Latest News and Stories

12

Credit Crunch forced a decision to place XL Leisure Group into administration has also left thousands of staff facing the axe.

The firm went into administration at 3am on Friday after failing to secure a multi-million pound rescue package. In a statement it blamed problems caused by "volatile fuel prices and the economic downturn".

Chairman Phil Wyatt said he was "totally devastated" by the failure which has grounded XL's 21 planes. The company flies to about 50 destinations.
There are 67,000 stranded who booked directly with XL, and another 23,000 who booked via other companies.

The Civil Aviation Authority(CAA) also said the firm had 200,000 advance bookings.

Up to 85,000 Britons are thought to be on holidays run by the company, which flies to 50 destinations, mainly in the Mediterranean.

A further 200,000 who have made bookings with XL, which trades under names such as Kosmar, Travel City Direct and the Really Great Holiday Company, are set to have their holidays ruined, after all its flights were grounded.

Holidaymakers preparing to come home who booked their trips through XL's tour operators, which also include Freedom Flights, Aspire Holidays and Medlife Hotel, are protected under the ATOL tour operators' licensing scheme, and will have return flights found for them and paid for.

However those who booked flights directly through XL Airways, the company's own airline, could have to organise and pay for making their own way home.
People preparing to leave for holidays with the group, which flew more than 2.3m Britons last year, have been warned not to travel to airports. However the news came too late for many passengers, who were informed by a leaflet they were handed as they arrived.

A spokesman for ATOL said XL's collapse was "a huge failure" and promised the group would be working with other operators such as Thomson First Choice, to bring any stranded passengers home.

Actions: E-mail | Permalink |

Post Rating

Other News

London Transport and Virgin Media have named first 80 busiest and major underground stations in London which are all set to receive Wi-Fi services for the Olympics season. Destinations including London Bridge, Oxford Circus, Leicester Square, Mile End, Tower Hill, Tufnell Park, Goodge Street, King’s Cross, Oval, Borough and Victoria are on the list to turn into accessible Wi-Fi hotspots.

The UK economy shrank for the last three months of 2011 - BCC predicts that growth will be flat this year , with one quarter of contraction, but says a full-blown recession is not inevitable if the government acts. It showed that in October, the service sector contracted by (a revised) 0.6%, while in November it grew by 0.6%.

Peacocks chief executive expected to lodge rescue offer for stricken fashion chain, while Past Times is closing 46 stores with the loss of 574 jobs. Peacock employs more than 400 at its Cardiff HQ and nearly 10,000 more across the UK.

Halifax index also shows a 0.9% decline in December 2011 and predicts a broadly stable 2012 … providing the UK can avoid the recession. The price of the average house in the UK is now just over £160,000, said the bank, thanks to a 0.9% fall in prices in December 2011 and a 1.3% drop over the whole of the year.

Europe’s worst financial crisis in generations is forging a new European Union, pushing Britain to the sidelines and creating a more integrated, fiscally disciplined core of nations under the auspices of a resurgent Germany.

Services
blog

Blogs

instagram

Instagram

facebook

Facebook