Scrapped flights, Omicron deliver Christmas gut punch

Published December 27, 2021
DEMONSTRATORS hold a banner reading “the virus of fear has killed common sense” during a demonstration called by an NGO in the Spanish Basque city of San Sebastian on Sunday. The demonstrators protested a law mandating the health pass and Covid-19 vaccination for children.—AFP
DEMONSTRATORS hold a banner reading “the virus of fear has killed common sense” during a demonstration called by an NGO in the Spanish Basque city of San Sebastian on Sunday. The demonstrators protested a law mandating the health pass and Covid-19 vaccination for children.—AFP

NEW YORK: Travel headaches abound for millions worldwide on the holiday weekend with 2,200 flights cancelled on Sunday alone, tracking websites reported, as celebrants wrap up Christmas battered by Covid’s Omicron variant.

Some 7,500 flights have been grounded and tens of thousands more delayed from Friday through Sunday — one of the busiest travel periods of the year — with multiple airlines acknowledging that rising cases of Omicron have prompted staffing shortages.

Effects have rippled worldwide, and the hurt was expected to bleed into the work week, with at least 735 flights already facing cancellations on Monday and 160 more on Tuesday, according to flight tracker FlightAware. The highly transmissible Omicron strain has sent new cases soaring across the globe, with countries reviving dreaded lockdowns, major sports leagues cancelling Boxing Day football and rugby fixtures and governments including the United States scrambling to boost testing and vaccinations.

In China’s Xi’an city, 13 million residents were confined to their homes on Sunday amid tightened restrictions as the country recorded its biggest Covid-19 infection numbers in 21 months.

Desperate to keep a lid on outbreaks before February’s Beijing Winter Olympics, China has implemented a vigilant “zero-Covid” strategy involving tight border restrictions, lengthy quarantines and targeted lockdowns. But there have been sporadic flare-ups.

In the United States on Sunday top pandemic advisor Anthony Fauci warned of a Covid “testing problem” as the virus overwhelms the nation and he vowed to make more tests available next month.

“There are still some issues now of people having trouble getting tested,” Fauci told ABC Sunday talk show “This Week.” “But we’re addressing the testing problem, he added, saying it should be corrected “very soon.” Severe weather has compounded the travel chaos in the United States, with storms battering the country’s west, though they brought a white Christmas weekend to Seattle and parts of California.

But air travel remained a global headache.

Aircrew and ground staff have fallen sick or gone into quarantine after exposure to Covid, multiple airlines acknowledged.

Lufthansa, Delta, United Airlines, JetBlue, British Airways, Alaska Airlines and several others have been forced to cancel flights.

“We entered the holiday season with the highest staffing levels we’ve had since the pandemic began and are using all resources available to us to cover our staffing needs,” JetBlue said in a statement.

“Despite our best efforts, we’ve had to cancel a number of flights, and additional flight cancellations and other delays remain a possibility as we see more omicron community spread.”

Chinese carriers, notably China Eastern and Air China, have scrubbed more than 2,000 flights over the long weekend, including many going in and out of Xi’an Xianyang International airport, according to tracker data.

Flightaware.com reports nearly 2,900 flights were canceled worldwide on Saturday, and 2,250 and counting on Sunday, with 720 of those within, originating from or headed to US airports. Some 7,200 Boxing Day flights have been delayed.

Published in Dawn, December 27th, 2021

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