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Ryanair forced to cancel more than 400 flights due to French air traffic control strike

Ryanair forced to cancel more than 400 flights due to French air traffic control strike

BreakingNews.ie2 days ago
Ryanair said it was forced to cancel more than 400 flights, disrupting travel for more than 70,000 passengers, due to a nationwide air traffic controller strike in France on Friday.
The disruption comes at the start of Europe's summer holidays, one of the busiest travel periods of the year.
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The French civil aviation agency DGAC on Wednesday asked multiple carriers to reduce flights at Paris airports by 40 per cent on July 4th due to the planned strike.
"In addition to flights to/from France being cancelled, this strike will also affect all French overflights," Ryanair said in a statement on Thursday.
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Passengers overflying French airspace from the United Kingdom to Greece and Spain to Ireland would also be affected, the Dublin-based carrier said.
Ryanair chief Michael O'Leary called on European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to take urgent action to reform European Union air traffic controllers' services.
"Once again European families are held to ransom by French air traffic controllers going on strike," Mr O'Leary said. "It makes no sense and is abundantly unfair on EU passengers and families going on holidays."
He said Ryanair had cancelled 468 flights and expected the number to keep rising.
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Jet2 profits prepare to take off on summer holiday boom
Jet2 profits prepare to take off on summer holiday boom

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jet2 profits prepare to take off on summer holiday boom

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My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris
My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris

Times

time4 hours ago

  • Times

My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris

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10 beautiful boutique hotels in Europe – that still have availability for summer
10 beautiful boutique hotels in Europe – that still have availability for summer

Times

time5 hours ago

  • Times

10 beautiful boutique hotels in Europe – that still have availability for summer

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Rooms have that effortlessly stylish Portuguese vibe: sand-coloured throws, white and pine, with flashes of mermaid-tail tiles in suites; and there's an included shuttle down to Ericeira town. The nearest beach is just a few minutes' drive away, with many more within day-trip B&B doubles from £367 ( Fly to Lisbon • The most beautiful places in Portugal Rooms may be simple at this sultry coastal hotel outside the city of Cagliari, but you're here for the verdant grounds — swaying palms, a briskly cool freeform pool, curtained double day beds and, crucially, less than a five-minute walk to the beach. This swathe of Sardinia's southern coast, in the Baia de Chia area, is a honeypot of natural beauty: miles of protected, grassy sand dunes, flamingos balancing in glittering lagoons and unspoilt, cream-coloured beaches. Follow the boardwalk path from Aquadulci's car park to the cooling shallows of Su Giudeu beach — a five-star dinner awaits you in its garden restaurant when you B&B doubles from £380 ( Fly to Cagliari Another adults-only candidate, this rustic-chic Turkish bolt hole has just 17 palm-thatched safari tents tucked into a dramatic sliver of cliffside outside Fethiye. Emphatically unspoilt, the surroundings are all thick pine forest and dramatic boulders (you'll be plunging into the Med from the rocks rather than a sandy beach, but the swimming is heaven). Peace and quiet is paramount here — you'll hear the odd chillout tune wafting over from the sunset bar, but the spaced-out plateaus with loungers, plunge pool and nocturnal outdoor cinema are all about unwinding. Take the hotel boat along the coast for completely undisturbed swimming, or lunch out at the beach club Room-only doubles from £466 ( Fly to Dalaman If you're seeking cooler pastures than the traditional Med this summer, consider Austria's lakes and mountains. The Pinzgau region outside Salzburg sees highs between 20 and 25C in July and August — comfortable enough for view-tastic hikes around Priesteregg, an 18-chalet boutique resort (nearby are 250 miles of marked Alpine trails). Last year this 'chalet village' opened the Seehütten, a trio of sweet wooden chalets with direct access to its spring-water bathing lake, and gorgeous views of the surrounding peaks. Book a massage, tuck into Austrian caviar or local kasnocken dumplings at the restaurant, or join outdoor yoga sessions surrounded by pines and B&B doubles from £587 ( Fly to Salzburg For those who like to be at the cutting edge of things, try this 22-room farmhouse outside Palma, Mallorca, which opened in May. A ten-minute drive from Palma's airport, it's one of the speediest of this list to get to; but don't be put off by the proximity to Magaluf — this is the sibling to Palma's esteemed Can Bordoy hotel, with a tranquil swimming pool in manicured gardens, cushioned loungers beneath the trees and a terrace straight out of an ancient Balearic village. The farm-to-fork Mallorcan restaurant is one big draw here — while a tennis court, spacious room terraces and freshly squeezed orange juice from the estate's trees all perk up your B&B doubles from £310 ( Fly to Palma • More great hotels in Mallorca An hour's ferry from the far-busier Santorini, Folegandros has a more rugged feel, with traditional Cycladian villages, secluded beaches and mountainous hiking trails. The five-star Anemi is equally fuss-free but straight-from-a-magazine stylish, with a cluster of low-lying sugar-cube buildings with a tennis court, an outdoor gym, the island's first spa and an outdoor saltwater infinity pool with zingy yellow parasols. The 44 rooms are minimalist and largely all-white, but for sparing splashes of the same yellow in a rug or bathroom wall. There's a relaxed Greek restaurant serving just-caught seafood or you can visit the hotel's 30-acre organic vineyard for tastings, yoga classes and sound B&B doubles from £244 ( Fly to Santorini Overlooking the Adriatic Sea and next to Novigrad's glamorous marina, Palazzo Rainis is the former 19th-century home of a Venetian chemist converted into an elegant adults-only retreat. There are just 16 sophisticated rooms and suites, with chocolate-brown parquet flooring, bottle-green armchairs and an art deco flair. All have balconies or terraces and most have sea views. 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