Extra flight hastily arranged after 300 Irish stuck in Heathrow when plane ‘oversold’

‘People arrived after us and . . . it’s just chaos,’ according to a Dublin-bound passenger

A Britain travel ban has disrupted the Christmas holiday plans of tens of thousands of Irish citizens. Video: Reuters/ RTE

An extra flight from London was hastily arranged on Sunday night to accommodate around 300 people who were stranded after an apparent overbooking on an earlier flight.

The new flight took off from Heathrow Airport after 11pm on Sunday night and landed in Dublin Airport just after midnight.

Earlier photographs and video footage of long queues forming in Heathrow's Terminal 5 emerged on social media as passengers arriving at the airport found themselves unable to board a scheduled 8.55pm Aer Lingus flight to Dublin.

One of the intending passengers, Katie Cullen, told The Irish Times that "around 300" passengers had been told that this flight had been oversold, and these passengers then queued to try and rebook on an alternative flight.

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“It’s all over the place. People arrived after us and they haven’t been told anything and it is just general chaos.”

There was additional demand on flights from London on Sunday evening as passengers planning to travel to Ireland tried to get home before a 48-hour ban on flights from Britain came into force at midnight on Monday morning.

This decision was triggered by concerns over the emergence a mutated strain of Covid-19 in London and southeast England.

Ms Cullen said there was a queue forming outside the terminal when she arrived at the terminal at about 6.30pm. She and her friends had booked the flight earlier on Sunday afternoon. "The flight was operated by Aer Lingus, but British Airways were selling tickets for it. They were doing the same for the Heathrow to Belfast flight," she said.

After arriving at the terminal, Ms Cullen said information was hard to come by after an initial update from a British Airways staff member.

A staff member from the airline updated the passengers again at about 8.30pm. “She let us know that they’re speaking to the [Irish] Government and they’re going to try and get us on a flight tonight, so there’s hope. She didn’t make any promises but she said there’s potential that we might get on a flight,” said Ms Cullen.

A spokesperson for Aer Lingus referred queries about the alleged overbooking to British Airways.

Glen Murphy

Glen Murphy

Glen Murphy is an Irish Times journalist