Ryanair’s chief executive has said British air traffic control is by far the worst in Europe, after travellers were hit by more cancellations this week due to staff sickness. Michael O’Leary criticised the UK’s air traffic control network as “by far and away the least productive, most inefficient”. The comments come after Gatwick on Monday revealed that it would be forced to cap the number of flights this week after an outbreak of Covid-19 among air traffic control staff. Nearly a third of staff
Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary has said that the airline is considering a move to the Brussels stock exchange, according to a report in the Sunday Times.
Lawyers who initiated a class action against Ryanair in the United States are now poised to harvest almost $1.5m (€1.4m) from the $5m being paid by the airline to settle the long-running case.
Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary said he has “no problem” being deposed by lawyers for Booking.com in a major lawsuit launched by the airline against the online travel agent giant in the US for alleged screen-scraping of its fares.