- Navalny lawyers face long sentences in Russian 'extremism' trial
- Neuer returns but Musiala out for Bayern
- 'Real-world harm' if Meta ends fact-checks, global network warns
- Auger-Aliassime belatedly beats Paul to reach Adelaide final
- Stock markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Lancet study estimates Gaza death toll 40% higher than recorded
- South Korea's presidential security chief resigns
- Italian FM tours landmark mosque in first Syria visit
- 'Apocalyptic': ghastly remains of Malibu come into focus
- Pakistan flight departs for Paris after EU ban lifted
- Nicolas Maduro: Venezuela's iron-fisted 'worker president'
- Ukraine's French-trained brigade rocked by scandal
- Venezuela's Maduro to take presidential oath despite domestic, global outcry
- Red-hot Gauff vows to keep cool in Australian Open title charge
- Zverev says he has mindset to finally win Grand Slam in Melbourne
- Anti-war Russian theatre in Latvia fights language ban
- Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to visit native Pakistan for girls' summit
- Shotgun watch: LA fire evacuees guard against looters
- Los Angeles fire deaths at 10 as National Guard called in
- 'Control freak' Swiatek describes shock and 'chaos' over doping ban
- Vietnam jails ex-lawyer over Facebook posts
- Sinner in dark over verdict as ATP says doping case 'run by the book'
- US President-elect Trump to be sentenced for hush money conviction
- AI comes down from the cloud as chips get smarter
- Englishman Hall grabs share of Sony Open lead
- Olympic champ Zheng says 'getting closer' to top-ranked Sabalenka
- Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
- Air tankers fight Los Angeles fires from frantic skies
- Right-wing disinformation targets DEI, 'liberal' policies as LA burns
- Osaka to play Australian Open after 'devastating' injury pullout
- 'Disruptor' Medvedev ready to bring down Sinner and Alcaraz
- Atletico can seize La Liga lead as Osasuna visit
- Navalny lawyers face long sentences in 'extremism' trial
- Sinner declares innocence as ATP chief says doping case 'run by the book'
- India's Kumbh Mela, world's largest religious gathering
- India readies for mammoth Hindu festival of 400 million pilgrims
- Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
- Last 2 years crossed 1.5C global warming limit: EU monitor
- Asian markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Sabalenka has 'target on her back' in pursuit of Australian Open 'history'
- Croatia's populist president tipped for re-election
- Veteran Monfils powers past teenager to reach 35th final
- Los Angeles fires rage on as National Guard called in
- Japan 'poop master' gives back to nature
- UN watchdog says Australia violated asylum seekers' rights
- Murray braced for Djokovic ire in coaching debut at Australian Open
- At CES, AI-powered garbage trucks reduce battery fire risk
- S. Korea presidential security chief urges 'no bloodshed' in Yoon arrest
- Combustible Kyrgios says tennis 'a bit mundane' without him
- US Supreme Court to hear TikTok ban case
UK airport chaos due to Brexit 'shambles': Ryanair boss
Air travel chaos in Britain is purely down to Brexit "shambles" by hobbling recruitment at airports, Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary said on Tuesday.
The CEO of Europe's biggest airline also dismissed threats of summer strike action by what he called "Mickey Mouse" unions in Belgium and Spain covering some Ryanair workers.
And he said his company has dropped a controversial pre-boarding questionnaire for South African passport holders requiring them to answer questions in Afrikaans -- a language commonly used by just 12 percent of South Africans, many of them white.
O'Leary told AFP that "100 percent" of the woes experienced by air passengers in the UK -- including massively long lines and cancelled flights -- was because "Brexit has been a shambles".
"It was delivered by a government led by Boris Johnson that is also a shambles. It was inevitable that Brexit would constrain the labour market, you see," he said.
O'Leary said Britain's decision to pursue a hardline departure from the European Union that put a halt to EU workers filling jobs is largely why it was difficult to quickly ramp up recruitment for ground and security staff at UK passports.
Airports and airlines in several countries, including in the EU and the US, have struggled to cope with surging numbers of travellers, many of them keen to fly after months or years of being grounded because of Covid restrictions.
O'Leary said that unlike European rivals Air France and Lufthansa, low-cost Ryanair had fully bounced back from the pandemic and was flying 115 percent of the passenger loads recorded before the coronavirus hit.
Rising inflation was only pushing more passengers into Ryanair seats, he argued, while acknowledging that the airline was raising ticket prices by around 9 percent.
He said the company's hedging on fuel prices through to March next year was keeping it competitive.
- Strike threats -
But unions in Belgium and Spain are threatening to clip Ryanair's peak summer revenues with strikes later this month to demand better pay and conditions.
O'Leary shrugged off the walk-out warnings.
"We think there will be very few strikes, if any, and those strikes will be meaningless and won't be noticed by anybody," he said.
"We operate two and half thousand flights every day. Most of those flights will continue to operate even if there is a strike in Spain by some Mickey Mouse union or if the Belgian cabin crew unions want to go on strike over here," he added in a media conference.
O'Leary said that, in Belgium, the airline had "reached agreement with the unions representing over 90 percent of our pilots and cabin crew" and was continuing negotiations.
On the controversial Afrikaans test, the Ryanair boss said the company had tried to respond to a rise in detection of false South African passports.
"We suffer a fine of 2,000 euros for every passenger who arrives in Dublin from Bodrum (in Turkey) with a false South African passport," he said.
He added that, while the airline had been asking South African passport holders to answer local general knowledge and geographical questions in Afrikaans, it got rid of the questionnaire.
"We didn't think it was appropriate either. So we have ended the Afrikaans test, because it doesn't make any sense," he said, adding that "South Africa needs to fix its problems".
South Africa's government had called the test "backward profiling".
Afrikaans is just one of 11 official languages in South Africa, and it played a role in the oppression of black citizens during apartheid.
F.Bennett--AMWN