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British travellers have been warned of queues as much as six hours lengthy at European airports this summer time.
Rafael Schvartzman, the vice-president for Europe on the Worldwide Air Transport Affiliation (Iata), mentioned the EU’s new border system meant a “onerous danger” of lengthy ready occasions and missed flights.
Delays and missed flight connections have already been seen in European international locations, together with Portugal, Spain and Italy, following the complete rollout of the entry-exit system (EES) in April.
The digital border administration for all “third-country nationals” to the Schengen Space requires fingerprints and facial biometrics upon first entry.
Schvartzman instructed the Iata Annual Basic Assembly in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: “What we’re seeing is a really onerous danger of actually difficult occasions or ready occasions, speaking about expectations of three, 4, 5, six hours, which is unacceptable,” reported The Occasions.
In keeping with the Iata vice chairman, as a substitute of “delivering sensible reform, aviation is being handled as a political soccer”.
He known as on European states to make sure that borders are manned sufficiently, flight schedules are identified properly prematurely, digital kiosks and gates are operational, and to proactively droop EES checks earlier than queues get too lengthy.
“With out EES, it takes between 20 and 25 seconds to course of a passenger. With EES, we’re speaking about 90 seconds and on high of that, you continue to have points with expertise, you’ll be able to think about what the breaking impact could be”, he added.

Schvartzman instructed passengers: “The recommendation is straightforward, permit way more time on the airport than you may often. Till EES is working easily, arriving two to a few hours earlier than departures and getting airside as shortly as doable is a prudent strategy.”
Final week, Wizz Air instructed British travellers to reach at European airports three hours earlier than their flight residence departs as post-Brexit EU border checks proceed to trigger prolonged queues.
Yvonne Moynihan, managing director of Wizz Air UK, mentioned prolonged delays at passport management on account of EEShad induced some passengers to overlook return or connecting flights.
Wizz Air instructed The Unbiased: “We encourage our UK clients travelling residence from Europe to reach on the airport three hours forward of their departure time, and to make sure they’re ready for border management procedures earlier than travelling, as this may also help scale back the chance of lacking their flights.”
Learn extra: Why Wizz Air’s recommendation for beating EU entry-exit airport chaos is ineffective for a lot of passengers

















