five days, Operation Matterhorn has now flown home over half of the 150,000 customers who were abroad at the time Thomas Cook stopped trading," said CAA chief executive Richard Moriarty.

"We aim to bring home the rest at the end of their holiday.

"An operation of this scale and complexity will inevitably cause some inconvenience and disruption and I would like to thank holidaymakers for bearing with us as we work around the clock to bring them back."

The CAA said it was processing hundreds of payments to hotels hosting Thomas Cook customers to ensure they could stay on and complete their holidays.

Monday's bankruptcy followed a lengthy period of chronic financial turmoil after a disastrous series of mergers left it burdened with soaring debt, a large branch network and high costs.

(AFP)

More For You

UK Invite-only visa

The UK is reportedly considering a new investor residency visa with a minimum £5m investment requirement

iStock

UK weighs new ‘invite-only’ investor visa for wealthy foreigners after scrapping golden route

  • The UK is reportedly considering a new investor residency visa with a minimum £5m investment requirement.
  • The proposed route could focus on sectors such as AI, clean energy and advanced technology.
  • Wealthy Indians and global business families may closely watch the scheme if it moves ahead.

The UK government is reportedly exploring a new “invite-only” residency visa aimed at attracting ultra-wealthy investors, signalling a possible return of investor migration routes four years after Britain scrapped its controversial golden visa programme over money laundering concerns.

According to reports, the proposed UK investor visa scheme would allow selected high-net-worth individuals investing at least £5m into key sectors of the British economy to secure residency rights for an initial three-year period, with a possible route to permanent settlement later.

Keep ReadingShow less