Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 1
UK Proposes National Airline Blacklist for Abusive Passengers, Closing Ban Loophole Across Carriers
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 1

UK Proposes National Airline Blacklist for Abusive Passengers, Closing Ban Loophole Across Carriers

11 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 1
  • UK officials are drafting a national no-fly blacklist that could stop abusive passengers from booking with any airline, rather than only the carrier that first banned them.
  • The proposal responds to recurring rowdy and drunken incidents that spike in summer and can threaten crew and passenger safety or disrupt flights and holidays.
  • Department for Transport officials will meet airlines this month on how a shared database would work; the scheme may not need new laws, but GDPR and data-sharing rules remain unresolved.
  • Airlines UK backed the plan as a next step for the most serious cases, after recent incidents including a 10-month jail term for a disruptive Ryanair passenger and Jet2 lifetime bans after a mid-air brawl.
Will a national passenger blacklist stop air rage, or is the real problem unchecked airport drinking?
As the UK plans a no-fly list, what stops you from being wrongly blacklisted with no way to appeal?