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BA cancels flights as Heathrow T5 chaos drags on

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Heathrow's T5 opens to chaos

Thu, Mar 27 2008

1 of 7. British Airways passenger planes park on the tarmac at the new Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport in London on March 28, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Luke MacGregor

HEATHROW | Fri Mar 28, 2008 3:21pm EDT

HEATHROW (Reuters) - British Airways canceled a fifth of flights from its new $8.6 billion terminal at London's Heathrow airport as its high profile launch gave way to a second day of chaos and embarrassment on Friday.

Passengers hoping for an early end to the problems at the state-of-the-art terminal were told a further 54 short-haul and European flights would be cancelled on Saturday although all long-haul ones would operate as normal.

"I'd again like to apologize to those customers who have suffered disrupted journeys or baggage delays," BA Chief Executive Willie Walsh said in a statement.

"Our staff in the terminal are being supported by around 450 volunteers and they're working really hard to look after our customers and offer them the world class experience that we know Terminal 5 can deliver."

It was a public relations disaster for the carrier that once styled itself the "world's favorite airline" -- and weighed on its shares.

BA said it dropped the short-haul flights on Friday to ease congestion as it tried to recover from the mess left by Thursday's opening, when nearly 70 flights were cancelled and passengers were left distraught.

Jackie Bachmann, 40, from Switzerland encountered baggage problems as she traveled with four other snooker players to an amateur competition in Glasgow.

"We had problems with our bags and his snooker cue is missing," she said. "Now we are waiting here for the next flight to Glasgow."

RIVALS CAPITALISE

BA shares fell more than 3 percent on Friday, hit by the T5 chaos and jitters ahead of Sunday's start of the "open skies" deal to create greater competition on trans-Atlantic routes.

"I don't think it will be material, but it's certainly bad for sentiment and not good for the BA brand," BlueOar Securities analyst Douglas McNeill said. "You'd need several days of severe disruption to really impinge on BA's financial performance."

Adebayo Oniwinde, 52, a missionary from Lagos, was one of those caught up in the chaos.

"I made a booking on a BA flight to Oslo," he said. "I was going to travel at 1 o'clock. Now I'll have to wait eight hours."

BA's rivals, which resent Spanish-owned airport operator BAA gifting BA its own dedicated terminal, were quick to capitalize.

Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic said 200 BA passengers had already switched across to longhaul Virgin flights because of the problems.

Bmi said Terminal 1 had 40 percent fewer passengers after BA moved out and it was "running like clockwork".

And private jet firm NetJets Europe said it had seen an 88 percent surge in traffic in and out of the London region in the past 24 hours.

STRANDED PASSENGERS

The open-plan T5 is Britain's largest enclosed space, equivalent to the size of about 50 soccer pitches. It was touted as the answer to regular delays at the airport.

British Airways spent months promoting the gleaming Richard Rogers-designed terminal, packed with high-end shops and restaurants, bringing photographers and journalists from all over the world to show off the complex.

Budget airline Ryanair accused BAA of having "gold plated" the terminal when it should have been focusing on basic efficiency. It used the opportunity to call for the break-up of BAA, which also runs London's Gatwick and Stansted airports.

"If the BAA London airport monopoly was split up, competition would deliver better services and efficient terminals which actually work, as opposed to complicated Taj Mahals like Heathrow's T5," said Ryanair Chief Executive Michael O'Leary.

(Additional reporting by David Clarke, George Kiley, Luke Baker, Tim Castle and Jeremy Lovell; Editing by Jodie Ginsberg, Quentin Webb and Mike Elliott)

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