Queue chaos spreads to TWO more airports: Manchester and Luton

Queue chaos spreads to TWO more airports: Manchester and Luton
Queue chaos spreads to TWO more airports: Manchester and Luton

'Horrific' delays at passport control are no longer confined to Heathrow as 'massive queues' formed at Luton and Manchester airports and travellers raged that the country is fast becoming an international 'laughing stock'.

As families returned from their summer holidays for the start of the school term, one traveller collapsed after landing in London and luggage was seen tumbling from conveyor belts because queues at 'poorly managed' arrivals halls were up to five hours.

Anastasia Tolmacova filmed the chaos at Luton Airport at 1am, with hundreds of people queuing through the terminal where social distancing went out of the window. 

She said: 'Massive queues at London Luton airport past midnight. Any social distancing is virtually impossible. Why do we have to pay extra for overpriced covid tests when the situation at the border is so poorly managed?' 

There were similar scenes at Manchester airport's Terminal 2 – back open after a £1 billion revamp. One elderly passengers is said to have fainted as the queues piled up with many forced to wait for hours. And Heathrow bosses blamed the 'unacceptable' waiting times this weekend on Border Force staff shortages.

The scenes of passengers queuing at UK airports have sparked furious demands for ministers to intervene.  MPs and travel industry figures last night demanded a meaningful response from Home Secretary Priti Patel and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, saying the chaotic scenes were blighting the UK's global reputation and running the risk of a spike in Covid cases. 

Luton Airport said the delays were not their fault. A spokesman said: 'We're sorry for any inconvenience caused by additional checks at the UK Border. Border Force is responsible for this part of the journey and we continue to work with them to ensure wait times are reduced as much as possible. Our Passenger Services team works extremely hard to prioritise families and those with additional needs and to ensure the comfort of our customers.'

Paul Charles, of travel consultancy The PC Agency, said ministers appeared to be 'deliberately sowing complexity around global travel'. 'How does it look to other countries?' he said. 'It sends the message that Britain is not fit for purpose.'

Henry Smith, Tory chairman of the all-party parliamentary group on general aviation, said: 'More resources need to be put into managing the chaos at the border at Heathrow, otherwise it could lead to increased risk of Covid transmission.'

Dr Steven Freudmann, former president of ABTA, said the images of chaos at Britain's biggest airport made the country look like a 'laughing stock'. 

Queues at just before 1am today at Luton Airport today as the queues at arrivals spread from Heathrow to across the UK

Queues at just before 1am today at Luton Airport today as the queues at arrivals spread from Heathrow to across the UK

Meanwhile, in Manchester, there were also delays at Manchester Airport. Passengers were seen standing in long snaking queues leading up to border control at the airport's newly refurbished terminal (pictured)

Meanwhile, in Manchester, there were also delays at Manchester Airport. Passengers were seen standing in long snaking queues leading up to border control at the airport's newly refurbished terminal (pictured)

Pictures show luggage piled up on conveyor belts and floors because passengers were caught up in queues

Pictures show luggage piled up on conveyor belts and floors because passengers were caught up in queues

Among those caught up in the disruption at Heathrow was Jason Reed, who said he and his pregnant wife had to wait for two hours to get through arrivals after returning from holiday in Malta.

'It was absolute carnage,' he told the Sunday Telegraph. 'My wife is pregnant and has a bad back so was uncomfortable and tired. It was also extremely hot with no ventilation.

'We saw a man had fainted – with lots of police around.'

Mr Reed said when they finally got to the front of the queue, no-one bothered to check their passenger locator forms declaring that they hadn't been to a high-risk country.

Some passengers arriving on Friday evening reported delays of up to five hours, although the Home Office contested this.

At Manchester yesterday, businessman Ian McCarter complained of having to wait for three hours to get through passport control.

Mr McCarter, who was arriving back from a week in Dubai with his wife and two youngest children – aged 16 and ten – described the scene which met them as 'chaos'.

'We got off the plane and found ourselves penned into a tight space with 200 to 300 people – it was ridiculous,' said the 52-year-old businessman, who lives near Wigan.

'Everyone was being shoved along like cattle, it was really warm, and not surprisingly a lot of passengers were starting to get quite agitated.

'There needs to be more resources and more staff otherwise travelling abroad just becomes a very off-putting experience.'

Furious Heathrow arrivals have slammed the government over the border queue chaos at the airport - with yet more passenger backlogs seen today - less than 24 hours after Home Office chiefs branded wait-times as 'unacceptable'.

Arrivals at the London airport this morning say they are facing 'horrific' queues to get through to the border area of Terminal 3.

One arrival posted a scathing attack on the Home Office yesterday, saying in a Tweet: 'Still horrific queues at Heathrow's T3 this morning. It's inhumane to force the disabled and children especially to stand for hours! Where's the promised improvement?'. 

Another arrival posted a picture on Twitter from the arrivals area today showing a line of people packed into a hallway. The picture shows a sign urging passengers to 'have your passports ready'.  

It comes as The Home Office finally admitted yesterday that massive queues at the airport's Terminal 5, where people including a pregnant woman fainted on Friday night, were 'unacceptable'. 

Meanwhile, in Manchester, there were also delays at Manchester Airport yesterday. Passengers were seen standing in long snaking queues leading up to border control.

Pictures also showed luggage and suitcases overflowing from the conveyor belts and strewn across the floor at arrivals the terminal, which has recently undergone a £1billion refurbishment.

One image even appears to show a male traveller lying on the floor in Terminal 5 after apparently passing out while queueing

One image even appears to show a male traveller lying on the floor in Terminal 5 after apparently passing out while queueing

Furious Heathrow arrivals are complaining of yet more queues at the Heathrow today, less than 24 hours after Home Office chiefs branded the wait-time chaos at the airport as 'unacceptable'. Pictured: One Twitter user, John O'Hara, posted this image on Twitter today

In another image posted on Twitter, he said he was preparing to join the 'long long wait' at the Heathrow Terminal 3 border

Furious Heathrow arrivals are complaining of yet more queues at the Heathrow today, less than 24 hours after Home Office chiefs branded the wait-time chaos at the airport as 'unacceptable'. Pictured: One Twitter user, John O'Hara, posted this image on Twitter today

Another wrote: 'Still horrific queues at Heathrow’s T3 this morning. It’s inhumane to force the disabled and children especially to stand for hours! Where’s the promised improvement?'

Another wrote: 'Still horrific queues at Heathrow's T3 this morning. It's inhumane to force the disabled and children especially to stand for hours! Where's the promised improvement?'

The queueing chaos at Heathrow airport continued overnight, with incensed British holidaymakers complained of the risk of spreading Covid as hundreds of passengers were rammed into small hallways and forced to queue for up to five hours

The queueing chaos at Heathrow airport continued overnight, with incensed British holidaymakers complained of the risk of spreading Covid as hundreds of passengers were rammed into small hallways and forced to queue for up to five hours

The queueing chaos at Heathrow airport continued overnight, with incensed British holidaymakers complained of the risk of spreading Covid as hundreds of passengers were rammed into small hallways and forced to queue for up to five hours

The strongly-worded statement from the Home Office on the border chaos at Heathrow came after a furious blame-game broke out yesterday.

It followed the posting of pictures on social media showing thousands of British arrivals being forced to cram into small hallways with no social distancing measures in place and queueing for several hours to pass immigration. 

One holidaymaker, Sonny Singh, told Sky News he saw a pregnant woman pass out while in the queue on Friday night.

'There were thousands of families queuing and just two people in booths up front checking documents,' he claimed. 

'Children were screaming and crying. The queue moved about five feet in the space of about 45 minutes.

'Then, when the pregnant woman fainted, it finally got through to someone somewhere - the kids were then put on the side to sit while the adults waited in the queue and it began moving faster.'

One photo even appears to show a male traveller lying on the floor in the London airport after apparently passing out while queueing for passport control, amid claims that stressed holidaymakers had no access to ventilation or toilets, and no shuttles were available.

Have YOU been waiting hours to get through immigration at Heathrow? 

Send photos and videos of the queues to [email protected]

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An incensed passenger queueing for hours to get to immigration at Heathrow tweeted on Friday night: 'Kids crying and screaming and fully grown [men] fainting whilst two people at the booth serving thousands of people queuing up to the runway.' 

Astonishingly, Heathrow has twice admitted that they have no idea how long it will take passengers to pass through immigration.

The border chaos has been compounded by the fact that families with children aged under 12 can't use the e-gates. 

In a statement, a Heathrow spokeswoman blamed 'unacceptable queueing times in immigration' on 'too few Border Force officers on duty'. 

She claimed

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