Thomas Cook collapses, stranding hundreds of thousands

it was always a bizzy airlinnes' seems strange its gone under ; so whats nxt Easy jet))) ??
 
From the Mail...

Thomas Cook collapsed after 178 years this morning leaving more than 160,000 Britons stranded abroad and a million more customers with cancelled holidays.

21,000 staff face an uncertain future after losing their jobs including 9,000 in the UK as the world's oldest and most famous travel operator officially went bust at 2am.

A £100million taxpayer-funded fleet of 40 or more jets are today already heading to Europe, America and Asia to start bringing 160,000 Britons home from more than 50 destinations over the coming fortnight.

Britain's biggest peacetime repatriation effort, codenamed Operation Matterhorn, will see around 16,000 people flown back to UK airports every day.

Holidaymakers stuck in resorts around the world are today waiting for news about how and when they will get home.

Thomas Cook check-in desks at the 20-plus UK airports the business flew from are shut today with all customers with holidays and flights told they are cancelled.

Last-minute talks to try and rescue the ailing firm collapsed last night with nobody willing to service its £1.7billion debt, and the Civil Aviation Authority announced the end for the 178-year-old company in the early hours of this morning.

Boris Johnson today said that the Government had been asked to bail-out the business with £150million of taxpayers' money but they had refused.

He said: 'Clearly that's a lot of taxpayers' money and sets up, as people will appreciate, a moral hazard in the case of future such commercial difficulties that companies face.'
 

From the Mail...

Thomas Cook collapsed after 178 years this morning leaving more than 160,000 Britons stranded abroad and a million more customers with cancelled holidays.

21,000 staff face an uncertain future after losing their jobs including 9,000 in the UK as the world's oldest and most famous travel operator officially went bust at 2am.

A £100million taxpayer-funded fleet of 40 or more jets are today already heading to Europe, America and Asia to start bringing 160,000 Britons home from more than 50 destinations over the coming fortnight.

Britain's biggest peacetime repatriation effort, codenamed Operation Matterhorn, will see around 16,000 people flown back to UK airports every day.

Holidaymakers stuck in resorts around the world are today waiting for news about how and when they will get home.

Thomas Cook check-in desks at the 20-plus UK airports the business flew from are shut today with all customers with holidays and flights told they are cancelled.

Last-minute talks to try and rescue the ailing firm collapsed last night with nobody willing to service its £1.7billion debt, and the Civil Aviation Authority announced the end for the 178-year-old company in the early hours of this morning.

Boris Johnson today said that the Government had been asked to bail-out the business with £150million of taxpayers' money but they had refused.

He said: 'Clearly that's a lot of taxpayers' money and sets up, as people will appreciate, a moral hazard in the case of future such commercial difficulties that companies face.'
What I can't figure out is why they went "belly up" so abruptly. Obviously, some hotel or whatever must have pushed them into it overnight or something. How they could have owed just one hotel, or hotel chain that much money - enough to throw them into bankrupt status that instantly is nuts.
 
it's not the first and wont be the last ' airlines now are so very competitive with their fares' plus online deals'
virgin is bringing back loads from different countries -my son has lost his holiday as they was going in oct 1st.
so claiming money back will take a long time =
 
I hope this is not going to be blamed on 'Brexit'. It sounds as though it was sheer greed....share-holders took a large slice of the profits instead of paying out expenses first.
Look what the CEO and other top brass were making. Its happening all over, equities are being diluted by the top guys raping the company . Not like it used to be - when the top guys were more regulated regarding their pay and bonuses.
 
I hope this is not going to be blamed on 'Brexit'. It sounds as though it was sheer greed....share-holders took a large slice of the profits instead of paying out expenses first.

Exactly. So many companies look to shareholder profits before considering customers, service or product because CEOs and top management are often large shareholders.
 
I don't know why everybody is upset about Britons being stranded, seems to me they have been this way for quite some time now, the way the royal family ruins things. mark55
 
Our neighbor is a "dualie" - dual citizenship from US/UK...she just got back from there a few days ago and said when she was at the airport there were a lot of tourists preparing to fly out. She said a few years ago her brother got stranded in Disneyworld when the volcano erupted and the ash prevented flights in and out of London and Thomas Cooke paid for them to stay an extra week...all expenses, meals and lodging!

Obviously they used to be a good company. Sigh.
 

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